I think in a noble society, once a problem is diagnosed, the best method for life preservation should be enacted. Why should cost be a factor. Honesty and assessment and dedication to excellence should be the factors for approving health care. If Obamacare disallows this, then it's not for us. There is plenty of waste in other programs. Let true quality control ferret out and cut those.
Good points. However, when the money being spent is, in effect, other people's, whether via taxes in a government-administrated health care system, as in the UK, or in the form of ever-higher premiums in the current U.S. system that relies on private health insurers, costs will always and necessarily be a factor. Nothing is ever really 'free' and that certainly includes top-notch health care. From hospital doctors and nurses to the janitors, people have to be paid. Sophisticated medical equipment is expensive and the manufactures don't give it away. Utility bills come due each month for both hospitals and doctors in private practice. On it goes and one way or another, someone has to pay and that 'someone' is us. Whether through higher taxes and somewhat restricted access to high-quality health care or via higher insurance premiums and cost-based limits on tests and treatment the financial aspect of quality health care cannot be ignored, unless the patient is fortunate enough to be able to pay 'out of pocket' for his or her care...and we all know that is rare. This is the reality we all have to deal with whether we do so via a totally government-administrated health care system (Europe) or with a mixture of government-administered medical insurance and private, job-related 'private' medical insurance plans (U.S.). Costs can be shifted around but not ignored. Free societies choose their methods of paying for and administering health care but what is effective in countries with small, homogeneous populations such as Sweden, Canada or the U.K. is not necessarily right for America with it's 320 million people, a third of them overweight. However, whatever a nations medical system construct may be cost-effectiveness will
always be an issue because, in the final analysis, nothing is ever
truly 'free'.
JimNow, back to the topic at hand (CK).