I can’t seem to wrap my head around why people are against fixing our painfully (apologies for the pun) broken health care system. I recently had the opportunity to visit with an ex-coworker of mine, and I really appreciated her views.
Being a single mother in a low income bracket, her son had access to HealthWave, which is the Kansan version of Medicaid for children. Unfortunately, once she was making $7.50 an hour for 32 hours a week, she received the news the her son was no longer eligible for the program (read carefully on the website. Coverage is never guaranteed. It only states that you may be eligible) . Granted, surviving on $7.50 an hour isn’t too bad, provided that you have a strong social support system. This is something that far too many people overlook. Think about every time your family (and/or friends) pushed you to work harder or set your own standards higher. Think about the expectations you grew up with.
I digress. In the conversation with my friend, she pointed that now health care for herself and her son is now hundreds of dollars a month. In the few years that they’ve had health insurance, they have visited the doctor or dentist a whooping total of five times. After acknowledging that treatment would have been cheaper had they paid out-of-pocket, she said that she wouldn’t mind paying so much (she could afford it now) if only she knew that someone was getting the benefits, instead of knowing that someone was getting richer.
I couldn’t agree more.
There’s a lot in the media about how the United States has the greatest health care system in the world. I am amused at how many people that I know support that statement have never experienced health care outside the US. And in conversations with them, I’ve been having a good time asking them to do a little research of their own. For example, try looking up the following by country:
Infant Mortality Rate
Maternal Mortality Rate
Preventable Deaths
These are just a few examples. Find where the US is on the list. Look at countries that are doing better than us. Then look at how many countries have socialized (or heavily regulated) health systems.
When roughly 20% of each dollar (this is the lowest number I’ve seen. The highest is 31%) is spent toward overhead costs, there is something wrong. At very LEAST, we need to digitize records and standardize billing systems.
This post meanders around a bit (I’ve been studying math for the past three hours and my eyes are crossing), but my points are these. 1) Something needs to be done about the current system. 2) We are not the best in the world, but I have hope that we can improve. 3) It’d be really nice if Americans could work together to create a better system, but I don’t have much hope for that.
(Side note: I am amazed by the number of people who are opposed to health care reform and can somehow manage claim they are religious. Deut. 15:7. “If there is a poor man among you, one of your brothers, in any of the towns of the land which the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not harden your heart, nor close your hand to your poor brother; but you shall freely open your hand to him, and generously lend him sufficient for his need in whatever he lacks.” Except, of course, unless you think he’s lazy. Or if you don’t like him. Or if he doesn’t share your particular belief system. I know folks that make a HUGE deal out of homosexuality (which the Bible mentions about six time) and yet complain about their tax money going to welfare (verses about taking care of the poor are second in number only to verses about having no gods before God). What happen to the whole idea of not judging?)
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My friend Mike brought this page to my attention. It’s certainly worth a look.
http://www.healthcarereformmyths.org/HealthcareReformMyths.php#A20
Comment by franksparrow 01/09/2009 @ 02:30Also, it should be noted that those overhead costs are BEFORE the obscene profits being made by healthcare CEOs. And one of the primary arguments that I’ve heard against socializing healthcare is that the vaunted “free market”, with all it’s “efficiencies”, can’t compete again the government. From the same people who argue that socializing it is wrong in principal. In the same paragraph.
How can you argue with people that can directly contradict themselves while making a single statement AND NOT NOTICE IT?
Comment by qkslvrwolf 01/09/2009 @ 06:06Hi, Anne- I’d also like to note that the single most disappointing force in health care reform is the American Catholic Council of Bishops. Prior to the current healthcare debate, they were the single largest organized force arguing for reform— now that the issue is on the table, they’ve done just about nothing to help it.
-Candice
Comment by alcarwen 01/09/2009 @ 09:52Anne, you are dead on. We have a system of care in this system that borders on the criminal. I could go on for some time, but as a physician, the system could only be worse if we were a 3rd world country. We treat people as a commodity, we essentially buy and sell.
See: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sickaroundtheworld/etc/notebook.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/21/AR2009082101778.html
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/08282009/watch.html
http://books.google.com/books?id=pOfrTRPgv_kC&dq=money+driven+medicine&printsec=frontcover&source=bl&ots=Sb73iqmkGq&sig=1uHBqHFujIef7bhW9tx4cJoILz8&hl=en&ei=Z02dSrzOG5altger2cneAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#v=onepage&q=&f=false
(Sorry for the links, I don’t know how to link here). Having worked in private and public practice, I can tell you unequivically that society is better off with a public system of care. I have verified this with relatives in Canada and Norway. They wouldn’t give up their system. The only winners in our system are pharm, for profit hospitals and their owners and patients whose wants far exceed their needs.
Comment by Greg 02/09/2009 @ 00:40