If I earned more, I would be happy to pay more. I have no issue with that. I don't feel like I would be screwed for achieving more. No matter what, the more I earn the better off I am.
Do I believe the UK is too expensive? Yes. Do I believe universal healthcare is the problem? No!
I believe that government programs are part & parcel to the reason why healthcare is so expensive.
That's not a great explanation. Why does it on average cost $5,000 more per person for treatment in the USA and the UK?
Good question, I know it was much cheaper before Obamacare came down the pike. People in the U.S. are paying an average of 30% more since it came to pass...sometimes more.
As for taxes.. take off co-pays and take off insurance premiums and see if you really would be much worse off. I don't pay to go see the doctor. All I pay is £10 a month for my prescriptions as I need quite a few of them. Other than that I will be charged absolutely nothing for treatment, specialist treatment, operations.. anything. Not a single penny. Even with insurance, co-pays can make medical bills in the US massive!
You pay a co-pay every month from your paycheck LMOHM whether you see a physician or not, how can you say that you do not pay a co-pay? and all in the UK pay a tidy sum in taxes to support your UHC albeit cheaper than the U.S. by the stats. The price of care has much more to do with lawyers & the litigious U.S. society as well, if american lawmakers wanted to bring down the price of care, tort reform would bring down the price immensely but , being politicians are mostly lawyers they have not moved a finger to change that environment. The price of malpractice insurance doctors have to carry is astronomical, there are many facets to why HC is so expensive in the U.S.
Do you think it right that someone becomes bankrupt and loses everything because they become ill and cannot afford treatment?
If they go bankrupt in this country, bankruptcy assures they don't lose everything, in fact it is a dismissal of the debt, not saying it is a good thing. People that can afford HC have went bankrupt depending on what care was received also, and I assure you that some in your country drain the HC system more than others also depending on what care was received.
It's more the case that no one questions the principle of healthcare that is free to all at point of need. And why would we?
It is not a question of the principle but, a question of who is managing the system...nobody trusts the government to do the right thing with the money. They have proven they are not trustworthy of managing social programs.
That system benefits everyone else as much as it benefits me. We don't think anyone should suffer through inability to pay for medical treatment. As stated earlier, this whole idea of rejecting universal healthcare is a peculiarly American phenomena.
Benefits everyone? that would mean that I could come there illegally and receive that same level of care as an illegal alien? This is another facet of the "American phenomena" that you do not account for when it comes to cost. We are also paying for the care of millions of non-citizens as well with our tax dollars. Does the UK give free care to non-citizens? The U.S. does...every day, just come to any emergency room in any hospital and you can watch it happen.
Not you, but others on this site have even gone as far as to suggest it's a sin for me to use the healthcare system that I believe in and I've paid into. Why have I only heard that from American Christians? What is so different about American Christians that many would argue universal healthcare is a sin (such as coveting), while Christians outside of the US would argue that universal healthcare is a great way of demonstrating the Christian ideals of love and compassion.
Expecting others to pay your way as well as their own is the sticking point LMOHM. I think that the U.S. citizenry, especially the middle class are weary of always being the ones to subsidize these programs and give increasingly more money while others make a lifestyle of living on these social programs it is not just health care it is a social program snowball where the workers keep paying and the takers keep taking. It is being seen by the most taxed in our society as theft at this point...at some point people start saying when is it enough?