M
manualman
Guest
I don’t meet the OP’s foreign born criteria, but I do have an illuminating second hand anecdote.
In the mid 1990’s my future father in law was in a bad car wreck in Wales. He received immediate attention, no question asked (like "where’s your insurance card?). They did a great job of stabilizing his condition (stopped blood loss, stitched him up, antibiotics for surficial infections, set broken bones…) and the Welsh staff of the small hospital gave superbly friendly and attentive care.
Unfortunately, he didn’t get better. He had a fracture in his back which was identified on X-rays and addressed (stabilized), but his pain just kept getting worse. His doctor told him that things looked fine and that he “didn’t meet the criteria” for any more advanced testing (such as an MRI). After another MONTH of no improvement (and agony that only drugs temporarily dulled), my future wife and MIL talked American Airlines into allowing him on board (waiving a typical medical stability requirement). Upon return, he was taken to Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, IL where he promptly received an MRI that identified an infection that had been festering in his spine where the injury occurred. Turned out to be a VERY close thing as the infection left unchecked would have soon caused irreparable spinal damage.
I really believe that we should have a national health care system for all medical treatment that existed prior to about 1980. Pay for it with general tax revenue and make it available to all with no private billing. Would probably be cheaper than the current system. For more advanced treatment, make people buy insurance.
This would be the best of BOTH worlds. Get the basics and preventative stuff out there for everyone and keep the profit motive alive to promote advances in medicine. Maybe someday MRIs will be as cheap as X-rays. Then we can add that to the universal care. You get the idea.
I should admit that this isn’t MY idea. I have known a couple dozen Canadians over the years. The ones who have never HAD a major health issue LOVE their system. The ones that have needed advanced care urgently wish they had what I just described above (when it occasionally comes up for discussion it is called “the two tier” approach, and usually gets torpedoed by horrified leftists).
In the mid 1990’s my future father in law was in a bad car wreck in Wales. He received immediate attention, no question asked (like "where’s your insurance card?). They did a great job of stabilizing his condition (stopped blood loss, stitched him up, antibiotics for surficial infections, set broken bones…) and the Welsh staff of the small hospital gave superbly friendly and attentive care.
Unfortunately, he didn’t get better. He had a fracture in his back which was identified on X-rays and addressed (stabilized), but his pain just kept getting worse. His doctor told him that things looked fine and that he “didn’t meet the criteria” for any more advanced testing (such as an MRI). After another MONTH of no improvement (and agony that only drugs temporarily dulled), my future wife and MIL talked American Airlines into allowing him on board (waiving a typical medical stability requirement). Upon return, he was taken to Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, IL where he promptly received an MRI that identified an infection that had been festering in his spine where the injury occurred. Turned out to be a VERY close thing as the infection left unchecked would have soon caused irreparable spinal damage.
I really believe that we should have a national health care system for all medical treatment that existed prior to about 1980. Pay for it with general tax revenue and make it available to all with no private billing. Would probably be cheaper than the current system. For more advanced treatment, make people buy insurance.
This would be the best of BOTH worlds. Get the basics and preventative stuff out there for everyone and keep the profit motive alive to promote advances in medicine. Maybe someday MRIs will be as cheap as X-rays. Then we can add that to the universal care. You get the idea.
I should admit that this isn’t MY idea. I have known a couple dozen Canadians over the years. The ones who have never HAD a major health issue LOVE their system. The ones that have needed advanced care urgently wish they had what I just described above (when it occasionally comes up for discussion it is called “the two tier” approach, and usually gets torpedoed by horrified leftists).