Thread: Sicko
View Single Post
Old 06-19-2007, 09:03 PM   #70
HOZ
Lifetime Suspension
 
HOZ's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Exp:
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hack&Lube View Post
My point was that there are many people who choose to avoid proper medical care to save money rather than getting the regular care that they should, ie: preventative treatment. Even for those with insurance, there are many people who have to pick and choose between medications and treatments because they could not afford them even when insured...especially seniors who decide they have to live without a certain pill or cut them in half because they can't afford them all. Ultimately, it comes down to that choice that is what makes the system ill -> that it forces people to perform triage on their own medical needs by the size of their wallets. Have you ever had something wrong and you decided that instead of paying out your deductable or spending on extra costs, that you would just sit and hope the problem goes away? My point was that this kind of engrained behavior can build up in the population (whether rich/poor/insured/uninsured) and the reason that other societies may be healthier in general (another theory the film posits) is that there are less chronically ill people since they have all sought treatment early or to the full extent on a regular basis. My own family, for whatever the slightest thing will visit the doctor without hesitation.

The Canadian system is not great, you have to wait for months to get certain tests or surgeries...but if you have a critical need, you can go anywhere and you will be taken care of immediately. The movie showcases the story of a mother with a sick child. Her insurance would not allow her child to be treated at the hospital nearest to her and her daughter was rejected from that hospital. She had to wait for proper authorization with a hospital affilitated with her insurance company and then go to that farther hospital -> by which time her child had died.

I am curious to know why you would choose your current system vs. that of universal health care? Care to let us know your thoughts on that?
There is something about these stories that simply don't add up.

In the USA if you go to any hospital, they HAVE TO TREAT you (as long as they have the facilities to do so), period. No general hospital, by law, can turn away a patient!

The problem comes when the payment is needed.

You have to pay!

Her problem, if I read correctly, stems from insurance. Now this women had a dying child and she waits for the insurance to come through? Hmmm....Stick the VISA card on the table and go into debt.

It is a Human Right!
Wikipedia
federal law ensures public access to emergency services regardless of ability to pay.[36] However, hospitals can still attempt to collect the unpaid bills, often damaging the uninsured patient's credit.
HOZ is offline   Reply With Quote