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LittleSoldier
Guest
Thanks for reading my post again. There is obviously a communication problem between us, so I’ll try to explain again.I’ve re-read your post 3 or 4 times and it seems your point is that if people have insurance then they can get preventative care. I’m saying that you don’t need insurance to get preventative care b/c it is cheap. If that wasn’t your point then please tell me what it is.
My point is that preventive care, when used correctly, would save money for both the government (or insurance companies or whoever ends up in charge of a national or state health plan). If a person is running a fever and coughing a lot, there is obviously a problem. I will agree that OTC medication is appropriate, unless the problems continue. You can’t cure pneumonia with OTC medications. So the patient needs to understand if a national health care plan is instituted or a state plan is instituted that he/she needs to see the physician early enough and not wait until things get so bad that he/she ends up in the ER.
My point about the ER turning people away is only meant in case a national (or state) health care plan is instituted. If we end up with a national health care plan or even state plans, people need to be educated in the proper use of the health system. Someone walking into the ER with an early case of pneumonia might be told to see his/her physician ASAP or go to an Urgent Care Center, etc. People would need education so that they could understand that it would be a misuse of the system to suddenly appear at the ER with either symptoms that present no emergency or appear with symptoms of severe pneumonia which could have been taken care of by a pcp as part of a regular office call. Years ago I ended up at a Kaiser Hospital though I didn’t have Kaiser insurance. It was an emergency and the Kaiser Hospital was the closest. There was a sign somewhere that stated if a patient came in without a real emergency they would be charged a fee above what Kaiser would normally pay for emergency care. I thought that was a good idea because it would help stop people from running to the ER for a simple cold, etc.
My point about scans, etc. comes from a previous post in which I read that the government is attempting to cut back on scans. MRIs, CT scans, and other scanning is something the government should be pushing - both in research which would help in the development of better scanning equipment and in the current use of scanning equipment as a diagnostic tool. Scanning would save money IMO. My point about my father dying from pancreatic cancer is relevant here. I realize that an extremely low percentage of people who have that type of cancer live. From what I was told, once a person discovers the cancer it is already too late. The cancer has been present for about ten years without noticeable symptoms and when it is finally detected the patient is given a death sentence. My father died within a few months of receiving the diagnosis and it wasn’t a pretty death.
I want researchers to improve the quality of scanning equipment so that a person can be scanned and a whole host of problems can be diagnosed very early (as is the case with mammograms now). Early diagnosis of cancer and other medical conditions would be a more effective use of money IMO (although I don’t have hard data to back me up) and it would certainly be better for the patient.
I hope this makes more sense. I apologize for not being able to communicate very well on this subject. I am trying very hard to learn everything I can about the health care problem. At this point I still have no position on a nationalized health care plan - I don’t particularly like the federal government sticking its nose into programs that should be run by individual states. And I’m not happy at all with my state’s current health plan. I still believe there is an answer somewhere but it’s so complicated.
Preventive care, as you said, is cheap (at least compared to all the costs associated with treating a condition that could have been detected earlier), although some of what I would call preventive care would be expensive enough to make it not affordable for many patients. This would be true with scanning, especially if it’s new technology. It would be a great tool for diagnosis but when a patient needs to pay a couple thousand dollars out-of-pocket for a test, there is a problem. But I still think it would be less expensive to somehow have that scanning paid for by insurance (or a national or state health plan) than to have insurance pay for treating the disease that wasn’t detected early on.