On the contrary, Happy, I think most of us would have a lot of sympathy with that view.I would be happy if some people were excluded from health cover.
Those who do not look after their health and then have medical procedures like bypass surgery, or lap-band surgery, or somebody who drives 200 k an hour and then needs 24/7 care.
(Suspect this view will not be very popular)
Emergencies do not matter - you get the same treatment public or private (if my assumption is wrong, happy to be corrected). If I need a knee reconstruction, my understanding is that I can go straight into private, pay a gap and get it done. If I go public, a long waiting list and doctors less likely to recommend, although it is free. Again if I am wrong, happy to be corrected......
...Emergencies do not matter - you get the same treatment public or private (if my assumption is wrong, happy to be corrected). ...
Nah, you have to pay upfront, not just the gap. It's in the several thousands of dollars.
I'm waiting for a knee reconstruction on the public system, currently. I'm category 2 or something, which means not longer than 90 days wait, but more likely about 6 months.
In retrospect it was very stupid, and lazy, to be playing competitive sport without private health.
Exactly. I once had the unpleasant experience of being in a regional hospital ED and being initially seen by an intern who looked about 15 and had very limited English. He seemed to have as much difficulty understanding me as I did him. The worry really started when he disappeared and then returned with a copy of "Diagnostic Information for Students"! At that stage I asked the nurse to find someone of at least Registrar status.. Most public systems are at the brink of collapse. The last thing you want is to be treated by some overseas doc, that can't speak a work of English and has 100 other patients to attend to.
Thanks for that, Wavesurfer. Does this apply in Qld regional hospitals or just in the cities?Julia, private doctors/surgeons etc.. are on call 24/7. Most private hospitals also have ED's
Exactly. I once had the unpleasant experience of being in a regional hospital ED and being initially seen by an intern who looked about 15 and had very limited English. He seemed to have as much difficulty understanding me as I did him. The worry really started when he disappeared and then returned with a copy of "Diagnostic Information for Students"! At that stage I asked the nurse to find someone of at least Registrar status.
Thanks for that, Wavesurfer. Does this apply in Qld regional hospitals or just in the cities?
Cover for surplus as health reform rescued
Sue Dunlevy From: The Australian February 10, 2012
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...h-reform-rescued/story-fn59niix-1226267240902
"..Health insurers have predicted 1.6 million health fund members would quit their health cover over the next five years if the means test goes ahead.
Mr Davis told state parliament yesterday if tens of thousands of Victorians dropped or reduced their cover because of the means test, "there would be a significant impact on the public health system".
"That would necessarily put greater pressure on the public health system, emergency departments, elective surgery lists and so forth," Mr Davis said.
Australian Medical Association chief Steve Hambleton said if the means test increased the pressure on public hospitals, the federal government should have to top up public hospital funding.
Opposition health spokesman Peter Dutton said many Australians would face higher premiums as a result of the means test and younger and healthier people might quit their cover, pushing up premiums for everyone else. "Half the nation has private health insurance and if you drive people out of private health insurance on to the public system that's already overstretched, we'll just get bad health outcomes..."
Prawn, if you drop out, don't the premiums if you decide to rejoin later come in at a higher level than if you'd stayed insured? I might be wrong but thought that was the case.
I think that only happens once you hit 30.
Correct.
My premiums will not rise based on age for another 5 years, so if this goes through i will need to re-assess if the tax break is worth having private health
At my age we will definitely keep our Private health.
Personally I think it represents fantastic value.
I claim back at least 60% through Chiro/Optometry/Massage/Dental a year.
Plus I have in the background full cover for emergencies.
This was bought home clearly last year when our good friend Kathy died of Cancer after a 2 yr struggle. She had canceled her private health 2 mths before diagnosis!!
I remember her frustration as she was being treated by Foreign doctors whom she could not understand. Their ability or willingness to answer questions basically non existent.
Once told there was nothing they could do for her she was basically ignored!!!
My wife had/has a benign tumor in her liver. While we didn't know that it was benign initially the level of service was far better in the private sector. As you can imagine very stressful---more evidently for me than Princess---who thought she was fine from the beginning. The whole diagnostic process was completed in 3 weeks.
Including the Xmas break where the specialist spent in Hongkong.
Youll be glad you have it if you ever need it.
So if you can afford it make it a priority.
If youve ever flown Business class over cattle class youll get the idea!
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