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SuiXi3D , to news in New research supports potential link between low-level lead exposure and liver injury
@SuiXi3D@kbin.social avatar

I suppose I should ask work if they can switch to unleaded solder, then?

HawlSera , to news in A nonprofit group is pushing to get estrogen FDA approved for gender-affirming care

It wasn’t already? Jesus Christ

Additional_Prune , to news in New research supports potential link between low-level lead exposure and liver injury

Didn’t we already know that there’s no such thing as a safe level of exposure to lead? I guess this research just confirms it.

Franzia , to news in A nonprofit group is pushing to get estrogen FDA approved for gender-affirming care

Yeah a placebo trial would be evil. I think widening the trials is important too, but there’s probably a huge medical difference between a puberty-blocker trans puberty for an adolescent and an adult trans second puberty. While estradiol is a basic easy one, none of these meds are all that great for you - its just the medical need to transition is greater than most (not all) of the health risks.

athos77 , to news in Texas abortion case puts doctors' agency in treating pregnancy complications in the spotlight

Just to point out that people argued this position to the legislature both some they were crafting and while they passing this law, and the legislature didn't want to hear it.

Smokey_the_beer , to news in Texas abortion case puts doctors' agency in treating pregnancy complications in the spotlight

Why do people hate women so much?

Rin ,

Because the Bible hates women.

EmpathicVagrant , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

“But where would the money come from?” My ass, that’s where.

GoofSchmoofer ,
@GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world avatar

I keep posting this article because I’m tired of hearing this statement as an excuse why we can’t do things for the American people.

If it is something that the leaders want they seem to always find the money.

eskimofry ,

Somehow you have more money for Israel, bailing out banks, covering police with pension, spending on stadiums, buying lavish gifts for SC Judges, and PPP loans but not enough to pay your citizens who built your country and shoulder it everyday?

EmpathicVagrant ,

And as long as we continue to shoulder and maintain for peanuts, that’s all we’ll get.

ObviouslyNotBanana , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

People talking about dismantling the military to pay for health care distract themselves from the fact that the health care system already holds all the money that is needed for single payer health-care. Which is what the people making money off this system want. They want people to blame the military, because that doesn’t solve shit.

bdonvr ,

Though we should also definitely dismantle the US military

BarrelAgedBoredom ,

Build some god damn trains, subways, and bus routes with the military money. Bing bang boom we’re an actual “first world” country now

Jessvj93 ,

Honestly, rather than them run their budgets to max so they don’t lose any the next cycle. It’s a damn self feeding monster.

Maggoty ,

Dismantle? No.

Reform for efficiency? Yes.

For example, the entire admin back end can be civil service. (Some of it already is) and contracting needs to go die in a dumpster fire. You’ve got at least 30,000 infantrymen sitting around doing nothing on any given day. Take a survey of their skills and start assigning additional duties. You can always fall back on contractors if you run out of grunts.

Also, for the love of God stop maintaining an entire mechanized army. You don’t need to mount every soldier at the same time. Yes it’s awesome. But most infantry units aren’t going much of anywhere once they’re dug in.

bdonvr ,

Efficiency of what? Imperialism? Fuck no.

Maggoty ,

Until superheroes or the Carebears become real we will need a military. The things I mentioned don’t touch the power projection debate on purpose. That’s a whole ideology thing that people need to be voting for and stuff. I’m taking about ways to save money whether we pull back or not.

raynethackery ,

Ready troops? Care Bear Stare!

Maggoty ,

It would be awesome.

aniki ,

you gotta source for that platitude?

Maggoty ,

Yeah. The world. Minutemen were cool in 1776. But that wouldn’t fly these days.

wanderingmagus ,

Source: Ukraine. Gave up nuclear weapons in exchange for an accord specifying its borders and promising peace. Almost immediately got invaded by a nuclear power with an army after making political decisions on its own. If it had kept its nuclear weapons, Russia would not have been so cavalier about straight up invading. Disarmament is a lie.

AngryCommieKender ,

Disarmament of an actual nuclear power has been done once. South Africa.

Ukraine never owned or controlled those nukes. They were guarded by Russian soldiers. They would have had to attack Russian soldiers, somehow repulse a Russian counterattack without Western aid, and then reprogram them since they didn’t have launch codes. Ukraine got the best concessions they could for giving Russia back the Russian nukes.

CybranM ,

You think Russia/Iran/China would just behave without the threat of US intervention?

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Ironically, without the “bigger threat” of the USA, they’d likely be at odds against each other. China still wants Outer Manchuria back, a region it was forced to cede to Russia back in 1860. Iran wants to be the de facto power of the muslim world, but has to deal with many other muslim countries that don’t want it, plus Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan are countries that Russia would prefer to have control over.

CybranM ,

Yeah there might be a struggle there for a bit but China would steamroll both of them and then what?

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

I doubt China would steamroll them. People thought Russia would steamroll Ukraine, it very clearly didn’t. Besides, China isn’t exactly a loved country, it has “allies” that would likely abandon them on the first opportunity and many countries that would love to see them getting kicked in the proverbial nuts.

Any militaristic action of China against any of those big targets would trigger a response from several countries. While everyone will talk peace, in reality a good portion would try to play the war up for as long as possible, to bleed both dry.

SeaJ ,

They also distract themselves from the fact that a single payer system would be cheaper so we could actually afford more military with one. No dismantling needed.

WhyDoYouPersist , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

How timely! American here who just received a bill for scoping my sinuses by an ENT specialist: insurance covered $28 out of the $415 procedure. This is on top of the $70 copay I owe for the $195 office visit. So all accounting factored in, I owe $450 for what I thought was going to be $70.

Because it was billed through insurance, the provider’s hands are tied in terms of further negotiation. I would bet if I had gone in as a cash patient, I’d be much better off.

The icing on the cake is that the scoping procedure was non-conclusive.

The US healthcare insurance system is the ultimate way to make money fast, for little effort. As long as you’re on the right side of it, that is.

_number8_ ,

copay is such a bullshit word, like i’m somehow equal partners with this trillion dollar corporation of ghouls

AlwaysNowNeverNotMe ,
@AlwaysNowNeverNotMe@kbin.social avatar

Try telling them you decline to pay the bill because it's outside network and see how much they value your partnership.

WeeSheep ,

The worst is that insurance companies “cover” things and that’s all they can say before anything is done. After, when billed, they can say “we cover 5% of the final bill. See? We covered it.” And we have no idea how much we will need to pay for standard necessary procedures.

DanglingFury ,

Get your jaw checked bro. TMJ can cause a lot of similar issues

Drivebyhaiku ,

Fuck. Canadian here who is just aghast at the charge. Had a friend go through the same procedure but essentially never paid a dime. We don’t even pay MSP any more but back when we did it was locked to your income bracket and while I had some bumpercrop years (my base rate is 33 bucks an hour and I work 12 hour days standard with time and a half applied for everything past 8 hours for 2019 I worked 11 months with routine 60 hour weeks) my payments never crested $250 for a quarterly payment. Heck I didn’t even realize that they stopped charging for two years because I had the thing rigged to autopay.

Heck a friend of mine’s Dad needed emergency hospital transfer from a small town and they used a helicopter ambulance and the family was never charged.

People want to complain that we’re slower and that people have to actually wait in waiting rooms and sure, non life-threatening stuff needs to be put in a queue but from what I have heard from my US buddies wait times at least are pretty comparable.

jasondj , (edited )

I swear people who talk about waiting have never visited an ER for something mundane because it’s the only option opened after 6, or who never had to meet with a specialist, or get a procedure that requires one.

Story time. January 2019. I have a 6 month old baby with mysterious rash. Pediatrician has us cut out common allergens and he clears up. Tells us to book with a pediatric allergist.

Now, I don’t live in BFE. I live in Southeastern MA. By no means an area underserved by doctors. The doctor refers us to Boston Children’s Hospital. It’s an hour and a half away without traffic, or 2 hours and 3 transfers on public transit.

The first appointment available was in October. Kids 7 months old at this point and already getting appointments for longer than that out.

We get put on a cancellation list and around March we get a call for him to be seen and get a scratch test. We take it, we are going on vacation 3 days after that and we’d love to know exactly what to avoid.

Kid lights up like a damn Christmas tree, but only one food allergy (peanuts) and it comes in like 1.5x the diameter of positive control.

Next, because of his age, they want to get him into an exposure therapy study, but he needs a good challenge first and they would call us when we got back from vacation.

Well, we came back from vacation the first week of March, 2019. BCH was now not scheduling any challenges due to the pandemic. Try again after Easter when the whole thing blows over. Then a month later. And another month.

Eventually they are booking again and after getting through the backlog of people that were cancelled due to the pandemic , the next appointment is 14 months out. By that point he’s too old for the study and we neeed to wait till he’s 4.

Well, now he’s 4. We book an appointment for his food challenge. The old scratch test is no longer good. He needs another one. Next booking for that is 10 months out, again. As luck would have it, though, we called back over and over again and eventually got a booking for his scratch test.

That was back in August. We booked his food challenge while we were in the office. It will be next October, barring any more global catastrophes or blind luck on the cancellation list. He will be five.

It’s amazing to me that there’s a person who can beat me at Smash Bros who has been waiting for a doctors appointment for nearly his entire life. And people tell me healthcare in America is fine. Those motherfuckers don’t know about this. They don’t know how much it costs every time he’s out of school for a couple of days with a fever and the school wants a doctor’s note. They don’t know that after wages, the single biggest part of their compensation package is their employers portion of their health insurance. In fact, depending on their job, it may even be more than their wages.

That last bit is important. People don’t realize how much their healthcare actually costs. They see the pre-tax line item for their share of premiums, never their employers. They see that as separate from the Medicare pre-tax item, and the vision and dental, all of which they don’t see the employers portion. They might see the bills if they got the high deductible plan, but they’re somewhat expected because “they got the ‘cheap’ plan”.

Drivebyhaiku ,

See up here people go all “I had to wait six months for a specialist! Bloody socialized medicine!” lt’s a blindness caused by not having anything to compare to and buying into the American political lies about our own system. That kind of wait time for a scratch test is insane even by our standards.

WhyDoYouPersist ,

Yeah the ENT specialist I saw was three months after I was referred by my general physician, because that’s the earliest they had available.

There’s nothing admirable about US heathcare (at no fault of the healthcare workers, let me be clear).

Drivebyhaiku ,

I admit that I technically have a horse in the US healthcare system. The industry I work in contracts our labour vs the US market because they don’t have to pay in to sponsor our medical insurance policy coverage. Technically speaking if the US fixed it’s healthcare my job would be less competitive.

But fuck, my job ain’t worth anybody suffering.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

For those who are interested, the population of those countries combined is roughly the same as the US: 331,137,369 compared to 339,996,563 for the US.

Altofaltception ,

I came here to ask this; an argument commonly made by proponents of the US system is that the population sizes are different.

CosmicTurtle ,

Which shouldn’t go ignored.

But the cost of the US Healthcare generally shouldn’t be ignored either. And it seems to be by a good majority of our politicians.

IMHO, our population should give us MORE leverage to get cost reductions but it’s just not going to happen. We need a severe overhaul of our healthcare system and the people who benefit from our current system have too much power and influence.

Maggoty ,

It should though because economy of scale works to make things cheaper, not more expensive. They’re literally ignoring basic economics to make that argument.

hobbicus ,

Not always, and not that I disagree with your point either. The US healthcare system is so over bloated with administration that it’s likely experiencing diseconomies of scale instead

Maggoty ,

Well that’s the issue. We don’t have a single system. We have an industry. I also love how that link completely dodges the motivation to raise prices purely for profit. But even with that, we already know the legitimate cost problem is due to multiple middle man companies that provide no value and just take money. And the more care they deny, the more money they make. So it’s a combination of problems. We have to pay them enough for them to employ people to find reasons to deny care.

General_Effort , (edited )

These stats are easy to find. The US spends a much higher percentage of its GDP on health care (16.6%) than anyone else. The difference is bigger than the entire US military budget. If the US cut its health care spending to the level of France (12.1%) or Germany (12.7%), it could more than double its military spending.

It terms of actual resources, the difference is even bigger, as US-Americans work much more than Europeans. I’m not sure what for.

ETA: At the same time, the US has a younger population, which should not really need as much care.

jasondj ,

You mean to tell me we can have better healthcare and more guns, and save money doing it?

Are you running for president?

General_Effort ,

Actually proposing that would be political suicide.

Honytawk , (edited )

Only in a backward country like the US it would.

Plenty of Americans are against their best interests.

lolcatnip ,

Thanks for clearing that up. The headline is badly written and needs that information.

Rapidcreek , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

It has always been known that more money could be saved with Universal health care. But, this couldn’t be done in Congress. Nothing new here.

SPRUNT , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

The American “Healthcare” system is a money-making venture, first and foremost. Health care is simply the structure the corporations use to wring as much money from the masses as possible.

Seraph , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined
@Seraph@kbin.social avatar

Ok now do Per Capita

cybervseas ,

As mentioned in the summary, the combined population of those countries is almost the same as the US. So per capita costs are in fact about 2/3 that of the US government’s spending.

BananaOnionJuice ,
@BananaOnionJuice@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

At least it’s in the summary because that title is way too clickbaity.

You think which countries?

cybervseas ,

Here’s the paragraph from the summary, which lists which countries. Maybe it doesn’t show up on your Lemmy client?

This means the U.S. government spent more on health care last year than the governments of Germany, the U.K., Italy, Spain, Austria, and France combined spent to provide universal health care coverage to the whole of their population (335 million in total), which is comparable in size to the U.S. population of 331 million.

Starglasses ,

It isn’t clickbait because the title is true.

lolcatnip ,

A title can be true and also be clickbait. This one isn’t, though.

uid0gid0 ,
snekerpimp , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

“That’s terrible! That’s money that should be going towards the military!”

reddig33 , to news in U.S. government spent more on health care in 2022 than six countries with universal health care combined

But if we had universal healthcare, how would all the useless middlemen make their money?

Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

Won't anyone think of the shareholders?!

GiddyGap ,

Corporations are people. Didn’t you know?

YeetPics ,
@YeetPics@mander.xyz avatar

They would move on to other amoral enterprises like cars/insurance/real estate/televangelism/etc

ReallyActuallyFrankenstein ,

I get the sentiment, but it actually would be a positive thing. Most people in these industries are there because the jobs were available and paid well, even if those jobs only existed to produce more unjustifiable profits for the bloated system.

Remove the jobs, and those people might actually go on to play productive rather than parasitic roles in society.

Cowbee ,

By contributing to the building up of the productive forces. Fuck this stagnation bullshit, invest in infrastructure and urbanization, invest in clean energy, and automation. Cut out meaningless jobs.

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