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Shhh! Details like that don't matter when you're ranting about **SOCIALISM**The NHS is a completely state run health care system, which is not what people are proposing for Medicare for all.
The patient, 46-year-old Spendi Rusitovski, visited the Ascension Southeast Wisconsin hospital Dec. 17 with chest pains. The hospital ordered a sonogram test for him that uncovered "an issue," and his primary physician wanted to admit him "due to the serious nature of the sonogram results," according to police and medical examiner reports.You probably don't know this, but there are programs for the "less well-off" including Medicaid in the US. Any person can walk into any hospital in the US and must be treated regardless of ability to pay. The homeless person who (intentionally in many cases now) gets hit by a car, gets the same ambulance ride to the hospital, same care, same food, same drugs, etc. as an insured.
The US demographic is very different than almost all other countries.
We also have a healthcare system that is unique and in some ways the envy of other countries.
When the wealthy of many of these "64" need advanced healthcare or procedures, where do they go?
Why is that important?And if you destroyed that system to satisfy a socialist agenda, where would they or anyone that could raise money go?
What incentive would there be to improve things when the government is in charge?
Look at Medicare and Medicaid. They're incredibly inefficient and bogged down with red tape. But you see that as a panacea.
The truth is there are problems with all of the systems. We should keep what we have and improve THAT!
I always find it amusing that the left keeps telling us that socialism is great, even though it hasn't worked well elsewhere. They tell us it just hasn't been done "right". That's what they're saying about these failing countries.
US heath insurers and patients foot the bill for most of the R&D of Big Pharma....something those in the UK fail to recognize and appreciate.
Personally, I requested an MRI from my doc 2 1/2 years ago and 5 days later was in the latest open MRI machine having my scan.
Virtually no wait time, just fitting it into my schedule. I'll take that vs. a 3+ month wait. BTW, dealing with Medicare is no picnic. It's a bureaucratic nightmare in many cases while also being fraught with mismanagement, waste and fraud.
Are there flaws and problems in the US system? Yes, and no one denies this. But a radical shift to a Medicare for All plan would not solve them.
Some want to embrace the penny wise pound foolish approach to health care.Yes, and we the taxpayer have to cover these costs. Costs that could be lowered if there was a public option for healthcare in the US. Costs that could be mitigated if the person had been receiving preventative healthcare throughout their life instead of waiting until there's a medical emergency to see a doctor.
The patient, 46-year-old Spendi Rusitovski, visited the Ascension Southeast Wisconsin hospital Dec. 17 with chest pains. The hospital ordered a sonogram test for him that uncovered "an issue," and his primary physician wanted to admit him "due to the serious nature of the sonogram results," according to police and medical examiner reports.
But the hospital did not have available beds early that afternoon, so Mr. Rusitovski and his wife were instructed to return to their home and wait for a call when a bed became available, his wife said. The reports did not say what time they left the hospital.
Patient dies hours after being turned away from Wisconsin hospital: A patient at a Franklin, Wis., hospital died of heart disease hours after being sent home to wait for a bed to be freed up for him, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Officials at the parent company of Somerville Hospital apologized Wednesday night for not meeting “our own standards for transparency and accountability” in the death of Laura Levis, who went to the emergency room during a severe 2016 asthma attack and found the door locked.
The story, written by Levis’s husband, Peter DeMarco, chronicled Levis’s asthma attack before dawn on the morning of Sept. 16, 2016. Levis’s attack led her to Somerville Hospital, but she never made it through the door. DeMarco’s narrative detailed the communication errors, overburdened staffs, and lack of fail-safes that plagued the response of police, fire, and hospital staff to Levis’s medical emergency.
Some 10 minutes passed between the time Levis called 911 and the time was she was found, in cardiac arrest following the asthma attack, mere feet from an entrance to the hospital’s emergency room. She spent seven days in an intensive care unit at CHA Cambridge Hospital, which is also owned by the alliance, before dying on Sept. 22, 2016. She was 34.
Yes, and we the taxpayer have to cover these costs. Costs that could be lowered if there was a public option for healthcare in the US. Costs that could be mitigated if the person had been receiving preventative healthcare throughout their life instead of waiting until there's a medical emergency to see a doctor.
Do you have health insurance? If yes, who is paying for it?
What is different about it and why would it matter?
Odd then that they do not emulate it.
Why is that important?
According to whom based on what evidence?
Improving our system is the whole point of going towards a model were more people have access to health care.
I always find it amusing when the right tells us that using our taxes to support a private industry is socialism.
On the contrary, I recognise and appreciate it all the time. You are however, the first American I have met that is proud to subsidise my healthcare
Personally, my doc decided I needed an MRI, I had my scan the day after the request.
My co-pay was $0. What was yours?
what hideous and ridiculous kind of healthcare system has the patients requesting procedures
One where the people are free to choose because they know their own bodies.
Oh, you know the answer to that. But keep sweeping it under the rug.
Why would they? They can come here.
A beacon of hope for people who can raise money for medical procedures? I think they have plenty of options.The world needs a beacon of hope.
You don't seriously deny that, do you? I deal with Medicare all the time for my stepdad and it's a nightmare. Doctors don't like it either.
Funny, that was what Obamacare was suppose to do. It's clear that was a failure.
However, it was likely suppose to be so the left could then say, "see, we need socialized healthcare".
Where did I say that? What you describe is Corporatism. If our healthcare was actually run in true free-market Capitalistic fashion, we could solve a lot of the problems.
I was born before most people had any health insurance or Medicare or Medicaid existed. The cost of my birth including hospital stay, food, nursing, etc.? $250. Adjusted for inflation, that would be about $2100 in today's dollars. What is the cost today for an birth in a hospital with no complications? Over $32,000!
If you are actually in Australia, this is likely not true. The US has 35.5 MRI machines per capital vs. Australia's 13.4.
Shhh! Details like that don't matter when you're ranting about **SOCIALISM**
I was without insurance for a while when I moved home from the UK. In my experience, yes it was worse there with coverage than without here.
Here, you might get in debt for a hospital visit. There, you might not even get a doctor to see you.