This article was written by Graham Hicks in the Edmonton Sun and provides some food for thought. I'd be interested in hearing your opinions.
YANKEE HEALTH-CARE HORROR
We've all heard horror stories about American health care.
On our San Francisco sojourn last week, our Bay Area friends quietly
assured us.
The stories are true.
The private, profit-driven American system is not about health. It's about
money.
Bay Area residents Jeff and Corry are lucky enough to have a good health
plan mostly paid for by his employer.
He pays a token $50 a month for a family of four to be part of an
employer-selected HMO, Health Maintenance Organization.
But if he was laid off or quit, big trouble.
"I'd either pay the full shot myself or have to buy insurance on my own."
There are myriads of private health plans in the U.S., much like dental or
drug plans here in Canada, each with different levels of deductibility and
quality of health care.
The cheapest family insurance plan starts at $500 a month and heads
skyward. The quality of health care we receive in Alberta would cost at
least $1,000 a month. And that's likely too low.
"If you're destitute in the States, with no assets and no house, you're
OK," Jeff says. "You qualify for medical aid. It's all free. But you have
to go to state-run county hospitals, where the medicine is assembly line
and they'd rather not be treating you."
It's the self-employed, or those changing jobs that are tremendously
squeezed.
"If money's tight and there's no company plan, many Americans take their
chances and drop health insurance," says Jeff.
King Ralph, if your Third Way is about innovative ways of improving health
care within a publicly funded, equal-access system, that's fine. As
taxpayers, we'll pay whatever it takes.
But otherwise, DON'T MESS WITH OUR HEALTH CARE!!!
YANKEE HEALTH-CARE HORROR
We've all heard horror stories about American health care.
On our San Francisco sojourn last week, our Bay Area friends quietly
assured us.
The stories are true.
The private, profit-driven American system is not about health. It's about
money.
Bay Area residents Jeff and Corry are lucky enough to have a good health
plan mostly paid for by his employer.
He pays a token $50 a month for a family of four to be part of an
employer-selected HMO, Health Maintenance Organization.
But if he was laid off or quit, big trouble.
"I'd either pay the full shot myself or have to buy insurance on my own."
There are myriads of private health plans in the U.S., much like dental or
drug plans here in Canada, each with different levels of deductibility and
quality of health care.
The cheapest family insurance plan starts at $500 a month and heads
skyward. The quality of health care we receive in Alberta would cost at
least $1,000 a month. And that's likely too low.
"If you're destitute in the States, with no assets and no house, you're
OK," Jeff says. "You qualify for medical aid. It's all free. But you have
to go to state-run county hospitals, where the medicine is assembly line
and they'd rather not be treating you."
It's the self-employed, or those changing jobs that are tremendously
squeezed.
"If money's tight and there's no company plan, many Americans take their
chances and drop health insurance," says Jeff.
King Ralph, if your Third Way is about innovative ways of improving health
care within a publicly funded, equal-access system, that's fine. As
taxpayers, we'll pay whatever it takes.
But otherwise, DON'T MESS WITH OUR HEALTH CARE!!!
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