For everybody living under socialized medicine |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 13:32 | |
Personally, I am satisfied.
The NHS has never let me down. I don't have to wait for GP appointments, but then I've never had to go to hospital for anything serious. Of course it's all down to personal experience, and ones perspective. There are still long waiting times for some non urgent surgical procedures. We also have a panel who assess the 'value for money' of drugs; notably certain cancer treatments which can extend life, and quality of life. They are called NICE (perhaps ironically) which I think stands for the National Institute of Clinical Excellence. They decide which drugs can be prescribed on the NHS. I'm sure if you were the relative of someone denied these drugs - or indeed the patient - then your opinion of socialised health care may be different to mine. But surely, there must be a similar situation in the states? Does paying medical insurance guarantee you to access to all available effective treatments, regardless of cost? |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 15:36 | |
Here's what I've experienced. Hospital care is good, but I've worked at a small company where I was directly involved in dealing with our health insurance. It steadily escalated without providing anything of value for the price hikes. That was money out of my damned salary. To add insult to injury, the deductible also went up. Are any of you well off enough to do without a paycheck or two if you get sick or are injured?
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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CCVP
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 15 2007 Location: Vitória, Brasil Status: Offline Points: 7971 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 19:52 | |
No, this does not happens here.there may be a list or line of patients and the waiting time depends on the state and on what procedure exactly, but nobody can have their procedure denied. That does happen in privatized medicine, though, but I won't lie, the private sector has usually better results as a whole, but it is indeed evil.
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 22:47 | |
For four years, Stephanie Miller, whose 37 year old sister Kelly Hines died of colon cancer four years ago, has wanted to tell President Obama her sister’s story. Yesterday in Ohio, the nation was moved as Stephanie got to not only tell Obama her heartbreaking story, but she also got a big hug from the President. And then she got the backlash. By last night, the Right wing was in full attack mode, calling her a plant replete with accusations of conjuring evil and issuing fake tears over her sister’s death, claiming her sister deserved what she got because she “chose not to get insurance.” Ms. Miller spoke last night with Alan Colmes on his radio show about her emotional embrace from the President as well as the right wing attacks. Here’s the video courtesy of Fox Radio: Ms. Miller believes that if Obama Care had been in place four years ago, her sister might still be with her. Her sister was a hard working single mom of two young boys. She couldn’t afford healthcare. Instead of using the money for herself to go to the doctor, she made sure her boys went. For Stephanie, the passage of ACA meant that her sister didn’t die in vain, because no other family would have to go through what her family went through. Had her sister’s colon cancer been caught earlier, she would have had a much better chance of survival. Speaking on Alan Colmes’ radio show last night, Stephanie said the President’s reaction was to say he was sorry for her family’s loss, and then he asked for the name of her sister, which Stephanie provided. The President said Kelly (Stephanie’s sister) would be in his thoughts every day as he fights for us all. Then Obama hugged Stephanie, surprising her because she didn’t expect her sister’s story to matter so much to the President of the United States. Ms. Miller thinks that once people realize Obama Care isn’t the monster people think it is they will wonder why they were scared of it. Stephanie doesn’t have health insurance either right now, she has to work for a year before she qualifies to get insurance. Speaking of monsters, right before Ms. Miller was on Colmes’ show, Alan and I were treated to a frothing conservative barrage on Twitter (I am @srjones66). Here’s a sampling, from evil to fake tears to her sister deserved it – it’s enough to make a patriot weep for their country:
To put this in perspective, this guy also tweeted:
Here’s a few more:
Alan Colmes brought up the right wing attacks, but Stephanie is no shrinking violet. She pointed out that while yesterday was the four year anniversary of her sister’s death, she knew there would be a lot of negative reaction but it doesn’t bother her. For her, yesterday was a once in a lifetime chance to tell the President her sister’s story, “I didn’t think I would actually be able to talk to him (Obama). I was fortunate enough to get close enough to touch him. And I decided it was now or never to tell him her story and he was gracious enough to stand there and let me tell him her story.” Is the Right wing simply refusing to accept the fact that people in this country actually die from lack of health insurance? They seem to believe that people can afford insurance but choose not to purchase it (this is actually an argument for Obama Care as it will make insurance affordable for everyone, but we’ll let this intellectual lapse go). In Stephanie’s sister’s case, her income was too high for Medicaid. This is a common problem for middle-income families. They make too much to be eligible for help, but not enough to pay the hundreds of thousands of dollars it takes to fight a disease like cancer. Here’s the deal. Nearly 50 million people in this country don’t have access to healthcare and more are going broke paying for it. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 23 million of those without health care are white, 15.3 million are Hispanic, 8 million are black, 2.6 million are Asian. However, the percentages show that 1 in 10 white people are without insurance, while 2 out of 10 black people, 3 out of 10 Hispanics and 2 out of 10 Asians are without health insurance. Those without healthcare have shorter life spans. Our healthcare system was broken before Obama Care. Good people — hard working people — died for lack of access. Their children died. We are 37th among industrialized nation for healthcare according to the World Health Organization. France is number 1. This is not exceptional; it’s completely unacceptable. Stephanie rightly observed that Obama Care is going to change people’s lives and she hopes it isn’t repealed, “This bill will positively affect millions of people in this country. If somehow someone else gets into office and they repeal this bill, those same people will be negatively impacted.” For her trouble, Ms. Miller is being targeted and her loss is being cruelly mocked. Of course, Stephanie works at a prison, so I’m thinking she might be more immune to intimidation than they expected. They won’t get her to back down with juvenile, cold-hearted name-calling. Americans like Stephanie Miller have a story to tell, and tell it they will. No frothing right wing trolls are going to tread on their Real American Stories. This is a real American story; the story of a family who lost a loved one, who might have been saved if only she had had access to affordable health insurance. In a nation with 50 million uninsured, too many can relate to this story. It’s a story that didn’t have to be, and won’t be once the Affordable Care Act is implemented fully. Inevitably, the woman behind this story is now being ruthlessly attacked by anti-healthcare conservatives. |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 23:01 | |
Citation needed.
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 23:11 | |
Citation granted:
PoliticusUSA shared a link.Right Wing Attacks Stephanie Miller, Sobbing Ohioan Hugged by POTUS |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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The Truth
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 19 2009 Location: Kansas Status: Offline Points: 21795 |
Posted: July 10 2012 at 23:21 | |
But wait, if you can afford health care for two boys, can't you afford a family healthcare plan? I don't know how it works exactly, I'm 16.
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