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Re: No LBC---Health Insurance

To: Larry Daniels <ladaniels@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: No LBC---Health Insurance
From: b-evans@earthlink.net
Date: Sat, 06 Jan 2007 15:38:42 -0800
Larry Daniels wrote:  "How about universal health coverage just like 
every other large industrialized country on the planet?"

Oh, Larry, I truly do love your sense of humor!!!!  One of the great 
myths in America is of how wonderful "universal" health coverage is.  
Unfortunately, most Americans have absolutely no understanding of its 
reality, and therefore it sounds appealing.  Reality, unfortunately, is 
quite different and would not be tolerated by usYanks.

First, it is certainlty not "free".  Everyone has to pay for their 
health insurance which goes under the name "National Insurance".  Last 
year, I sat down with a friend who lives about five minutes from 
Stonehenge.  She is a pub barmaid, her husband a woodcutter on the 
estate of Lord Pembroke.  Each of them pays more for their National 
Insurance than my wife and I do for our Blue Shield coverage and Pam's 
Medicare coverage. 

Waiting lists are the constant bugaboo of the system.  A couple of years 
ago, Mandy visited us just after her GP had referred her to a specialist 
about some circulation problems in her leg.  She was told that she could 
not get an appointment with the specialist for 18 months.  While here, I 
had checked by a doctor, and the diagnosis was phlebitis, and she was in 
danger of losing both legs to amputation.  (A letter to doctors back in 
England got her treatment in time.)

Today, the U.K.'s health service is in a shambles, and even the Labour 
Government admits it is.  Hospitals and clinics are closing (the Labour 
Government is being charged with closing hospitals in Conservative 
areas.).  The waiting lists for simple GP appointments is staggering 
compared to American standards.  Patients will no longer be able to have 
follow-up visits with their specialist after surgery.  The waiting list 
for hip replacements is at least a year throughout the country.  Doctors 
are forbidden to prescribed certain expensive drugs for such issues as 
breast cancer and Alzheimers.  And now, as a cost-saving measure, the 
Government has sent out an edict that hospitals are not to operate on 
patients until they have been on a waiting list for 20 weeks.  I could 
go on and on, but you get the idea.

Today, more and more people in the U.K. are purchasing their own private 
health insurance.  Ironically, although this lightened the burden on the 
NHS, the Government is going to great lengths to discourage the 
practice.  This while it has been revealed that some of the top 
ministers in the Labour Government are themselves purchasing private 
health insurance.

One of the problems that people in America have is that too many 
complain about costs.  The costs of health care and the cost of 
insurance.  Too many, however, forget the giant strides that have been 
made in medicine in the last couple of generations.  All of the mystical 
magical equipment and procedures that we have today were simply not 
available a few years ago.  But it costs money.  If people want 
something for nothing, they can get it.  But it won't be of the same 
quality!  Pam and I just happen to be fortunate enough to have who we 
consider to be the most fantastic GP in the business;  one has literally 
saved Pam's life in the last few years (and she's the most beautiful).  
We also have an HMO that has been outstanding, and with whom we have no 
complaint.

To me, the bottom line is that despite all you hear, health care in 
America is by far the best on the planet.  Is it perfect?  Of course 
not.  But compare your life expectancy with that of your father, 
grandfather, and on back the line.  You are living longer.  (There are 
naturally cultural difference that explain longevity in different 
countries, as well.)

RBE




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