Health Care Debate
Posted: Wed Jul 29, 2009 3:30 am
Rush Limbaugh is a friggin liar and a moron. I watched him on Greta Van Sustren the other night as he tried to twist Obama's health reform into a socialist agenda. Every example Obama presented, Rush would say he was flat out lying. For example, Obama said something about how some doctors will do tests, not because they are needed, but because they can charge more. This is a fact.
But Rush went ape-shit and said that the reason they do more tests was to protect themselves from malpractice lawsuits.
WTF?
On his radio show he goes on and on about how Obama is attacking a nobel profession and is trying to paint this image that doctors never do anything wrong, and that even though they get paid outrageous sums of money, they really aren't interested in making a buck. Its all about helping patients, not about money for them. HA!
Limbaugh s full of crap.
Here are just a couple of stories from a doctor in the field, Dr. Behzad Mohit:
This coincides with my own personal experiences with the "for profit" healthcare system of America.
When I was on my mission I had headaches and was passing out. The Church sent me back to California and I was taken to a cardiologist who rigged me with a 24 hour EKG recorder. The doctor was rather dry, never made any eye contact, but he was recommended by one of the elderly couples working at the Anaheim Mission office. Anyway, after reviewing the recording the doctor informed me that he would need to put a pacemaker in me... at age 20! When the Church insurance said they wouldn't cover it because my heart "murmur" was a preexisting conditon, the doctor managed to get the phone numbers of various family members, from someone at the mission office. He then began calling my mother in Atlanta, my father in Florida, and even my grandparents, asking for credit card numbers. He assured them that my life depended on their financial support.
I wanted a second opinon, and the doctor gave me three names to go see. As if I was going to go find out whether his good friends were going to negate his diagnosis. So I begged the Mission office to allow me to go see another doctor who wasn't affiliated with this cardiologist. When I went to anotehr doctor, I was informed that I didn't need a pacemaker, and that the idea of putting one in me at my age was borderline idiotic.
And yet I came so close to having it done.
This could only happen in a "for profit" healthcare system and Rush Limbaugh and the other alarmists out there want us to believe none of these stories are true.
Later that month I told my story to a nurse in the ward who was familiar with that doctor's name, and she informed me that he was one of many doctors at that hospital who had a record of giving highly questionable diagnoses to patients, and using scare tactics to get them to comply with his desire to perform needless operations. Oh, but Irvine Hospital was "the best healthcare" one could ask for on this planet.
She also said something like, the medical profession has the highest rate of bankruptcies than any other field, because they make so much money they get into more debt prior to making it, and they rely on these kinds of operations to bail them out of their financial woes.
My next experience with American health care would come many years later. About 8 years later I suppose. I had pinched a nerve behind my knee. I knew I pinched it. I recall when it happened. The result was numbness on the front of my chin just above my foot, and whever I walked I dragged my foot because I couldn't control the muscle that was responsible for lifting it while walking. Anyway I went to a family doctor that my family in Orlando had been seeing for decades. I never saw the doctor, but instead a nurse. She did her little test in the room for about 5 minutes and then informed me that I might very well be experiencing the early stages of MS (Multiple Sclerosis), which normally would have scared me to death had I not already known about the pinched nerve. What boggled my mind was the fact that I told this woman about the pinched nerve, but she would have none of it. She insisted this could be MS and said I need to schedule a time to have more tests performed. She told me these tests would be "extremely expensive" and then started asking what kind of insurance coverage I had.
Unbelievable. I ended up massaging my own leg with some lotion every night for a week and the numbness eventually went away.
A third incident involved an accident at work. I got knocked on the head pretty hard by a falling object and my employer called an ambulance just as a precautionary measure. The ride to the hospital was superfluous and about three miles. Shortly afterwards I moved out of state, but would later discover that my former residence had been receiving bills from the hospital, including an $1100 ambulance ride. The sent all of this to a collections agency and it took another year of squabbling over the phone before my credit was cleared and my former employer eventually paid it.
Four years ago while playing football in Brazil, I broke my kneecap. Brazil's health system is rated something like 96th in the world, so I was a bit nervous. I walked into a hospital that was open to the public, showed my passport, sat on a crummy concrete bench in agony for about two hours, and then went into the x-ray room. Three other doctors were called in to debate whether or not my fracture was significant enough to require surgery. It really was just a hairline fracture, and they decided that it didn't need surgery. And it didn't. The doctors informed me of the damage, and then I was sent to another wing where I waited about 45 minutes before having my leg placed in a cast.
After the cast was in place, I went to a consultation room where another doctor made a schedule for to to return every two weeks for further x-rays. Over the course of three months, my knee healed, and I was out of pockt a grand total of 0$. And thsi from a "third world" country?
What blows my mind even more is how expensive drugs are in the USA. If I get an infection in the USA I have to go to the doctor and get a prescription before buying antibiotics. The usual routine is to go to the doctor and pay around $100 without insurance ($10-30 with insurance) just so he/she can look in my throat and say, "Yep, it looks pretty red" and then write me a prescription for amoxicillan. Thay will cost me about $30-60 without insurance, and about $5-15 with insurance.
In Brasil, I walk in any pharmacy and get as much amoxicillan as I want without prescriptions. A pack of 30, 500 mg tablets is only 4 bucks! The same friggin brand that is sold in USA for more than TEN TIMES that amount!
But Rush went ape-shit and said that the reason they do more tests was to protect themselves from malpractice lawsuits.
WTF?
On his radio show he goes on and on about how Obama is attacking a nobel profession and is trying to paint this image that doctors never do anything wrong, and that even though they get paid outrageous sums of money, they really aren't interested in making a buck. Its all about helping patients, not about money for them. HA!
Limbaugh s full of crap.
Here are just a couple of stories from a doctor in the field, Dr. Behzad Mohit:
A close family member of mine had a lower back pain shooting to the side of her thigh. A neurologist, together with a neuroradiologist, took X-rays, etc., and recommended spinal fusion (an expensive operation that would lay her up in bed for some time). A friend gave her the name of a therapeutic massage therapist who diagnosed a spasm of a muscle in her buttock. After two massage treatments (cost: $200) she was relieved and has been free of pain for the last 15 years.
Case two. A middle-aged woman came to my dermatology office (she had full insurance coverage) with a wart the size of a pea on her third finger asking for treatment. I asked her if it had been treated before. She said, "Yes, doctor. I have been going to Dr. X for eight months. Every two weeks he freezes the top and shaves it, but the wart is still here." I froze the wart with liquid nitrogen deeply and in two weeks it was gone (cost: $75. The previous doctor's cost: $1,200). Dr. X was so busy with repeat visits that he could not accept a new patient for at least three months.
This coincides with my own personal experiences with the "for profit" healthcare system of America.
When I was on my mission I had headaches and was passing out. The Church sent me back to California and I was taken to a cardiologist who rigged me with a 24 hour EKG recorder. The doctor was rather dry, never made any eye contact, but he was recommended by one of the elderly couples working at the Anaheim Mission office. Anyway, after reviewing the recording the doctor informed me that he would need to put a pacemaker in me... at age 20! When the Church insurance said they wouldn't cover it because my heart "murmur" was a preexisting conditon, the doctor managed to get the phone numbers of various family members, from someone at the mission office. He then began calling my mother in Atlanta, my father in Florida, and even my grandparents, asking for credit card numbers. He assured them that my life depended on their financial support.
I wanted a second opinon, and the doctor gave me three names to go see. As if I was going to go find out whether his good friends were going to negate his diagnosis. So I begged the Mission office to allow me to go see another doctor who wasn't affiliated with this cardiologist. When I went to anotehr doctor, I was informed that I didn't need a pacemaker, and that the idea of putting one in me at my age was borderline idiotic.
And yet I came so close to having it done.
This could only happen in a "for profit" healthcare system and Rush Limbaugh and the other alarmists out there want us to believe none of these stories are true.
Later that month I told my story to a nurse in the ward who was familiar with that doctor's name, and she informed me that he was one of many doctors at that hospital who had a record of giving highly questionable diagnoses to patients, and using scare tactics to get them to comply with his desire to perform needless operations. Oh, but Irvine Hospital was "the best healthcare" one could ask for on this planet.
She also said something like, the medical profession has the highest rate of bankruptcies than any other field, because they make so much money they get into more debt prior to making it, and they rely on these kinds of operations to bail them out of their financial woes.
My next experience with American health care would come many years later. About 8 years later I suppose. I had pinched a nerve behind my knee. I knew I pinched it. I recall when it happened. The result was numbness on the front of my chin just above my foot, and whever I walked I dragged my foot because I couldn't control the muscle that was responsible for lifting it while walking. Anyway I went to a family doctor that my family in Orlando had been seeing for decades. I never saw the doctor, but instead a nurse. She did her little test in the room for about 5 minutes and then informed me that I might very well be experiencing the early stages of MS (Multiple Sclerosis), which normally would have scared me to death had I not already known about the pinched nerve. What boggled my mind was the fact that I told this woman about the pinched nerve, but she would have none of it. She insisted this could be MS and said I need to schedule a time to have more tests performed. She told me these tests would be "extremely expensive" and then started asking what kind of insurance coverage I had.
Unbelievable. I ended up massaging my own leg with some lotion every night for a week and the numbness eventually went away.
A third incident involved an accident at work. I got knocked on the head pretty hard by a falling object and my employer called an ambulance just as a precautionary measure. The ride to the hospital was superfluous and about three miles. Shortly afterwards I moved out of state, but would later discover that my former residence had been receiving bills from the hospital, including an $1100 ambulance ride. The sent all of this to a collections agency and it took another year of squabbling over the phone before my credit was cleared and my former employer eventually paid it.
Four years ago while playing football in Brazil, I broke my kneecap. Brazil's health system is rated something like 96th in the world, so I was a bit nervous. I walked into a hospital that was open to the public, showed my passport, sat on a crummy concrete bench in agony for about two hours, and then went into the x-ray room. Three other doctors were called in to debate whether or not my fracture was significant enough to require surgery. It really was just a hairline fracture, and they decided that it didn't need surgery. And it didn't. The doctors informed me of the damage, and then I was sent to another wing where I waited about 45 minutes before having my leg placed in a cast.
After the cast was in place, I went to a consultation room where another doctor made a schedule for to to return every two weeks for further x-rays. Over the course of three months, my knee healed, and I was out of pockt a grand total of 0$. And thsi from a "third world" country?
What blows my mind even more is how expensive drugs are in the USA. If I get an infection in the USA I have to go to the doctor and get a prescription before buying antibiotics. The usual routine is to go to the doctor and pay around $100 without insurance ($10-30 with insurance) just so he/she can look in my throat and say, "Yep, it looks pretty red" and then write me a prescription for amoxicillan. Thay will cost me about $30-60 without insurance, and about $5-15 with insurance.
In Brasil, I walk in any pharmacy and get as much amoxicillan as I want without prescriptions. A pack of 30, 500 mg tablets is only 4 bucks! The same friggin brand that is sold in USA for more than TEN TIMES that amount!