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Transsexual on Hunger Strike
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<blockquote data-quote="wanderingone" data-source="post: 51754260" data-attributes="member: 116911"><p>I believe insurance (be it private or public) pays based on a far more complicated set of standards. Keeping someone alive wouldn't actually be the priority unless the treatment has a high rate of success, and the patient can look forward to a return to a reasonable quality of life. </p><p> </p><p>As another poster pointed out treatments don't just go to the critically injured or ill. My grandson had a minor palate problem, it wasn't life threatening, but it did sometimes cause feeding problems when he was small. Was it wrong for public medical insurance to cover the treatment?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wanderingone, post: 51754260, member: 116911"] I believe insurance (be it private or public) pays based on a far more complicated set of standards. Keeping someone alive wouldn't actually be the priority unless the treatment has a high rate of success, and the patient can look forward to a return to a reasonable quality of life. As another poster pointed out treatments don't just go to the critically injured or ill. My grandson had a minor palate problem, it wasn't life threatening, but it did sometimes cause feeding problems when he was small. Was it wrong for public medical insurance to cover the treatment? [/QUOTE]
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Transsexual on Hunger Strike
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