In most cases, when a person dies, there was an option to save them. Killed by a disease? With enough money, best doctors and medicine could be bought to save them.
What do you mean with “best doctor” in this case. Do you mean more than just a doctor who know which clinical trial says which drug is best for a particular condition?
Killed by an obesity caused by unhealthy life style? I am sure that with enough money, something could be done to prevent this, too.
There no straightforward way to throw money at the problem of obesity to solve it. Gastric bypass surgery might work to reduce the weight but it has it’s own disadvantages and I wouldn’t call it buying health.
I don’t think that there are many cases where you can simply buy a life in a country with a health system like Germany for $1 000 000.
What do you mean with “best doctor” in this case. Do you mean more than just a doctor who know which clinical trial says which drug is best for a particular condition?
You’re leaving out the possibility of needing to shuffle through a number of doctors to get a competent diagnosis. It’s a fairly frequent problem in the US. I don’t know how common it is in Germany.
Gastric bypass surgery might work to reduce the weight but it has it’s own advantages
You’re leaving out the possibility of needing to shuffle through a number of doctors to get a competent diagnosis. It’s a fairly frequent problem in the US. I don’t know how common it is in Germany.
Do you have a source that describes how US millionaires go through 10 doctors to get a correct diagnosis?
I think most of the time in Germany what stopping people from going to more doctors isn’t financial but the fact that they trust a doctor.
I don’t have a source for how many non-millionaires in the US have to go through a number of doctors to get a correct diagnosis—I just know a fair number of people (some online-only) who’ve done it. They probably have average or better incomes, though it would be worth checking. It isn’t a cheap process, at least in terms of time, and I’m guessing that poor people are less likely to have the self-assurance to do it.
Your assumption is that the difference in Germany is in the degree of trust in doctors rather than better diagnosis?
I don’t have a source for how many non-millionaires in the US have to go through a number of doctors to get a correct diagnosis—I just know a fair number of people (some online-only) who’ve done it.
I would guess that thing that separtes those people that you know online from the average person isn’t only that the have more money but that the make decisions differently than the average person.
What do you mean with “best doctor” in this case. Do you mean more than just a doctor who know which clinical trial says which drug is best for a particular condition?
There no straightforward way to throw money at the problem of obesity to solve it. Gastric bypass surgery might work to reduce the weight but it has it’s own disadvantages and I wouldn’t call it buying health.
I don’t think that there are many cases where you can simply buy a life in a country with a health system like Germany for $1 000 000.
You’re leaving out the possibility of needing to shuffle through a number of doctors to get a competent diagnosis. It’s a fairly frequent problem in the US. I don’t know how common it is in Germany.
Typo: I think you mean disadvantages.
Do you have a source that describes how US millionaires go through 10 doctors to get a correct diagnosis? I think most of the time in Germany what stopping people from going to more doctors isn’t financial but the fact that they trust a doctor.
Fixed.
I don’t have a source for how many non-millionaires in the US have to go through a number of doctors to get a correct diagnosis—I just know a fair number of people (some online-only) who’ve done it. They probably have average or better incomes, though it would be worth checking. It isn’t a cheap process, at least in terms of time, and I’m guessing that poor people are less likely to have the self-assurance to do it.
Your assumption is that the difference in Germany is in the degree of trust in doctors rather than better diagnosis?
I would guess that thing that separtes those people that you know online from the average person isn’t only that the have more money but that the make decisions differently than the average person.
Is that because Germany has more competent doctors, or because Germans trust their doctors even when they shouldn’t?
How does a non expert judge the competence of an expert?
Well, seeing if the doctor’s recommendations help the problem is one way.
Like this? (I’d guess Germany would be somewhere between France and Sweden.)
Your link just goes to the OP, I assume you meant to link something else.
D’oh! Fixed. Thanks.