Front Office Football Central  

Go Back   Front Office Football Central > Archives > FOFC Archive
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read Statistics

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 03-04-2010, 01:53 PM   #1
Airhog
Captain Obvious
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Norman, Oklahoma
If colleges worked like health care

If Colleges Worked Like Health Care - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com
__________________

Thread Killer extraordinaire


Yay! its football season once again!

Airhog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2010, 02:11 PM   #2
albionmoonlight
Head Coach
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: North Carolina
If health care worked like college, I think that we'd probably have a lot more advances in the medical marijuana area and doctor's offices would be open from 2:00 in the afternoon until 4:00 in the morning.
albionmoonlight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2010, 02:12 PM   #3
digamma
Torchbearer
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: On Lake Harriet
Well, there would be morning clinics, but they would be sparsely attended.
digamma is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2010, 02:21 PM   #4
sterlingice
Hall Of Famer
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Back in Houston!
That's kindof stacking up one dysfunctional model versus another.

SI
__________________
Houston Hippopotami, III.3: 20th Anniversary Thread - All former HT players are encouraged to check it out!

Janos: "Only America could produce an imbecile of your caliber!"
Freakazoid: "That's because we make lots of things better than other people!"


sterlingice is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2010, 02:27 PM   #5
Passacaglia
Coordinator
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Big Ten Country
What if apples grew like tomatoes? That would be weird, too.
Passacaglia is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2010, 06:59 PM   #6
gstelmack
Pro Starter
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Cary, NC
Quote:
Originally Posted by article
Correctly viewed, a modern university is a prepaid, staff-model, pedagogic group practice – the educational analogue of a staff-model health maintenance organization, or H.M.O., like the Kaiser Permanente Health Plan. Like H.M.O.’s, which are prepaid an annual capitation for all of an insured person’s medically needed services, universities are prepaid one annual tuition fee for all the pedagogic services going into the education of the student.

Well, first off HMO's suck because they take your money and have a huge incentive to NOT treat you when you are sick. That's how they make a profit. I had ONE experience with an HMO and it was NOT pretty.

Second, colleges are NOT that model. You pay tuition per class, room & board is separate, meals are separate, books are separate. I can control costs based on how many hours I attend, what I choose to eat, and where I choose to live. College is more like how BCBS NC handles pregnancy - one copay per "illness", which means we paid once at the start of the pregnancy and not another dime throughout it. Get sick with something else, you pay for that separately.

But yes, doctors charging for every little thing they see you for rather than for their time leads to a lot of the insane billing we have now. I don't know if that is the fault of the doctors or the insurance companies.
__________________
-- Greg
-- Author of various FOF utilities
gstelmack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2010, 09:33 AM   #7
flere-imsaho
Coordinator
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Chicagoland
Quote:
Originally Posted by gstelmack View Post
But yes, doctors charging for every little thing they see you for rather than for their time leads to a lot of the insane billing we have now. I don't know if that is the fault of the doctors or the insurance companies.

I'm pretty sure the fault lies with the insurance companies. Since doctors pretty much universally hate paperwork I can't imagine they'd really be into nickel-and-dimeing their patients.

I'd restate the question by asking if this bill-by-item approach is done on purpose by insurance companies (i.e. generate revenue through nickel-and-dimeing), or if it's just a consequence of how they have to do business.

I would imagine that, to an insurance company, insanely detailed billing is preferable to, say, time-based or outcome-based payments because it's black-and-white. If a doctor did X, Y and Z, they pay for X, Y and Z. If he sees patients for 8 hours, did he do it well?

I also suspect that itemizing also allows insurance companies to dictate certain courses of treatment and/or uses of equipment, so as to save costs, and that this is appealing to them (for obvious reasons).
flere-imsaho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-05-2010, 10:29 AM   #8
Noop
Bonafide Seminole Fan
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Miami
College is a scam.
__________________
Subby's favorite woman hater.
Noop is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:15 PM.



Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.