Sure - but the french system works the same way (Okay the details a different the plans are more structured but the concepts are the same) and gets a good rap from all parties involved - and here to.PhoneLobster wrote:Compared to the US mess it is a damn miracle working system.cthulhu wrote:Works great.
But in practice the good bits are the public system and collective public bargaining power for drug purchases. The private system is just free money for corporate shills at the expense of the public system.
Of course this article is over 5 years old now.
NOW we subsidize over 4 Billion per year on the completely corrupt and unproductive "Private health rebate" alone. And royal commissions are warning us that we are creating an unfair two tiered environment that is damaging the public health system.
And in the end the basic concept that rich people deserve better health is foul and disgusting, even in a "hybrid" system where the bottom isn't as far down.
Australian implementation here is a bit ho hum and can definately be improved (so can everything! I can link you to articles about the crippling problems experienced by every health system - except the ones operated by ultra rich city states like Hong Kong and Singapore), but the concept and direction is probably the right one. I could have used france and denmark as the examples if you'd like. It's the same idea - public healthcare minimum with public/private hybrid topup programs. France and Germany? I'm pretty sure hong kong works the same way too. It is a pretty common structure.
As for the rich thing - look, you can essentially spend any amount on medical care. The dollars that can be thrown at the task are unlimited. Rich people will want to spend dollars on medical care. It would require massive social and economic changes to prevent that, which are probably out of scope of the discussion. Given that, its just part of the landscape.
You can crack down on it - like Canada and the UK - but I'm not sure that actually makes things better. Those two systems are probably the cheapest deliveries of effective healthcare globally, and honestly deciding that the NHS is the way to go with health (and it sounds like the system you'd support) is quite a rational decision.
I've lived under the NHS and while it is a cheap and excellent system, and the end of the day I'm not sure it is my preferred.
But at the end of the day, whether you go france, Australia, Canada or the UK all of them are wildly superior to the US model in every respect.

