| ▲ | atahanacar 5 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
>The big-medicine industrial complex is always trying to get you to have worse health so they can maximize how much they bill you when you finally break. Ok, if this is the argument that you want to use, here is a counterargument that completely destroys your viewpoint. Most civilized countries don't bill the patient, and it is entirely funded by either taxes or mandatory public insurance. So just like how it is in "big-medicine industrial complex's" best interest to maximize profits, it is in the health system's best interest to lower cost. So if whole-body scans for otherwise healthy (as in no symptoms) people means less profit for those companies, it means less cost for the health system, which would mean they would be promoting (or even requiring) whole-body scans. MRI machines are much cheaper than doctors. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | OutOfHere 5 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
The big-medicine industrial complex in this context is not the insurance firm, whether public or private. It is the biomedical firms that are developing expensive new treatments costing five, six, or seven digit dollars per patient per year, and these firms very much would prefer if you didn't take steps to catch conditions early or prevent them cheaply. | |||||||||||||||||
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