mike777, on 2013-November-17, 13:03, said:
Rik, thanks for your post, it would be helpful to describe how these systems work. For example the govts UK and Canada don't have just a single payer system, there are large parts of the system they don't own. As far as I can tell there are vast parts of the health care system in Sweden not owned by the govt. Docs are just a small part of the system
You mention Sweden and others are govt based but you don't really say what they own or don't own and who makes the economic decisions. Who decides where capital is allocated and how and based on what?
For example in the USA these decisions are made by millions and millions of people in the market, not one person.
You are right that not everything in Sweden (or Finland) is owned by the (or even a) government. There are private practices and though it is not a large fraction, there are enough of them to not call them an exception. (As a matter of fact, the doctor's office that I had in Sweden was a joint private practice run by -what seemed to me- college friends.)
To the best of my knowledge (but I could easily be wrong, any Swedes out there to correct me?) doctor's offices get funded based on the amount of registered patients. I could imagine that there are correction factors for things such as above average age patients or patients with a difficult social background or other groups that statistically need to see their doctor more often. (I know for a fact that in the Netherlands funding for schools is allocated like that. I think they have something similar in Swedish schools too, and then it seems reasonable that they have it in health care.)
The situation in the USA is very different from the Swedish situation. In Sweden "the government" knows literally everything about you, among others: your doctor, your pensions, the amount of money in your bank accounts, your employer, your salary, your employment history, how much rent you pay or what you have paid for your house, the amount and interest rate on your mortgage, and many other things (I could imagine that they knew what bridge clubs I was a member of). They get this information from you, but also from the other party (your employer, your bank, your doctor, your bridge club, etc.) All government databases are linked to each other and information is continuously shared between government agencies.
So when I am registered as a patient of Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones says that I am
his patient, alarm bells will be ringing.
I realize that in many countries an all-knowing-government would be terrifying (it was to me when I moved there), and I don't think it will have a chance in the USA, but once I was settled, I found out it really worked well.
Rik
P.S. Just one of the nice side effects of these linked databases: I basically never needed to do my taxes. The IRS equivalent always sent me a completely filled out tax form. After each number they have a line where you can correct their number if you don't agree with the value that they report. I only needed to fill in my travel expenses, sign and return. (I guess you can do it over the internet now.) I always had my taxes and my wife's done in 5 minutes.
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The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg