In 2015 Norway and Switerland were more expensive per capita. Being expensive does not mean services are expensive. As per the article Americans are more likely to have horrible eating habits and lack exercise thus become obese. This adds to the costs due to how people live. You are looking at the end result not the "why".
Health-Care Check-Up: Whose System Is Least Efficient?
Both Norway and Sweeden do not have universal healthcare. They have a system somewhat similar to the ACA. They also make far more money in median income. Per Capita it seems Norway is the only one that pays more per person. However they have far better income equality in their country so the average American would actually end up paying for significantly less in a single payer situation. Lastly the article mentioned preformance. I just looked up the United States and we are now 37th.
But look at the charts there and see that all of the countries with universal healthcare are much cheaper and have better scoring records in world wide healthcare standards.
Norway shows otherwise. If you have law preventing competition than your government has restricted the market thus is not letting the free market operate. Blame your government not the market.
Norway isn't a single payer system. They only have coverage for those under 16 and only for hospitilization if my understanding is correct. Adults (which is the majority of healthcare costs since young ones tend to be healthy) are not part of a single payer system.
Yes it is as government control the industry. Government decides who to hire, how many to hire and when thus controls the amount of doctors available. Doctors are not free to find work according to market demand but by government bureaucracy. Government controls which hospitals remain open or are closed. Hence why thereare cases of patients being left in the halls for week rather than a room. Government limited available space. When a recession hits government closes down hospitals to clean up it's bottom line as funding is part of the national budget rather than being based on competition within the market. Government controls the spending for equipment thus which hospitals offer which services.
Doctors, equipment, facility, funding are all rationed. These are finite. Infinite healthcare is a pipe dream usually held by those that never had to use the system in a major way.
So the deciding factor of these rations should be by need or by money? By your logic it should be money? It is not an item like sugar. Healthcare is a dynamic market based on skills. It isn't rationed off to an equal amount per person. It does deal with supply and demand of services but this is not the same thing as a ration. You don't get 3 medical treatments a month per person as you would sugar or any other product.
Secondly it wouldn't change the market at all with the exception of those that went without because they lacked the funds.
Yet all my points above show otherwise. For Canada's system is being criticized for lack of services, lack of doctors, lack of locations, lack of infrastructure.
You have only made one point and that it was that another non-single payer system is slightly more expensive per person in the whole world.
Canada does have its problems. However they are not stemmed from the single payer system but actually a lack of medical professonals in the country. They are currently taking measures to change this. The problem, however, does not stem from the fact it is a single payer healthcare system.
Which is a form of rationing by definition....
dunno what you are talking about.
Ration- allow each person to have only a fixed amount of (a particular commodity).
Hardly. The individual is free to seek other facilities if the current one is overburdened. They are free to seek different services from a complex program to a cut and out service of triage.
You are free to do the same in a single payer system. You are not designated to a single doctor or a single facility. The only thing that changes is that you don't have an insurance card but rather it is paid for through the government. It changes nothing in your ability to go to a preffered doctor.
When government decides you need it and when
To a degree. However they are more willing to pay for services than private insurances by far. I work with insurances for a living and it is private insurances that deny coverage far more often than medicare or medicaid. And if medicare (which is slightly pickier than medicaid depending on the state) simply requires the correct diagnosis codes which every doctor has access to to validate treatment. The doctor still decides what procedures you get and when. The government doesn't treat you. Your doctor treats you. The government pays for it instead of cigna or aetna or blue cross blue shield.
Yes there is as people can use services and facilities which offer more based on how much the custom is willing to pay. Rehabilitation services for example
And if you want extra there is nothing saying you can't get extra. But the comprehensive levels of treatment should be broad. For example no universal healthcare will ever pay for a boob job. You gotta get that done on your own. If you want to go to a spa rehabilitation center rather than a medical focused one you can pay for that. It doesn't stop you from getting the extra stuff you would want to pay extra for.
You will be paying more from taxes than you pay right now The average cost for healthcare from taxes in Canada per person is over 4k a year, including children. There is no coverage based on relations.
Sounds pretty easy of a decision to me. Especially since I have a 2 thousand dollar deductable and 20 coins. The flip is I pay less for healthcare in taxes than I do premiums and zero more after that.
You will pay less in taxes than you do on your healthcare insurance and deductable that is for certain. Average Canadian pays 4k in taxes? Is that the average per capita as that will be higher than the median. The average joe pays far less. You are basically saying you would rather pay more for worse coverage.
You are just taxed per captia instead resulting in your paying far more than what you pay now.
false.
It is a feel good distinction which omits facts for the sake of emotions.
IT means that you have coverage no matter your situation. That is an important non emotional distinction. It is always there. I don't have to worry about having to pay my road or school bill every month. It doesn't get taken away from me if I lost my job or was going through tough economic times. Not being based on individual capital is an inextremely important distinction that has nothing to do with feelings.
You understand it yet you do not understand what the rhetoric has omitted.
Except I have explained it throughougly. You still believe the lie that healthcare would cost more in a snigle payer system. You even used a non-single payer system as an example against it without realizing it isn't a single payer system.