It appears jhill and H20 gave-up on trying to argue the last thread, so I'm going in for the kill.
Not only are there tremendous cost savings -- prices will drop -- when you allow the market to price healthcare services and return catastrophic health insurance to its rightful place, but look at the following...
More Canadians die of heart attacks on average than Americanshttp://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2004/09/20/heart_canus030920.htmlWe have the best practices in the world -- once you get sick. Some call this "disease care" instead of healthcare and I can see their point.
Where the system is broken is on issues of preventative care. Infant mortality, rates of cardio-vascular disease, and other general health related problems in the U.S. are unaccptable. We are far worse than other industrialized nations.
It's clear that lifestyle issues and preventative care are amiss in the U.S. How do rectify this without condemning more people to death when they contract a disease like our friends with socialized medicine?
Driving down the cost of preventative care so everyone can afford it is not a political issue -- it's a moral imperative. We can do this two basic ways.
1) Provide universal coverage for all preventative care. This ensures everyone has the same access to pre-natal and general diagnostic services. Problem is, if a problem is diagnosed, you have a greater mortality rate due to rationed healthcare.
2) Mandate catastrophic coverage so we do not lose our superior system in the U.S. for treating diseases and ailments. At the same time, make neo-natal care and other preventative care affordable so it can reasonably be paid out-of-pocket by 90%+ of Americans. For all others, ensure medicaid and medicare are solvent and truly make preventative care a priority.
I, for one, would rather be forced to pay for an annual check-up than told I need to go home and wait in line for treatment if I get cancer. If made affordable in a true market system, I think most other Americans would feel the same way if they truly looked at the facts.
We have an opportunity for a unique American solution to this problem. I refuse to believe we have to sacrifice the U.S. position on the cutting-edge of medicine in order to cure our problems with access to preventative care.