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The Best Health Care System in the World!

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mclarkson The Best Health Care System in the World!

Deaths from pregnancy and childbirth in the United States have doubled in the past 20 years, a development that a human rights group called "scandalous and disgraceful" Friday.

The report, "Deadly Delivery: The Maternal Health Care Crisis in the USA," notes that the lifetime risk of maternal deaths is greater in the United States than in [...] virtually all industrialized nations.


linky

Could you, would you, with a goat?
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Storm

YAY PRIVATE INDUSTRY!!!

 

Your Mom

Good. Fucking people need to stop breeding.

 

DontBogartMe

don't worry, it'll only be the poor that die in childbirth, no one worth worrying about or anything.

 

arigato

Originally posted by: Your Mom
Good. Fucking people need to stop breeding.


Is there another way to breed?

 

mclarkson

Could you, would you, with a goat?
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arigato

Point taken

In other news the government of Quebec is now going to pay for vitro treatments for approved couples.
ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20100311/quebec_invitro_100311/20100311?hub=Health

 

persist

It's against the law to turn away any patient for an inability to pay.

So I suppose we'll be blaming the police for murder rates next.

Lets blame the system that's struggling to cope with the problem rather than blaming the factors that cause the problem like racism, and economic conditions which require poor and middle class mothers to work on their feet right through their trimester.

Do You think social health care is going to change their ability to take a day off from work?

Good god.

 

mclarkson

Dude, calm down. Deep breath. Hold it. Hold it.

Now let it out.

*whoooosh*

I'm not sure who you are accusing of blaming whom. I certainly didn't mean to say that, say, doctors were to blame.

Do You think social health care is going to change their ability to take a day off from work?


While I don't believe we'll see that any time soon, it's certainly possible and in many evil socialist countries, taking time off from work to see a doctor is explicitly covered.

Could you, would you, with a goat?
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persist

I highly doubt the magic unicorn of social healthcare will come with the workman rights fairy dust that will make paid maternity leave a federal requirement.

:deep breath:


I had 4 days off paternity.

my canadian coworker had 8 weeks for his.

And mine was a miracle of luck of working at the right company that actually has a policy for dads.

call me jaded.

 

arigato

Actually, maternity leave, maternity pay, and job retention are all federally mandated here in Soviet Canuckistan.
Das get paternity leave, too, it's part of unemployment insurance.

 

persist

Originally posted by: arigato
Actually, maternity leave, maternity pay, and job retention are all federally mandated here in Soviet Canuckistan.
Das get paternity leave, too, it's part of unemployment insurance.


As it should be here, and I believe it should be put in place before a move to a social healthcare system as a transition measure as we start to understand the impact social healthcare would have in terms of funding, corporations, taxes and small business.

But the healthcare system itself, regardless of who's paying, is only one side of the issue.

Currently laws vary from state to state, and getting fired for becoming pregnant of course can be veiled in plausible deniability.

 

creepylurker

sometime ago I read a report that showed that many of women with complicated pregnancies in lower social-economic classes had almost no pre-natal care or education. OFten times the care and education is free, but refused.

we can blame whatever boogeyman we want, but we should not ignore the fact that some people simply don't care.

You have the right to submit peacefully

If you refuse that right you will be audited, tasered, and imprisoned
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Storm

oops....stumbled into a serious thread......

* backs away slowly *
* closes door *
* checks sign .... | 12s | *

hmmmmmmm

 

oregondave

Originally posted by: persist
It's against the law to turn away any patient for an inability to pay.




you are correct ... but they don't give you a lollipop and say 'this one's on me' either ...

they set up a nice payment plan ... and since the law you are referring to applies to emergency room visits, that bill will be a few thousand dollars - for a routine visit.

you can blame the woman for being ignorant of the fact that she might qualify for Medicaid ... and if that's the case (or if she doesn't qualify for one reason or another) she is faced with racking up emergency room visits that she knows she can't pay for - and face the probability that legal action will most likely be taken & wages garnished once she misses a few payments.

so as a society we are faced with the options - Medicaid (100% taxpayer funded), grossly inflated emergency room costs for non-emergency care ( a problem only exacerbated by those who default on their payments), or a partially subsidized system where the individual makes at least some monetary contribution to their care and are able to see much less expensive practitioners and specialists at regular increments throughout the pregnancy - not waiting until mid-catastrophe.

or just say tough shit - you either provide proof of insurance or a briefcase full of cash - otherwise, hit the bricks and best of luck to ya'

the way I see it, we're already subsidizing those without insurance - just at a rate several times higher than is necessary ... regardless, if we really want to find a solution, it is going to require somebody to do something they really don't want to do ... either the taxpayer or the employer

 

Obscure/Renegade

Originally posted by: oregondave
the way I see it, we're already subsidizing those without insurance - just at a rate several times higher than is necessary ...


You haven't seen anything yet, dude. Major Medical assholes are already jacking rates while reducing, and in several cases, dropping coverage. I guarantee that there are people on 12stone right now that have already seen this happen, especially if, for example, they were with BC/BS and have been moved to Anthem BCBS. I feel sorry for the HMO/PCP folks (my advice to anyone reading this is to go PPO if you can, and give yourself some leeway if you just have to go to a certain Dr. Soandso)

MM sees the indecision by the feds and have already made a quick run into your pocketbook to offset the initial thrust of cost that WILL occur if national healthcare is implemented. And it's far from over. The costs will be higher right where it hurts, in your paycheck and mine, and you aren't going to get better care.

Take it to the bank.

I know you are, 'cause it's fuck or walk.
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dashiel

i'm with rush. costa rica sounds great.

 

oregondave

So what should we do O/R?

if that's the case (and it seems as though it is) ... isn't that the best argument yet for a single payer government health insurance program?

as long as MM knows they are the only game in town, they can do pretty much whatever they want under threat of higher costs or dropped coverage.

isn't this 'the good fight?'

 

Walt

what has struck a nerve with me this past week are the arguements over abortion-wording in the president's proposed healthcare bill


okay, so here's my understanding of the situation... in terms nobody seems willing to report except twisted in republican double-speak

the president's words:

"I laid out a very simple principle, which is this is a health care bill, not an abortion bill and we're not looking to change what is the principle that has been in place for a very long time, which is federal dollars are not used to subsidize abortions."


now here's where he gets into fucking trouble:
he and the democrats spend months and months allowing the insurance industry and republicans to the negotiating table encouraging their ideas be inserted into a bill—which they had no intention of ever voting in favor of

nevertheless, republican notions and ideas were added to the bill:
like government subsidized healthcare savings plans and tax-incentives to employers who will in-turn be using government money to subsidise private insurance policies

now then:
in the twisted minds of folks like michigan democrat Bart Stupak, the addition of these republican ideals into the healthcare bill simply amounts to government funds being used to pay for abortions.

my question:
why doesn't anyone just stand up and speak about this in simple, real terms?


the republicans say one thing while they do the opposite:
the republicans have continually repeated the mantra that the democrats are trying to take over the healthcare system, trying to insinuate themselves and their values into the private healtchcare system—yet, infact, they have added the proverbial Trojan Horse into the healthcare bill... yes, if the government allows for tax breaks and subsidies of private insurance plans directly to tax payers or through employers—the government will now be able to influence healthcare policy and procedures like prenatal counseling and yes, abortion.

Finger


fuck these slippery motherfuckers

they had control of the government for how many fucking years and didn't outlaw abortion—up or down vote, one way or another, solve the issue and shut the fuck up... but no. this is an issue you can keep bringing up against the liberals.

keep government funding out of private insurance companies hands.
i repeat. the healthcare savings plans and tax breaks in this bill are a trojan horse we will never hear the end of





ALT+0151
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arigato

Abortions for some - miniature American Flags for others!

 
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