Bent-Valve said:
OHSCrifle said:
Bent-Valve said
The VA also let a student X ray my knee at full power, twice, like when the actual tech came in she panicked. I thought the machine was going to vibrate off the wall. I now have more trouble with that knee years later.
2019 "private" HC story:
I live in GA. Wife is in healthcare. She had a mammogram this week. She was told during the procedure that in Georgia you don't have to be a trained radiology tech to be a radiology tech.
Evidently anyone with an eight hour "training" session can shoot x-rays... so one health system whose name rhymes with Bellstar recently got rid of all radiology techs.
One of the recently fired radiology techs (doing her scan and telling the story) said his replacement performed TWELVE chest x-rays on a patient.
I hope they get sued BEFORE they really mess someone up.
My point is a Single Payer System allows care to be dictated by a bureaucracy, when your a number and not a person seen by a doctor the bottom line becomes easier to justify.
Recently Tricare had to send me to a Hospital in North KC. Excellent care, can't say enough good about the staff. The co pays sucked, but you get what you pay for.
UKMC who took care of my cancer were also outstanding, they fought a losing battle with Tricare to get me what I needed at home. To take care of the wound I drove to Western Missouri Medical Center, sat in the parking lot and took drugs for the pain, then the outstanding and caring lady took care of the wound. Three days a week for, I forget, several weeks. I walked back to the car and waited for the pain medicine to wear off and drove home. (car note, did this in a 1988 Olds Stationwagon, Sam, my 120lb Blue Tic hound was in the back watching over me) Four months to heal up before I could work again.
As far as single payer systems requiring bureaucracy to determine when you get seen.
You must not have been to a hospital lately. Or a health clinic.
That’s how medicine is done here in America for the past few decades. You walk in and someone has you fill out forms then she gives them to a nurse who decides who has priority, heart attacks apparently have priority over bleeding, stroke over broken bones, and lowest on the list is discretionary issues like is this a mole or cancer.
Works the same pretty much all over the world. I’ve waited in waiting rooms for hours. I’ve even been told to come back tomorrrow or after the weekend, with one broken bone they couldn’t do anything until the following Thursday.
By the way, some insurance plans now encourage what’s called medical tourism. If your procedure isn’t life threatening they will give you plane tickets, motel rooms, ground transportation, meals etc to fly to Say India or wherever they have a great reputation and low costs. As a reward you get a cash incentive.
It makes sense, a procedure here in America could cost more than a $100,000 US dollars. But be performed in France for say $21,000. Add a few thousand for transportation and lodging plus a cash bonus to the patient and the insurance company saved themselves a big pile of money.