Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#46
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The statistics cited in the post above are for applications, not individuals. Most candidates apply to 5,10,15 or even more schools, so the total number of applications far exceeds the number of applicants. |
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#47
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Here's my take on why the ACA did not fix the healthcare system.
I have often heard the ACA was designed to fail so that the American general public would be asking for total government control - "Medicare for All." Before the ACA, there were many people with pre-existing health conditions who could not obtain health insurance or afford healthcare. The ACA addressed that by offering coverage to all and requiring everyone to have coverage. Requiring all to pay was later found unconstitutional. Therfore, many people don't pay into it, and the premiums and deductibles have skyrocketed. People who can afford to pay will purchase the health insurance, while others either qualify for subsidies or skip coverage. Basically those who have $ are paying for those who do not. I know my family has suffered these astronomical premiums and never reach our deductible. We do not yet qualify for Medicare. We did not have an employer plan and are limited to the plans on the ACA exchange. Here in Florida we have Florida Blue and I have not found a decent provider to take it. As we approach age 65, the premiums skyrocket based on what I consider a pre-existing condition I cannot control - my age. None of the other conditions matter. Nevermind if we are extremely healthy and in our early sixties. Yet those who are most likely to use the health insurance (those with pre-existing conditions), are not charged any more for their high risk. Government regulations and insurance company involvement drive up the cost of healthcare. Insurance companies donate to government office holders and this cycle continues. You could say the ACA was successful in making health insurance affordable to those who could not obtain it before. Insurance is not healthcare, as many found out. Some of these people have subsidies for low premiums and deductibles and yet they still cannot afford the bills. That's my take from what I've seen FWIW, and I'm sure some will disagree. |
#48
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Or PA. My personal belief you can’t go wrong with either. |
#49
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Unfortunately , you can.
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#50
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Regarding the ACA, I don't think the costliest increase was the elimination of pre-existing conditions...because if the plans are affordable, many people will buy them and not have pre-existing conditions. But the elimination of the individual mandate ensured that the population on ACA plans were sicker and costlier individuals. If everyone was required to have a plan, the costs would be spread over more plans with healthier/younger people.
I know some people will say that the healthy are subsiding the unhealthy. While this may be true, none of us really knows when we may go from being healthy to not as healthy. So much of the total medical spend in this country is for people in the final year of life. So no matter what, we all pay for that. As for Florida, I believe that there is a math problem which manifests itself in several ways, and one of them is health care. There are so many people moving here and the growth has been so fast that medical care can't keep up with population growth. The same percentage of physicians would have to be moving here as the rest of the population, but I don't think physicians are as likely to give up a job or location they have been in as the rest of the population so this is one of several areas FL has to play catch up. I am stating my opinion, not claiming to know it all or stating hard facts or statistics. As always and as my wife will happily verify, I could be wrong. |
#51
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#52
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#53
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Both my wife and I are on an Advantage plan and are satisfied with it. We live outside the Villages in the Ocala area. We both have been able to get referrals to specialists when needed. We've also been to an urgent care center and the PA there was also very good. We both use the annual blood panel test to modify our lifestyle and eating habits as necessary in lieu of taking a script to cover up a symptom.
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#54
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Quite interested in your take on foreign applicants for local positions, especially as we have a niece in her second year of residency in Bangkok, Thailand, and who is looking to emigrate to America once her degree is finished. I heard that the local hospital is (or was) offering $10,000 for a referral of any applicant for the position of MD, if it would be his or her first position after fulfilling degree requirements and if that person is hired. She is looking at coming to Florida, specifically here. Do you know anything about this? |
#55
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#56
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#57
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#58
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Less than 2% of successful applicants to US Medical Schools are not US citizens or non permanent resident. Some of those, perhaps many are primary speakers of English. Many others speak English better than those born here. The data does not answer your question as to what undergraduate school these non citizens attended. Would University of Toronto, or McGill, or Oxford be a problem? How about Jamaica.. an English speaking country. Tell us how you feel about a US citizen attending a non US undergraduate school then applying to a US medical school. Is that a problem for you? You asked about that situation as if it is one. It apparently is not for US medical schools as per the last report I found looking at that exact issue, a higher percentage of US citizens who attended school abroad were admitted to medical school than those that stayed in the USA. https://www.aamc.org/media/5961/download?attachment If you want data, the AAMC has a button you can click and they will produce any data set you request if they are able. Data & Reports | AAMC
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Men plug the dikes of their most needed beliefs with whatever mud they can find. - Clifford Geertz |
#59
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#60
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I’ve seen a lot of praise for The Villages, and the Morse family and their genius in planning such a place and the continued expansion but one thing they lacked foresight on was that a predominantly senior population needs a lot of medical care, hospitals, clinics, doctors, nurses, medical technicians, etc. A doctor told me that central Florida just isn’t a place that attracts the best and brightest and those doctors with families don’t relish living amidst a senior community of 125,000 and growing. No, they did not think this aspect through, nor the fact that most seniors are living longer now, many well into their 90’s, and there would not be the “turnover” they anticipated when they made their best laid plans. |
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