Listen to the Celebrity Health sCare Experts (not)

Another great YouTube video I ran across, this time on Heath sCare:


Rationing Health Care

I finally ran across an article advocating single payer that openly admitted that there would be rationing. They’re absolutely right. They’re right as well when they say rationing takes place today. The important question is who decides what health care is worth what. If it’s the patient, or those around them, that’s fine. The problem is when it’s a disinterested 3rd party that makes an irrevocable choice.

When Canadians need health care (in a timely fashion – instead of waiting for months) They come south of the border and can get it here. Tests and procedure that they may have to wait 6 months for there can be gotten in two days here.

Where will we go if we can’t get the health care we need and want in the US? Go south of OUR border into Mexico?

There’s another issue it brings up as well, and that is the “cost” of a human life. I would like to see that codified in any health care legislation … and in any OTHER legistaltion that’s supposed to be for our own good. Health standards, product safety, OSHA and the like. It’s not uncommon to see “safety” legislation costing $50 million to save one life. If it’s your own life or that of someone you know, it’s hard to say that there is any price to high to pay for even just a few more months of life. When we’re all paying that price for someone else that we don’t know, that’s a different matter.

“Even if it’s just one life” is the battle cry, but that’s a totally untenable standard. Even when it gets to the courts, there is a saying: Hard cases make bad law. When you’re looking at the person face to face (or their grieving widow or parents or whoever) and have to say that it just would have cost too much to make that change that would have prevented that 1 in 100 thousand cases form happening to your loved one, it’s had to tell them – so sorry, but life has no guarantees.

Given unlimited funds, there aren’t many patients who’s life can’t be extended by a few days, months, oe even years. Where do we draw the line and, more impotantly, who draws it? Something to think about.

The Future of American Health Care?

This is what we want in the US for a health care system?

Canada’s ObamaCare Precedent – WSJ.com:

The problems were brought home when a relative had difficulty walking. He was in chronic pain. His doctor suggested a referral to a neurologist; an MRI would need to be done, then possibly a referral to another specialist. The wait would have stretched to roughly a year. If surgery was needed, the wait would be months more. Not wanting to stay confined to his house, he had the surgery done in the U.S., at the Mayo Clinic, and paid for it himself. Such stories are common. For example, Sylvia de Vries, an Ontario woman, had a 40-pound fluid-filled tumor removed from her abdomen by an American surgeon in 2006. Her Michigan doctor estimated that she was within weeks of dying, but she was still on a wait list for a Canadian specialist.

And these are just the tip of the iceberg. It’s not unusual for some provinces to shut down everything but real emergency care near the end of the year because they are out of money. Not just hospitals and testing facilities, but clinics and regular doctor’s offices. It’s not that long since you could get your dog in for an MRI faster than yourself. Canada’s solution? Ban pets from access to after hours access to the equipment.

There’s that awful word, “rationing” popping up lately. Could this happen here?

Only half of ER patients are treated in a timely manner by national and international standards, according to a government study. The physician shortage is so severe that some towns hold lotteries, with the winners gaining access to the local doc.

A bit further afield, until recently, you could not get treatment for macular degeneration in Britain until you had gone totally blind in one eye. Where are the Europeans that need care NOW and can afford to pay for it come here to get it going to go next?