Quote:
Originally Posted by Aquila
No system is perfect. While people warn of the potential dangers of a system like that found in Canada (which are often full of myth and exaggerations)... they are ignoring that an estimated 45,000 Americans were dying every year from treatable conditions because they couldn't afford health insurance on the free market.
The internet is a wonderful thing. I challenge any who oppose Canada's healthcare system to find a Canadian forum and invite a debate on it. First, you'll be schooled by the very people who are in their system. A number of your facts will be debunked. A number of myths will be corrected. And a different perspective will emerge. You'll also get plenty of critique of our system from an outsider's observation. It can be eye opening.
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You keep using the 45,000 number, which is widely disputed and likely incorrect.
""Urban Institute senior fellow Stan Dorn, who studied the issue in 2008 and concluded 22,000 people died in 2006 because of a lack of health insurance.""
"It’s impossible to know precisely how many people die from having no insurance. There’s no national data for it."
"Richard Kronick, a University of California San Diego medical professor who now works for the Department of Health and Human Services, wrote in 2009 that estimates are "almost certainly incorrect.""
"His paper, published in August 2009 in HSR: Health Services Research, found that
uninsured participants had no different risk of dying than those were covered by employer-sponsored group insurance. The finding was surprising coming from Kronick, who told PolitiFact then it was "not the answer I wanted.""
"Henry Aaron, a senior fellow at the centrist-to-liberal Brookings Institution, told us in an interview that he, too, thinks the number of deaths is impossible to nail down. In addition to Kronick’s skepticism, he pointed to a study of Oregon’s Medicaid experiment (which Baicker co-authored and PolitiFact looked at here) that found no significant improvement in health outcomes, including conditions like blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar, between a group of new Medicaid enrollees and uninsured Oregonians who could not get on the Medicaid rolls.
"Like Kronick, I am a strong advocate of measures to achieve universal insurance coverage and would rather that Kronick’s study and the Oregon project provided evidence in support of my policy preference," he said. "But, as far as mortality is concerned, they just don’t.""
Here's the kicker: the Harvard "study" which claimed 45,000 uninsured die was based on a guessing game.
""That 2009 report determined that people without insurance are 40 percent more likely to die without insurance""
There's no actual data on how many uninsured die. And why did they die? Was it truly because they couldn't get the care they needed, or was it do to an accident, homicide or other natural causes NOT related to inability to get medical care.
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-me...year-because-/