Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - A Health Care Voter's Guide
Episode Date: October 30, 2020If, by some set of unexplainable circumstances, you are still an undecided voter in the U.S. we've prepared something special for you in anticipation of next week's presidential election on Nov. 3. If... you're not undecided, you'll at least have a better understanding of how important this election is.We'll be reviewing the major tenets of the healthcare plans of both Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Who will have the better plan? You'll have to listen to find out. (It's not Trump.)Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers
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One, two, one, two, three, four. We came across a pharmacy with the two in that's lost it out.
We were shot through the broken glass and had ourselves a look around.
Some medicines, some medicines that escalate my cop for the mouth Hello everybody and welcome to so bones a marital tour of misguided medicine on your co-host just macaroni and I'm Sydney Mcroi
What was that inflection? Yeah, there was some of the accents in different places places. They haven't been before I guess I'm just so preoccupied
with this
This election coming up. Oh, there's an election coming up. I'm mainly watching it for their commercials
But yes, there is an election coming up. Yes, I watching it for their commercials, but yes, there is an election coming up.
Yes, I guess we do that. Don't we? I'm gonna miss people. I'm gonna miss the Facebook ads. We're heartbroken. Are you kidding me?
We can't get a single donation. Please just in service in our time and we have an 800% matching donation for the next three minutes. Get in here.
You know what I will miss. I've never been a person who gets a lot of text messages
in a day.
Well, I should say from different people.
I get a lot of text messages in a day from my mom,
but I don't get a lot from different individuals.
And I get so many different text messages
from all my friends.
Sometimes it's comular, sometimes it's Joe,
but then sometimes it's like, you know,
Steve with team, whatever,
who wants to reach out to me about something.
And I just have so many friends now.
Yeah, it's very busy.
And sometimes, you know what I've noticed
about those friends, like comular Joe,
sometimes I'll text them to see, you know,
like politics inside, how are you doing?
You know what I mean?
You guys have guys be exhausted.
There were to get a response to those, you know, it's weird.
Or it's just a link sometimes.
Sometimes it's just a link and that's so hurtful, Joe.
I just don't know if you're eating well and getting up
by it.
I don't know.
People got to start political affiliation by his texting us.
Yeah.
You know, really, if you think about it,
it should be the other team texting like,
hey, listen, I wanna read your first one.
Please.
I think that would make me anxious, actually.
Speaking of anxiety, the election is November 3rd,
I hope you voted.
Yes, I hope you, we've already voted.
I hope you've voted.
If you haven't voted, please vote.
The vote in person if you can safely vote if you if you if you got a mail-in ballot, I would drop
it off now. Yeah, just take it to your to the drop-off place and wear a mask. But all that aside
and you've already you kind of tipped our hand there. Yes, I feel like it is, if you've been listening
to this show for a while, you probably already know
we're like our political affiliations lie.
I mean, that's just,
I think we let it slip in the first episode
that we give a crap about other human beings.
So we probably just want political affiliates.
My point is simply that I wanted to do,
actually this was your idea, Justin, to do an episode
kind of outlining. Let's say that healthcare is your number one voting issue. I don't think
there are a lot of single issue voters. I know they exist, but I'd say for almost everybody,
healthcare is at least on your list of priorities of things that concern you.
If not, it should be everybody's got to health.
Yes, everybody will need health care at some point in their life or someone you love.
I mean, you should everyone should, but my point is you're probably at least somewhat concerned
about it up to you listen to a medical history podcast, so maybe very.
And so I thought it was at least worth since the election
is coming up, going through the basic outlines of the differences when it comes to healthcare
of the two candidates. Because I'll be honest, I had a part of the reason I asked you about this,
is like, I have not looked into it that deeply. I have not needed to know who to vote for
since ever. So like, it wasn't really much of a question for me.
So I didn't pursue it too deeply, but I think it's worth knowing.
I can't imagine that again, that a lot of our listeners haven't, you're, you're
somewhat medically interested. So you probably already have kind of made up your mind about
this. I don't think there are a ton of like swing voters who are waiting for this episode to decide what to do
If you if you do have someone in your life who doesn't really understand the two healthcare proposals
And especially if you think it might impact them to know what the differences are this might be we're sharing with them
If you live outside the US
I think this could be an interesting look into. These are the two paths to fixing or reforming our healthcare system that exists.
So that probably will tell you a little bit about what our healthcare system is like now.
Yeah.
So it is, it is first worth mentioning that when it comes to healthcare plans,
what I mean by a healthcare plan, what, what a policy person would mean by a healthcare
plan would be a list of distinct proposals that and with like a way to make them happen.
Not just ideas or concepts about healthcare, but actual, I want to change this, I want to
fix this, I want to give more money to this and here's where it would come from, I want
to give less money to this and here's where it would come from, I want to give less money to this and whatever. Like, right, it's not just a list of, it's not like,
my healthcare plan is I want everybody to have healthcare. That's not really a plan I just gave you,
that's just an ideal and that's great, but that's not a plan. So I think it is important to know
that the Trump campaign has not actually put forth what we would consider
a healthcare plan with distinct direct policy proposals.
They did issue sort of a big executive order statement about like an America first healthcare
something. Anyway, they have issued like these
ideals that they have and these things that they value. That has certainly been
put out there. If you watch the 60-minute interview with Leslie Stahl after the
president left the interview upset, his press secretary did bring like a big book and hand it to her and say like, here's
the healthcare plan.
And it was a very large book.
I guess what was inside of it were a lot of like, again, like executive orders and like
ideas for executive orders and these kinds of things, which isn't, I mean, from a policy
perspective that you can't, you can't just hand that to Congress and say,
vote on this.
So what I'm comparing are the plans laid out by the Biden campaign and sort of the ideas
and executive orders and rebuttals from speeches that have been laid out and tweets from the
president.
So I, this is just, this is where we are folks.
This is just what's out there.
So let's start first.
If we're talking about health care policy,
let's start with the pandemic, because that's still going.
If, if there is a medical issue that is on your mind right now,
no, that you all have individual medical issues
that you may have on your mind. Let's generalize it. I would say if there is one common medical
issue that most of us have on our mind right now, it's the coronavirus COVID-19, how do
we move forward? Right? So generally speaking, the Trump administration, the Trump campaign is not really proposing a lot of new ideas
outside of what you've already heard, right?
I mean, considering he has been ostensibly
in charge of managing it up to now.
His main goals would be the vaccines that are coming out.
I really can't. Therapeutics, or as he likes to point out, goals would be the vaccines that are coming out. Really count on this.
Therapeutics, or as he likes to point out,
cures, therapeutics, or cures, whatever you like to call them,
he opposes further lockdowns.
He opposes masking mandates.
That doesn't necessarily mean he opposes masking,
but he does oppose a federal mandate for masks.
As we've talked about on the show before, he has vaguely suggested this herd immunity idea.
I would not say that is, I would not go as far as to say that that is Trump administration
policy.
But we know that one of his health policy advisors, Dr. Scott Scott Atlas does endorse that idea.
And there was that comment he made about herd mentality
when he met herd immunity.
So, I mean, at least this could be part of the next phase,
possibly this idea that we just let it go
and see what happens.
His chief of staff did make a comment
that we're not trying to control the virus anymore.
Cool.
So take that how you will.
He does, in his policy statements,
he does promise to eradicate COVID.
And he said that healthcare workers will get everything that we need.
And how is that going so far?
So the mechanics of this aren't clear.
And I mean, this isn't, I'm just telling you
what is out there as far as how do we make that happen?
How do we get the funding for the tests that we need
for the PPE that we need?
Because if anybody's telling you that we have plenty of tests,
can I tell you firsthand, we don't.
Yeah.
In recent days, I have not been without PPE personally.
Although I do know that there are other physicians that have been other healthcare providers,
not just physicians that have been without PPE, that do not have in 95 masks and are seeing
patients that could have or do have COVID.
But outside of that, I can personally attest that we do not have enough tests.
I've bought UPP on Amazon in the past week.
Yes, you have.
Yes, you have.
So he assures that that will change or will happen,
but again, I can't give you particulars
because they're not out there.
Biden has more details in his plan.
He would, I think the biggest thing to think about is he would make it more of like a federally
centered response.
The federal government would kind of take the lead again as to how we are responding to
the pandemic as opposed to the way that Trump has sort of left it off to up to like state
and even like less than state,
like county control.
I mean, if you look all around the country, there are, I mean, school districts and individual
schools who are handling things differently, counties, cities, states.
I mean, it's kind of all dissociated, right?
Everybody's doing their own thing.
Biden says it would be more of like federally coordinated and he would turn it over largely to the scientists
to run it.
They make the decisions and he helps turn that into policy
that can be actually put in place to run things.
He would expand testing.
He has said he would consider an executive order
for a federal mask mandate.
I don't know that he has clearly said absolutely
That's plan day one federal mask mandate, but I know that that is on the table
He would extend that another area that he has talked about that I don't really see Trump addressing when it comes to the pandemic is health care coverage right now
So a lot of Americans have lost health care or don't didn't have health care to begin with
I don't know how to pay especially if they lost their job. I don't know how to pay, especially if they lost their job.
I don't know how to pay for if they do get sick.
What do they do?
So he's talked about expanding coverage through Medicaid, through the Affordable Care Act,
through Cobra, giving money to employers to allow for things like sick leave and that kind of thing right now to kind of alleviate the burden on employers and employees through government funds, right? To kind of take the
burden off of us as individuals and he would eliminate out-of-pocket costs for
COVID treatment and make PPE available to essential workers as well as
increase pay for frontline sort of like a hazard pay for frontline workers extending unemployment and we would rejoin the World Health Organization,
which I assume Trump wants to leave us out of since he took us out of it. Yes. So those would be
the big differences in terms of the pandemic management and their plans for how to move forward.
Yeah, I don't want to editorialize too much because again, we've made it clear
sort of where we're at. I do would point out that that does sort of sound like a
planned for managing COVID and sort of the alternative literally speaking of not
me. Right.
Mediginco. And I do think I didn't mention this directly. Biden, of course, has said that if the scientists,
if Dr. Fauci and the scientists have a vaccine that has gone through the appropriate clinical
trials and has been approved, that is also obviously part of his plan.
Yeah, so Biden would not withhold the man.
No, I mean, I said Trump's plan is the vaccine, and I mentioned that because that seems to be
the centerpiece of his, like, we'll get the vaccine, we'll be fine, Biden also endorses a vaccine, but in addition to these other things.
When it comes to prescription drugs, that's been a big issue that, like, for Trump to talk
about. Trump has, has, has said many, many things about lowering prescription drug costs.
That was one of his biggest policy priorities according to his campaign trail
talk, especially before he was elected in 2016. He actually proposed some ideas back then
when it came to healthcare and prescription drugs that were wildly unpopular with the
Republican party. Now that has, that has long since passed. We are not there anymore.
He has
Change things so that in 2021 when he talks about how he lowered insulin so that so cheap you've probably heard him say that
He has put some things in place for specific Medicare recipients who are on insulin that will cap their costs
Like I think it's like $35 a month in 2021. So there has been some movement in that specifically.
He's talked about allowing us to import drugs from other countries from Canada to reduce
the cost of drugs to increase competition.
That has not happened, but he has talked about it.
He's talked about this sort of like generally lowering drug costs through
transparency kind of thing so we can negotiate for better prices and there'll be
more competition. These things have not happened. There were in the at the end of
2018 some there were some reduce like reductions in the price of some drugs as
a result of some of the things he was talking about, but then at the beginning of 2019, we saw like 450 drugs increased in cost. So, you know,
no changes so far, but that's certainly something that he spends a lot of time talking about.
He did make it so that he removed, it used to be that your pharmacist could not tell you if
you were getting a prescription, that there was a generic that would be equivalent to it that would be cheaper.
And he did remove that so that your pharmacist can tell you, hi, this is a brand name
drug.
Here's the same thing that's generic and it's cheaper for you.
Would you like it?
Now you can do that.
Biden wants to allow for the government to negotiate for better drug prices like through
Medicare.
That's been a big thing that Democrats have pushed for a long time and Republicans have
historically opposed.
He wants to cap the cost of drugs sort of like we would create a board.
I guess this is similar to what they do in Germany is my understanding where there's
like a board that decides for a new drug what would a fair free market price for this
drug be.
And then actually that's what it could, that's what they could charge.
And you can't increase the cost of drugs
beyond what inflation would dictate.
So just a bunch of different ways of saying
pharmaceutical companies, you can't charge any more
than this for your drugs.
So that's another, and then there are other ways
that would affect prescription drugs
through these plans we're gonna talk about
through the ACA and stuff like that.
But those are sort of the direct prescription drug proposals.
Speaking of the ACA, the Affordable Care Act.
You mean Obamacare?
Yes, Obamacare.
Repealing the Affordable Care Act, the ACA, Obamacare,
whatever you wanna call it, has been... I'll stick with Obamacare, whatever you want to call it, has been...
I'll stick with Obamacare, thanks, Sydney.
Has been a major goal of the Trump presidency since the beginning, right?
Like he said that from the beginning.
Yeah, when I repealed the failing Obamacare.
Yes, one of the first things he did was repeal the mandate that made people buy in.
And then since then there hasn't been a ton of movement.
If you remember in 2017 there was the whole repeal and replace thing and it failed in
Congress and that's kind of been the end of it for a while.
The reason for this, by the way, is that every year since then the ACA gets more popular
according to polling.
So it's a hard thing politically.
I know.
Well, I mean, that's the thing.
Once you give people access to health care,
they really don't want to let it go.
And that's what repealing it would mean.
And so people can be so selfish.
You know what I mean?
They just get addicted to it.
It's a tough, it's a tough political thing
because it is becoming so popular that to repeal
it will be bad for the party or president that does that.
So but still the Trump has said he wants to repeal the ACA.
The Supreme Court will likely do that at his behest.
I assume that's how they operate now, a week after the election.
The ACA will come up and the thought is that we probably will see the end of the Affordable
Care Act at the hands of SCOTUS a week after the election.
This will of course remove health care from about 20 million Americans
that will remove protection for preexisting conditions. So you can be denied coverage again
if you have a preexisting condition, which in an existential sense, by the way, we all do
just saying. The concept of preexisting conditions is so American
We all have preexisting conditions. We were born. So I'm just saying this the phrase shouldn't exist It shouldn't be a consideration
But and the lives as he's my preexisting condition
The curse of breath given to me by my mother without my consent
I'm just saying. Freaking dark, said. Have you been awake?
Yeah.
Fair.
So and then something that my sister Riley is very upset about kids can't remain on their
parents' insurance until 26 as they currently can. That's going to go away. So that will
be a bummer. There is no one clear replacement. That's the that's been the question, right? Trump keeps saying
he has this big beautiful plan to replace it. And people have been asking it and you can look through
this isn't me making this up. Since I mean since the beginning of his campaign for president
the first time he said he'll have a plan. In the last year he's made multiple references to this plan that it's coming two weeks,
it's usually a time frame we're given, it's coming out in the next two weeks.
My big beautiful plan.
It's never, we don't have a plan at this point, like what exactly will happen when the ACA
is gone.
Trump really likes, this is one thing he has tried to push, are these sort of like short-term,
low-cost plans that you can find these like private little plans that you can buy
that don't cost a lot upfront, don't necessarily provide the best coverage in the world, sort
of like disaster coverage plans, like this is just in case something really terrible happens
kind of plans. Like the kind of car insurance
you see cartoons selling sometimes yeah same idea same idea and then
They these plans for the most part don't allow people with preexisting conditions to enroll
So it it would not that part of it has not been addressed his plan for what what does everybody with preexisting
Condition do once this is once this goes away is not been addressed, his plan for what does everybody with preexisting condition do once this is, once this goes away, has not been made clear.
There was a recent executive order that stated that the United States government
policy is to protect, protect people with preexisting conditions,
but it's just, that's the thing about executive orders.
If they're not coupled with some sort of legislation to like make them happen, then it's
just, I mean, you may as well just like quilt it or something.
Like it's a needle point.
You know what I mean?
Like you have to, it would look nice on your wall, but it doesn't, you've got to,
not going to pay for my answer.
No, no. Biden wants to do the opposite.
He doesn't want to end the ACA.
He wants to expand the Affordable Care Act.
Basically, build on it.
He calls it the Biden plan.
So, it's from Obamacare to, I guess it will be Bidencare.
It'll be Obamacare.
Obamacare.
The way without getting into all the exact dollar amounts
and percentages, the goal, and
you can read all those if you're interested in the numbers.
But the goal is to decrease premiums because a lot of people said that the premiums were
so high on the Affordable Care Act plans that they couldn't afford them.
So decreased premiums provide the same federal standards.
That's been a big thing.
A big part of Affordable Care Act was saying,
if you're gonna have health insurance,
it should cover these basic things.
And if it doesn't cover these basic things,
it's not health insurance, and you can't call it that.
He wants to keep those standards,
decrease the cost to patients.
He also wants to create the big thing
other than these little tweaks to Obamacare. He wants to create a public option. That's the big thing other than these little tweaks to Obamacare.
He wants to create a public option.
That's the big thing.
That's the thing that the insurance companies hate and are lobbying against him.
That's what if you see ads, I keep getting these pushed to me on Twitter from America's
healthcare, future or something.
Anyway, it's a lobbying group that represents
largely insurance companies, hospitals,
pharmaceutical companies who don't want this public option.
The idea is that it would be like Medicare,
but for everyone else who wants it.
Like not just over 65.
Anybody who wants it, you can sign on,
it's a government program.
They can negotiate for costs that are lower
and hopefully compete with commercial insurances.
It is.
Is why I dried in on end of single pay.
Okay, you see why it gets so much opposition
because it is a very, very tiny baby step
in the direction of single-payer healthcare.
Of bringing our system in line with every other industrialized nation.
Yes.
There's more.
Oh, I want to hear about it.
But ironically, this is the time to go to the Belly department.
Let's go.
The medicine, the medicines.
I left this file on my other computer.
I'm sorry. It'll be the right music next week.
What else do we have to cover, Sid?
What else is on the docket?
Medicare.
Medicare.
Now which one is that?
How many remember?
Medicare is for people over 65.
Got it.
You care about your grandparents.
Yeah, but Medicaid is for people who fall within a certain level of the poverty line
And I also care about those people. Yeah, but like I'm just trying to think of a mnemonic. You have a better one, please let me know
Medicare is an area that I think I think both both camps could really talk about a little more because
in 2024 the the thought currently
at the rate we're going, Medicare's gonna be insolvent.
Mm, a lot of boomers.
That's when we switch okay, boomer, two thanks boomer.
Thanks, boomers.
No, I'm kidding.
I believe in taking care of boomers.
And everybody else.
I love my parents.
Yeah, I want to take care of them.
They've got a doctor though. It's you, yeah. No, I'm love my parents. Yeah, I want to take care of them. They've got a doctor though.
It's you.
No, I'm not.
I am not my parents doctor.
So in 2024, Medicare is going to run out of money.
And so we need a plan.
We need to put some money there.
We need a plan to fix that.
And so far, a lot of the Trump economic policies,
like tax cuts have actually kind of accelerated us in that direction.
He hopes that the wealthy,
1% of Americans will take care of us in our own need.
I'm sure they will.
That's how it trickles down.
You're gonna rush to our aid.
He tried to offset that somewhat
by cutting reimbursements for outpatient visits.
If you're a physician out there right now,
you're screaming, basically saying like,
well, what we'll just say is that when a patient
goes and sees their doctor outpatient,
Medicare will just pay them less.
And that will be a good way to save money.
From a family physician, thank you so much.
And that he will also, his plan, his budget that he has proposed
would cut Medicare spending by about 450 billion over the next decade. So we're going to spend
less on Medicare. Also because the Affordable Care Act is getting repealed in, this is assuming that Trump wins
and all this stuff comes to be,
the donut hole, which if you were on Medicare,
you know what that is, it was like Medicare covered up
to a certain amount when it came to meds.
And then like, there was this hole
where it was like, now you take over for a while,
good luck, senior citizen.
And then after you racked up enough debt,
then it came back. I was like,
okay, we're back. We're going to take care of you again. The donut hole would be reopened
because the Affordable Care Act closed it. So that would increase out of pocket costs for
recipients of Medicare. Biden promises to protect Medicare. He promises also to lower the age of
enrollment to 60. Yes, It'd be a big change.
And as many people have pointed out, cost more.
Yeah, a lot more.
Yeah, and we're-
We're five more.
And we're-
By my rough math.
He has said that this would be paid for through different taxes
than what we, this would be paid like the people from 60 to 64 who choose.
It would be an option.
You wouldn't be forced, but we had an option.
It would be paid for slightly differently than the rest of the Medicare program is the
plan.
There's also a lot, when you get into these sort of government programs, you have to start
thinking about things like payroll taxes and how much the federal government taxes different
things that are used to pay for these programs that Trump has spent a lot of time trying to
take away these taxes and Biden probably would
reinstate some of those taxes.
And when I'm talking about, I'm largely talking about businesses and the very, very wealthy.
I am not talking about you or me.
But anyway, so that would also help with some of these payment problems.
He will also add vision
dental and hearing benefits to Medicare. That seems good. Which again, I don't know how
all this gets paid for, but that would be awesome. Sure. That is a huge problem in case
you are not familiar, Medicare doesn't cover any of those things. How did people give
it? They don't, honey. They just don't, or they buy a supplemental insurance plan, or they pay out of pocket if
they can.
Well, I think we should figure that out.
Or as we'll get to, they go to the ER.
Under Trump, Medicaid has been cut and would likely continue to be cut.
That is a program that he would like to privatize ultimately. This has
kind of been attempted with like, we'll offer states these sort of private
parendown Medicaid sort of plans where like they don't have to cover very much.
Again, the idea is like, well, for people who can't afford health care, we'll just give them
the bare necessities.
And we won't have any standards as to what that has to look like.
It's to deregulate insurance companies more so that they can offer you crappy plans.
Bad ones.
Bad ones.
And states were offered like block grants to go ahead and do this.
No state has taken them up on it, but I don't know, maybe they would next year.
And also they want to add work requirements for Medicaid.
You can't get it unless you're working.
And then with the end of the Affordable Care Act, everybody who got Medicaid under the
expansion will lose it.
That's what's going to impact a lot of us here,
like where we live in West Virginia,
in states like ours, states where a lot of people
do live in poverty.
The Medicaid expansion, I can't tell you the impact
I personally saw it have in our community.
How many people, through a free clinic,
I knew we serviced, who got Medicaid under that expansion.
How many clinics had to convert to a way to take Medicaid because there were so few people
left that didn't have any insurance at all because of the Medicaid expansion.
When that gets rolled back, that's going to be devastating to states like ours, who are
strangely part of the lawsuit that is being brought before the Supreme Court to repeal the ACA.
Huh, that's so weird.
Yeah.
Under Biden, Medicaid would be expanded automatically to everybody in a state who didn't accept the original expansion under the ACA.
They're like 13 states that didn't take it.
All those people in those states would get Medicaid.
And it would get more funding.
Other big differences, so other than these kind of big programs, the big ways that we
pay for healthcare and how we get it and all that kind of stuff, other big differences
in regard to specific healthcare services.
Abortion is a big difference when it comes to Biden's plan, he wants to stop like the
global gag rule where you're not allowed to like,
we're not going to give funding to any organizations that also provide abortion services or that,
you know, talk about abortion services or anything like that. Repeal the high amendment,
make sure federal funds can go to Planned Parenthood again and protect the right
to a safe and legal abortion
for everyone who desires it.
A couple of other policy priorities that he's named,
he wants to address the maternal mortality rate in our country,
which is higher than it should be, than you would expect.
Especially among people of color, he wants to stop the ability,
currently, of healthcare providers to wants to stop the ability currently of health care providers to refuse
to care for somebody because of their gender or sexual orientation or HIV status. Obviously
he does not agree with that. And then some like non-specific key supports community health
centers, mental health services, expand that kind of care and coverage, addiction services.
mental health services, expand that kind of care and coverage, addiction services, those kinds of things. Again, I don't know the specific plans for each one of those points, but
those are mentioned as his some policy priorities. Trump, in, I would say, on the other hand, has
made efforts to restrict the right of an individual to abortion services.
And I would say most obviously through the appointment of our most recent Scotus Justice,
Supreme Court of the United States Justice, it seems like the goal is to restrict or completely prohibit abortion altogether.
Seems to be where we're headed.
That would be my assumption.
And then these other issues that I mentioned
have not really been made policy priorities for Trump.
He's talked a lot about the opioid epidemic
and services to people in regards to stopping drugs
from getting into our country and that kind of thing. But as far as like,
I don't know what exactly the policy plans are to, to like expand addiction services and
treatment facilities and that kind of thing. It's more think the question to ask yourself, uh, if you can't decide who to vote for, or if
someone else, uh, can't, uh, a couple, and it, when it comes to healthcare, here are
a couple questions.
First of all, do you feel like Trump has handled the pandemic well and do you want to
continue in this manner?
Are you waiting for me to answer?
Yeah.
I think it's okay.
No.
Yes.
And I think I say, do you feel like
how's Trump handled the pandemic?
Well, there are multiple indicators
that the US has fared very poorly in the pandemic
compared to other countries.
Yes.
We have had a disproportionate number of cases and deaths.
Yeah, we did a bad job.
So I would say no, bad.
Do you feel like you have reliable access
to easily affordable health care services
and that you're financially prepared
to handle an unexpected major health care cost?
Because if you feel like you aren't,
I don't think Trump has put forth anything to fix that.
Biden has plans that could fix that. I don't think either of them have a plan that provides
healthcare for every single human in this country, absolutely affordable all the time. But
I don't think Trump has any answer to that. If your answer is no, I don't know how he gets you there.
And do you believe that healthcare is a writer of privilege?
Right.
I think that's what it gets down to.
So as you alluded to, the Biden plan is not socialized medicine.
It's not Medicare for all.
It's not single-payer healthcare of which I have said I am a
proponent
That is not what Joe Biden is proposing. It definitely is a tiny little step in that direction, right?
Right. Just the tiniest of steps with with the public option the idea that the government would provide a safety net for everybody
Not just if you qualify based on age or economic status,
but for everybody.
So we're still using like a patchwork method,
like a little bit of this program,
a little bit of this funding,
a little bit of that, and we all come together,
and it will leave holes,
and people will fall through those holes.
And those people will either get sick and not get care,
or they'll go to the ER.
The Trump collection of ideas moves us further away from that,
I would say, and it treats healthcare a lot more like a product.
You can buy a better healthcare product if you have more money.
And if you don't have any money, you can't buy one at all.
With a free market, there are winners and there are losers. That's the that's the whole thing.
This is not a political statement. It's just the way it works. And if you accept the health care should be left up to the free market, people will lose. And when I say lose, I mean they will
get sick and not get care or they will get sick
and die or they will get sick and go to the emergency room. Which is what that's the one thing I would
I would think if you think the healthcare system is working. Maybe there are some people who do.
If you think our healthcare system is working in the United States for patients and for those of
us in the healthcare field. Because it is working.
It's working the way it's intended.
A lot of people are making a lot of money off this system.
And that is what it is intended to do.
But if you have a problem with it,
or if you don't think you have a problem with it,
if you think it's fine, I would think about this.
So in the history of US healthcare,
and we have a whole episode about how we got to where we are with health insurance
So I'm not going to belabor that point
But basically in the 20th century we started with employer-based health insurance as like a perk an extra perk that might attract workers
Since then there have been multiple efforts made to provide for government-funded universal healthcare
I mean this is not the first time we've been having this discussion
FDR tried true man tried funded universal healthcare. I mean, this is not the first time we've been having this discussion.
FDR tried, true man tried, Reagan really fought it hard.
Johnson got people on board with the idea,
but only for people over 65, which is Medicare.
Nixon tried, Clinton tried, Obama got us closest
with the ACA but
Obviously, that's not where we are and these efforts by the way have been routinely opposed not just by like who you'd expect the insurance
Companies and the hospitals and the pharmaceutical companies the American Medical Association
Historically has opposed every one of these presidents that I just named who tried to make
Universal health care a thing.
So the doctors were fighting it all along.
But in 1986, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act
was passed. You may have heard it called Mtala.
And what it said is, if you are sick and you go to the ER,
they can't turn you away because you can't pay.
They have to take care of you, even if they know
they're never going to get paid for it.
So, but that's not funded.
The government's not gonna give any money for that.
It's just a mandate.
You have to take care of them.
How will you get paid?
I don't know.
We don't care.
We're just saying you have to take care of them.
And so the result is you go, you get care,
and then you get a bill, and it's wildly high, right?
And you can't pay it.
So the hospital doesn't get paid for that.
And you have debt collectors chasing you forever.
So what do they do?
They increase costs for everybody else to make up for the fact.
So you pay $8 for a Tylenol or your insurance company
does to make up for the fact that they're not getting any money from some people who
can't afford to pay them. So everybody's cost are increased, everybody's care is
affected, nobody gets preventive services in this situation, nobody gets the
kind of like regular maintenance health care that would keep them out of the
ER possibly in the first place. So we already have universal health care in the form of the of an incredibly expensive
emergency room visit that is just aimed at stabilizing you and saving your life, not
at providing any sort of long-term care. That's just not what they do. So that's so it's
broken. We're already doing that. We're doing it in the least effective way possible. We have to change it.
We have to fix something.
We have to move forward in a way that promotes general health
and provides preventive services and closes all these holes
and fills all these gaps.
We can't just go back to the way we were
before the Affordable Care Act where things were even worse.
So without my guess, I'm just, this point should really be, there is no plan moving forward
with the current administration as to how do we take care of people.
And if you don't believe the health care is the right, then I guess it doesn't matter.
You don't care. It's fine. If you can pay for health care, then I guess it doesn't matter. You don't care.
It's fine.
If you can pay for health care, then you're fine with it and those who can't.
I guess that's what they deserve.
But if you do believe the health care is a right, then we have to do something.
We have to have a plan.
And also the coronavirus thing.
Well, yeah, also we're in the midst of a deadly pandemic and it's getting worse. And I love vaccines.
I will get the vaccine.
I am not hesitant about that.
I trust the scientists.
I trust Dr. Fauci.
I'll get the vaccine.
But that's not enough.
There's a lot more to health care than just this one vaccine.
So please go over to a Biden Biden because that'd be better.
Whether I kept it secret until now, but that's what I think we've never
officially endorsed a candidate here. So what a thrilling changes is,
well, the New England Journal of Medicine did. Yeah. So why not?
So once, thank you so much for listening to our podcast.
We hope you have learned something
and you can take that out of the world
and spread the word to other people.
I should maybe share the link to this episode
and say, hey, here's what's at stake,
because it's scary.
Thanks to taxpayers for these
that are some medicines
as the intro and outro program.
And thanks to you for listening.
We really appreciate you.
Please go vote.
Please go vote. Well, next time we talk to you, listening. We really appreciate you. Please go vote. Please go vote.
Well, next time we talk to you, we'll be on the other side.
It's gonna be a wildly different tone.
One way or another.
Let's get back to the fun medicine episodes.
Come on everybody, let's do some weird stuff again.
I really just wanna talk about eating mommies again.
Please America, let us go back to eating mommies.
That's what's really at stake in this election.
Thank you for listening.
And be sure to go to the next time for some moments.
Until then, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright!
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