We don't need any more barriers between a doctor and patient. The fewer, the more efficient, the better. The thing about this contraception controversy is that it wouldn't even have been an issue under a single payer system.
The well-said perspective of a health provider:
The Contraception Controversy as Seen Through a Doctor's Lens
Our Mission: CaHPSA aims to cultivate leadership and advocacy skills among health professional students to effect change in the health care system, primarily through grassroots efforts, education, and chapter growth in support of comprehensive, publicly-financed, privately-delivered guaranteed healthcare for all Californians.
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Reining in the Budget (a truly serious approach)
A good article about discretionary spending, federal debt, and how health care costs factor into all this.
I think the graph below from the CBO (Congressional Budget Office) explains it rather clearly.
We cannot fix the government deficit without first fixing healthcare. And no, Social Security is not a big issue. So when politicians keep hammering away at being "fiscally responsible," what they usually want to cut doesn't actually make an inch of difference in the long run, and in some cases, can actually make things worse long-term. Tackling health care costs is the only way to do it. And single-payer is the best method.
I think the graph below from the CBO (Congressional Budget Office) explains it rather clearly.
We cannot fix the government deficit without first fixing healthcare. And no, Social Security is not a big issue. So when politicians keep hammering away at being "fiscally responsible," what they usually want to cut doesn't actually make an inch of difference in the long run, and in some cases, can actually make things worse long-term. Tackling health care costs is the only way to do it. And single-payer is the best method.
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