Some Thoughts on the Health (Long)

In summary, the conversation revolved around the differences in healthcare between Canada and the US. The speaker, who recently moved to Quebec City, shared how easy life is in Canada due to the healthcare system. Their roommate, who is from Morocco, expressed their desire to move to California for the "good life" despite never having been there. The speaker explained that healthcare is a major factor in their decision to stay in Canada, as they have experienced the benefits firsthand. They also discussed the challenges faced by Americans in terms of healthcare, including the difficulty of obtaining coverage while working minimum wage jobs. The conversation ultimately concluded with the importance of avoiding serious illness, as it can greatly impact one's ability to work and live freely in the US.
  • #1
JasonRox
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Note: Please read the entire opening posts.

As some of you may know, I moved to Quebec City about a month ago. I found the place I live in just a week before I moved here. I just jumped on the boat and came here. Family, friends, and colleagues thought this was crazy, and amazing. (I'll get back to this later.)

I had no idea who my roommate is and might be. He could have been pulling a fraud for all I know. It turns out that my roommate is Morrocan, and immigrated to Canada about 4 years ago. He's also spending the summer in Quebec City. He always talks about how amazing it would be to move to California where the good life is. I laughed, and I asked why. He explained how you have beautiful weather, women, and money. The money I explained is a fantasy he has. The other two reasons I can accept, but not necessarily agree with because I haven't been to California before making conclusions. I decided to ask him if he's been to California, and he said no. His only knowledge of California is from movies and watching OC. I wouldn't consider movies and especially the OC to be an accurate portrayal of California. And I laughed some more. I like to laugh at the level of irrationallity some people have, and sometimes I have. (*smile*)

Then I explained to him that Canada would be a much better place. He said then asked me why. I answered: "Life is easy. Life is great. Life is beautiful here." He then asked me how so. I explained that in Canada we have no worries like Health Care, and insane school debts. (The rest of the reasons are subjective, so I exclude them.) How is life easy in Canada? Well, I can work anywhere I want in the country, quit when I want, move when I want, live where I want in Canada and have health coverage.

How important is health coverage? Without the health system here, I would have not been able to move to Quebec City like I did, and experience this beautiful city in the way that I am. I would have to stay home and keep my job there, and try to maintain health coverage in some way (however, it might work). The jobs that I have are certainly not jobs that would offer health insurance. I'm happy with them because they pay enough to allow me to live here. I have pink eye like two weeks ago, and I just walked in the hospital here in Quebec, and got my care. Just like that. One little application because I'm from Ontario. It doesn't ask about medical history at all. You just fill in your standard personal information and write when you came to Quebec. The doctor came to see me shortly (not a 3 hour wait) in about maybe 5-10 minutes. I got the diagnosis, and even the drugs for free. I even got a prescription for a drug for my ears for free in case I get an infection. The doctor understands that I can't delay my ear infections, and I asked to make sure they were clean while I was there. Again, free. I work two part-time jobs with no benefits.

How about my roommate? He's already been to the hospital twice in Quebec City, and he also had no problems. I laughed and said "Good luck doing that working at a pizza place in California when you start your life there." He didn't like that because he knows it's a real threat to destroying his dream to living and residing in the US. In Morroco, health coverage is also covered by the government. He's never lived in a country when a similar system as the US.

Anyways, how do Americans cope with it? I wanted to apply for a VISA and just go work in New York until I realized I would have to worry about health care. I would definitely get rejected because of the conditions of my ears. I had more surgeries than two hands can count.

Note: I have some stories to tell about the health system. I'll leave them out until I see comments.

Thoughts?
 
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  • #2
Avoid getting seriously ill.

I try to see the doctor maybe once a year for a checkup. Other than that, I try to avoid becoming ill.

I saw my doctor 15 months ago when I had walking pneumonia, and then about a year ago for my annual physical which actually occurs on an 18 - 24 mo cycle.
 
  • #3
When I say "Life is easy.", I don't mean you can do nothing and you'll be taken care of. That isn't necessarily true here. It is not the meaning of what I mean from "Life is easy." I don't want to read posts about "Yeah, life is easy for some crack addict and we pay for him through taxes." IT IS NOT THE IMPLICATION OF THE MEANING. What is the implication? You'd have to live here to know that, and my roommate knows it as he lived here for 4 years. Hence, why I said that to him and quoted what I said in the OP.

Also, the discussion isn't about Canadians who work paying for those who don't, which is another reason it should not be brought up. I want to keep the conversation about the health system in the US and how they manage to do what they want, like work anywhere. I feel as though you can't work anywhere because the second you quit, you have no coverage and the coverage at the other job might not start until 3 months later. Also, you can't just work at McDonald's in New York City just so you live there for 3 months and leave (similar to what I'm doing in Quebec City).
 
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  • #4
Astronuc said:
Avoid getting seriously ill.

We all do that though.

My illness occurred through an innocent swim in a lake. I'm not sure how you rationally avoid getting ill besides eating healthy and living actively.
 
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  • #5
Our family uses medical insurance through my wife's job, and my company covers us for the rest like co-pays/deductibles and expenses not covered by insurance.
 
  • #6
Astronuc said:
Our family uses medical insurance through my wife's job, and my company covers us for the rest like co-pays/deductibles and expenses not covered by insurance.

It is conceivable that someone gets cancer, and you go broke?
 
  • #7
JasonRox said:
It is conceivable that someone gets cancer, and you go broke?
If you don't have insurance and have a catastrophic illness, then yes, you may have to file bankruptcy to get rid of the debt. But as has been previously discussed, many hospitals work with charities and accept government medical funding to pay off some or even all of your major medical expenses.

Healthcare for all New Yorkers
Paying for your healthcare

Financial concerns should not keep New Yorkers from seeking the healthcare their families need. At HHC we are committed to helping our patients find financial assistance, whether through a low or no cost insurance program or through a reduced fee arrangement.

HHC offers its patients the opportunity to examine a variety of payment options. Click below to learn more:

HHC Options - HHC's own financial assistance and charity care program

MetroPlus - An HHC subsidiary which offers health plans under Medicaid, Child Health Plus, Family Health Plus and MetroPlus Gold HHC hospitals accept a variety of other health insurance plans.

http://www.nyc.gov/html/hhc/html/access/paying.shtml
 
  • #8
JasonRox said:
We all do that though.

My illness occurred through an innocent swim in a lake. I'm not sure how you rationally avoid getting ill besides eating healthy and living actively.
Don't think along the lines of getting ill. How about needing an MRI because you tore an MCL playing a recreational sport. You are in for a wait. A long wait in most cases. For every drawback you can think of for the US systems, I can think of a plus. That's jut the nature of the beast. Neither system is even close to perfect.
 
  • #9
Many colleges offer medical services to their students for a nominal fee. I went to the University of Alaska for one year, and had some minor medical problems. The campus medical facility was great. I don't remember how much it was then, but it's $110 a year now - that's cheap.
 
  • #10
All I know is that health care insurance, whether through private coverage in the US or through tax-funded coverage in Canada, costs more than my actual health care. I haven't had an illness or injury that has required a visit to the doctor in 15+ years, and when I did need treatment back then, I didn't have insurance, and it didn't cost anywhere near what I'm paying in insurance premiums, even with my employer covering the bulk of the cost. When I think about what a hospital stay would cost, and how that would break down in payments if it were, say, a loan for a luxury car, it would still cost less than my insurance premiums, and probably less than would be taken out for taxes if I was in Canada, especially if you factor that in over a lifetime of payments. Sometimes I think simply having low interest loans available, similar to how many people finance their educations, to cover major medical expenses would be much cheaper than paying for insurance. The only time insurance really pays off is if your injury or illness is so severe that you are permanently disabled and unable to return to work afterward to pay off the debts.
 
  • #11
Moonbear said:
All I know is that health care insurance, whether through private coverage in the US or through tax-funded coverage in Canada, costs more than my actual health care. I haven't had an illness or injury that has required a visit to the doctor in 15+ years, and when I did need treatment back then, I didn't have insurance, and it didn't cost anywhere near what I'm paying in insurance premiums, even with my employer covering the bulk of the cost. When I think about what a hospital stay would cost, and how that would break down in payments if it were, say, a loan for a luxury car, it would still cost less than my insurance premiums, and probably less than would be taken out for taxes if I was in Canada, especially if you factor that in over a lifetime of payments. Sometimes I think simply having low interest loans available, similar to how many people finance their educations, to cover major medical expenses would be much cheaper than paying for insurance. The only time insurance really pays off is if your injury or illness is so severe that you are permanently disabled and unable to return to work afterward to pay off the debts.


My surgeries would have tallied atleast $1 million. I have no idea how you expect me to get low interest loans to pay that.

You're solution, no offense, is not practical.
 
  • #12
I guess I have a distorted view, as I have full health coverage through my mom's work as a teacher. And it always amazes me to see who doesn't have coverage, even people who are very well off.
 
  • #13
JasonRox said:
My surgeries would have tallied atleast $1 million. I have no idea how you expect me to get low interest loans to pay that.

You're solution, no offense, is not practical.

Your solution, no offense, is not ethical.

According to what ethical theory is it justified to use more resources from society than you can ever contribute back?
 
  • #14
Crosson said:
Your solution, no offense, is not ethical.

According to what ethical theory is it justified to use more resources from society than you can ever contribute back?

When you are in legitimate need of the resources.
 
  • #15
Crosson said:
Your solution, no offense, is not ethical.

According to what ethical theory is it justified to use more resources from society than you can ever contribute back?

Is money the measure and value of ressources within society? Um... no.
 
  • #16
There are many in the US who have health insurance (usually through their employer) but those policies will only cover so much each year and/or during one's lifetime. So you can experience a catastrophic illness or injury and still go backrupt after the insurance cuts you off. It happens WAY too often.
 
  • #17
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=sicko&sitesearch=#

Watch that.
 
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  • #18
Tsu said:
There are many in the US who have health insurance (usually through their employer) but those policies will only cover so much each year and/or during one's lifetime. So you can experience a catastrophic illness or injury and still go backrupt after the insurance cuts you off. It happens WAY too often.

How can you guys live with that?

If you get cancer, you're either dead physically or if you live, you're dead financially.

Also, if the government foots the bill for medical care goes up, then taxes go up of course. But to save money on health the government has an actual reason to try and maintain the best environment for its citizens to avoid serious illness.

In a country like the US, the government doesn't care if the environment induces serious illnesses onto people. They aren't paying for it. It's either the citizen as an invidual or the insurance company (but usually the citizen).

It makes no sense.
 
  • #19
JasonRox said:
How can you guys live with that?

If you get cancer, you're either dead physically or if you live, you're dead financially.

Also, if the government foots the bill for medical care goes up, then taxes go up of course. But to save money on health the government has an actual reason to try and maintain the best environment for its citizens to avoid serious illness.

In a country like the US, the government doesn't care if the environment induces serious illnesses onto people. They aren't paying for it. It's either the citizen as an invidual or the insurance company (but usually the citizen).

It makes no sense.

If you watch the video I posted above, you'll understand why it makes perfect sense. (Premium per month from customers) - (money given for injuries) = profit. The less money you give to the sick (especially the ones who really need it like cancer patients, but rack up a lot of money in medical bills), the more profit you make! And who doesn't like profit?

For instance, I know a guy who had a sister with cancer - her total cost for treatment was 4 million dollars, and 400,000 dollars out of the family's pocket. She passed away, but because she was left without insurance for a month racked up that $400,000 bill.
 
  • #20
JasonRox said:
Is money the measure and value of ressources within society? Um... no.
Actually, that's exactly what it is, especially when comparing money to money. Your intangible value to society isn't what matters in this case, it is specifically the money you pay to the government in exchange for the goods and services the government provides for you that determine who is getting the better deal. But in this case, we only care about one of those goods/services: the monetary value of the medical care vs the money you paid to the government for it.

You are basically a lottery winner, Jason, though this is a lottery you don't really want to win. It is exceedingly rare for a person of your age to acrue $1 million in medical expenses.

I pay my own medical insurance, but have the associated co-pays and deductables. I would estimate that over the past 5 years (since I got out of the Navy), I've paid about $10,000 for $3,000 worth of care. How much you've actually paid, I don't know, but I suspect it is comparable. In any case, that's the way insurance works (whether it is through the government or a private firm is irrelevant) you don't need it until you need it, and you buy your lottery tickets every month hoping not to win. And in this case, 99 other people have had to pay their $10,000 and not get sick in order for the government to be able to afford to pay you that $1,000,000.
 
  • #21
I haven't been to a doctor in ages, even when I had insurrance. My ancestors came from Canada so I've always wanted to live there though. I think both systems have their ups and downs.
 
  • #22
JasonRox said:
It is conceivable that someone gets cancer, and you go broke?
As others have mentioned, if one has a catastrophic illness, not necessarily cancer, and that illness prevents one from working, then one could lose one's house, or whatever one bought on credit. I heard some stories today of people in the state capital who had lost their homes after falling behind on payments because of illness and not being able to work.

There are about 42 million people in the US without health insurance, and millions more who have limited health insurance that might not cover some costly illnesses.
http://facts.kff.org/results.aspx?view=slides&topic=4

As Russ points out, the problem of health insurance is the number of people needing medical services and the cost. Insurance in general is about spreading risk with everybody contributing a little amount and then a small fraction, e.g. 1/1000 or 1/100000, seeking payment. When just about everyone needs coverage, then it stops being insurance and becomes a subsidy, and that's a significant problem that the US has to face in the near and long term.
 
  • #23
I've always figured that's why suicide is illegal, because the government gets cheated out of taxes and such...
 
  • #24
Crosson said:
Your solution, no offense, is not ethical.

According to what ethical theory is it justified to use more resources from society than you can ever contribute back?

That is an insane opinion.

As long as the number of those people, who are unlucky to need expensive treatment, is small, it is extremely reasonable for the society to take care of those. You prefer a society where the majority gets 99% lower taxes to pay, and few unlucky people who would need expensive treatment don't get it for free, and get their lives destroyed? :yuck:
 
  • #25
For some reason I don't feel we should be entitled to health care, I don't really like the government in my backyard so I shouldn't ask them to take care of me when times go bad.

Then again at this point it seems the government is overstepping its bounds in almost all arenas so maybe they should foot the bill.
 

1. What are the main points in "Some Thoughts on the Health (Long)"?

The main points in "Some Thoughts on the Health (Long)" include the importance of maintaining good physical and mental health, the impact of lifestyle choices on health, the role of genetics in health, the connection between mind and body, and the benefits of preventative measures for long-term health.

2. How does genetics play a role in our overall health?

Genetics can influence our health in various ways, such as predisposing us to certain diseases or conditions. However, our lifestyle choices and environmental factors also play a significant role in determining our overall health.

3. What is the connection between mind and body in terms of health?

The mind and body are closely interconnected, and our mental state can have an impact on our physical health. For example, stress and negative emotions can weaken the immune system and make us more susceptible to illness.

4. What are some preventative measures we can take for our long-term health?

Some preventative measures for long-term health include maintaining a balanced and nutritious diet, engaging in regular physical activity, managing stress, getting enough sleep, and avoiding harmful substances.

5. How can we promote good health for ourselves and others?

We can promote good health for ourselves and others by making healthy choices, advocating for policies that support public health, and educating ourselves and others about the importance of preventive measures and maintaining overall well-being.

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