wow. someone needs to go to jail over that.
How does Canadia do their health care anyway? Is it like you guys?
Sad. It happens here too.ATG wrote:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/cbc/080923/science/winnipeg_er_wait
Dead for a day in the E.R.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/07/02/waiting.room.death/
yes but some nucks talk like their shit dont stink.......thats the point. pointing that out to the ones with broken noses.Mason4Assassin444 wrote:
Sad. It happens here too.ATG wrote:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/cbc/080923/science/winnipeg_er_wait
Dead for a day in the E.R.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/07/02/waiting.room.death/
charge 'em all with involuntary manslaughter
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NHS ftw
Our system's good in the fact anyone with Canadian citizenship is allowed free health care. The drawbacks are long waiting times for stuff like MRI's catscans, and sometimes even major operations. Our shortage of Doctors and nurses doesn't help matters either.
No...more like you guys do.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
How does Canadia do their health care anyway? Is it like you guys?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
dANNN wrote:
NHS ftw
Woot...we only let our dead stay dead for an 2 hours!
Source: http://www.contracostatimes.com/health/ … source=rss
Source: http://www.contracostatimes.com/health/ … source=rss
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26794291/pr … mode/1098/dANNN wrote:
NHS ftw
With health care a perennial election issue, Americans need to decide whether to take a more free-market approach or move towards a government-run system. Perhaps a testimonial by F. Brinley Bruton might assist in that choice. Bruton has the unique perspective of having to use both American and British systems to treat the same serious illness — and the experiences couldn’t be more different, although Bruton’s choice may surprise some readers:
This is a lengthy read, but worthwhile. It talks honestly about the benefits and drawbacks of both systems, and gives readers a choice of nightmares. Would you rather have the most attentive and consistent of care and get forced into bankruptcy, or would you rather have more efficiency, less cost — and get ignored or worse while fighting to get attention?A few weeks ago I found myself curled up in a hospital here in London, my feverish body shaking violently back and forth. The pain in my side and back made it hard to straighten my torso, and I’d thrown up in a friend’s car on the way to the hospital.
The hospital couldn’t find an extra hospital bed, so I spent my first night hooked up to an IV on a gurney in the middle of a row of men and women, my sweaty skin sticking to the plastic. A shriveled woman in the bed to my right issued loud and largely unintelligible commands to nobody in particular. A steady flow of patients visited the bathroom right in front of my bed. A shouting match broke out between some of the nurses and nurses aides until a man at the other end of the room yelled, “Could you please take it outside? I’m trying to rest.”
Sometime in the midst of this I was diagnosed with pyelonephritis, a severe urinary tract infection that had spread to a kidney, and ended up in the hospital for three nights. I had already been on two courses of antibiotics, but that hadn’t cleared up the initial infection. Finding myself sick and alone thousands of miles away from my mom was bad enough, but scarier still was just how familiar the illness felt.
I’d been sick with the same thing almost 10 years ago when I was in my 20s and still living in the United States, where I’m from. In both cases, my side and back hurt and fever shot up. And each time, I recovered after serious doses of antibiotics and lots of bed rest. But apart from that, my experiences were a world apart.
The choice isn’t as easy as it seems, in part because Bruton seems to miss the common thread of the probems in both systems. Both systems hide the true cost of the care from the consumer, only in Britain that’s done a little more transparently than in America. Bruton received top-flight care but ran afoul of her insurance, a situation which we’ve repeatedly experienced ourselves. In the end, she wound up paying thousands of dollars for care that should have been covered by insurance, mostly because she waited far too long to seek attention.
In Britain, the cost comes right off the top of her salary, but that’s only the basic cost. Bruton had to negotiate for attention every step of the way through her treatment, essentially competing for severely rationed treatment with other consumers. Bruton succeeded, and she feels relatively sanguine about the results, but the anecdotes should horrify the rest of us. Thanks to a lack of competition, Bruton also admits that she’s fortunate enough to have a competent provider in her neighborhood — which many of her co-consumers do not have.
In both situations, the common problem is a centralized payment system that disconnects consumers from the cost of medical care and eliminates competition. What’s truly needed is a shift away from comprehensive insurance care to a combination of catastrophic coverage partnered with tax-free HSAs that would allow people to choose from truly competing providers for what’s known as primary care. That would lower costs for most of the medical treatment Americans receive as clinics would have to compete for business — much the same as non-covered treatments such as breast augmentation and Lasik clinics do, for instance — while containing costs for the rarer hospitalizations and lengthier treatment regimens through group insurance plans.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Yup. There was a case near here where something similar happened.Mason4Assassin444 wrote:
Sad. It happens here too.ATG wrote:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/cbc/080923/science/winnipeg_er_wait
Dead for a day in the E.R.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/07/02/waiting.room.death/
Makes no difference where you are tbh.
Edit: The second link is the one I was thinking of.
Last edited by Poseidon (2008-09-27 19:21:27)
Not in MY town. Our Medical Director has stated that, for EMS at least, there is no such thing as a prank call, and any call will get an ambulance. Granted, you may also get a cop if you call a lot, and if you abuse the system you may be more likely to go to jail than the hospital.Mason4Assassin444 wrote:
Sad. It happens here too.ATG wrote:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/cbc/080923/science/winnipeg_er_wait
Dead for a day in the E.R.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19207050/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/07/02/waiting.room.death/
Our EMS also does send a unit if someone calls 911 from an ER. They will also call the ER so that person may be evaluated to see if they really need help.
Socialised health care means that the government takes your money, and leaves you feeling helpless while waiting months or even years for the critical treatment that you thought you had bought and paid for. Many people die on waiting lists every year waiting for treatment that they could've gotten immediately with private insurance. It's just not worth risking.