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Pete Huck's avatar

If Katelyn says “here’s a link” I’m going to watch. This was an exceptional presentation by General Perna. The right person, in the right place, at the right time during a crisis. Very refreshing to watch if you are tired of listening to the endless blather from politicians. His take on leadership, and the collection and use of actionable data, is truly inspiring.

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Noway2's avatar

No doubt to say the logistics of the 2021 roll out were gargantuan would be an understatement.

As for today, as you put it, "This is due to a massive shift: vaccines are now commercialized." This reminds me of your other recent post about being careful comparing the US to other countries and how the CDC (or as it has come to be known in my social circles, Center for Disease Creation) made vastly different recommendations than the rest of the modernized world. In that post, you indicated it was because in every measurable metric the US ranks dead last in terms of quality and outcome of healthcare. The US is also the only one that relies of insurance for funding (more on this in a second) in a healthcare for profit industry. So, it is not surprising that this for-profit care industry would do an equally spectacular job with a mass vaccine roll out. Color me shocked, I tell you. Prior to 2020, the political right wing used to crow about how the US had the best healthcare in the world. Thankfully they've gone silent on that one.

As far as insurance, I have long said that it is the wrong financial vehicle for healthcare, especially routine healthcare. Using oil changes as an analogy, which can be considered a form of routine health maintenance for your vehicle, if we were to fund oil changes like we fund healthcare, you would buy a policy with a $100 per month premium to get an oil change every three months. The mechanic would bill the insurance company $500, and they would negotiate it down behind the scenes to $50. While this may sound absurd, if you look at how much most insured people are paying, either directly or through their employer (compensation not seen in their take home) versus how much the care they receive costs ... the parallels should be apparent.

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