That's right. If all those old people, sick children, disabled, and poor people would just die at the rate nature intended, instead of being kept alive by the government, you and I could get the cheap healthcare we so richly deserve. It's a travesty, it is.
barfo
S T R A W M A N
In any case, a good read from the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons:
http://www.aapsonline.org/index.php/article/medicare_myths_and_facts/
Myth #2: Medicare pays the reasonable cost of medical services.
Government price controls have, in some cases, slashed Medicare fees to 10 cents on the dollar compared with the Medicare “allowed charge” 10 years ago. This has forced those who provide these services not only to work without payment, but actually to subsidize the cost. The harder they work, the more money they lose.
Myth #3: Without Medicare, most seniors wouldn’t have medical care.
The government used carefully doctored statistics to mislead the public into believing that nearly half of the senior population did not have medical insurance coverage prior to the passage of Medicare.
These statistics, taken from a 1964 Department of Health, Education and Welfare report, didn’t count an enormous number of people who were covered by a variety of programs including: indemnity policies that paid cash benefits, existing government programs such as the Veterans Administration, and welfare. It also didn’t count those who could afford to pay their own way-i.e.
lack of “insurance coverage” is not the same as lack of access to medical care.
The fact was that 77% of seniors were eligible for the Kerr-Mills program (Medical Assistance for the Aged), which had been passed into law a full five years before Medicare. The remaining 23%-if they couldn’t afford to pay for their own care-could receive free care at their local hospital. Under the Hill-Burton Act, hospitals agreed to provide free care to anyone who needed it in return for government grants and loans.
Thus, all seniors-and everybody else-had access to medical care whether they could afford it or not. Physicians also were able to provide a substantial amount of charity care to patients who needed it, unlike today, when the physician risks accusations of fraud with accompanying prison time and ruinous fines for failing to charge a Medicare patient what the government deems the patient should pay.
Charging a Medicare patient $0.0 can get a physician into a world of trouble today because of government regulations.
Myth #4: Seniors were in poorer health before Medicare.
Not so, at least not according to the seniors themselves. In a 1960 survey conducted by Emory University (i.e. 5 years before Medicare was passed into law), 10% of seniors reported that they were in poor health. Today, after 36 years of compulsory, one-size-fits-all medical care under Medicare, 26.7% of seniors report that they are in poor health.