It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
At the heart of the multi-headed abominable creature known as Affordable Care Act aka ObamaCare, there resides a singular deceit. It is too easy for lawyers and even U.S. Supreme Court Justices to miss this deceit in the process of arguing abstractions, but I and other doctors experience this reality every day our offices:
Insurance does not equal care. One patient’s needs can get in the way of another’s needs. My waiting room is like so many others in America, and when it is clogged with several patients with low-paying highly-regulated insurance, the waiting time goes up and the access to quality medical care goes down.
With all due respect to Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, though it is true that everyone will get sick and need health care eventually, it is not true that health insurance automatically provides you with that care.
I can tell you as a practicing physician that the regulations and restrictions and red tape of health insurance (all increasing under ObamaCare) hamstring my office staff and interfere with my ability to take care of you.
What does provide an uninsured patient access to health care are laws that mandate that a hospital emergency room can’t turn you away when you are sick.
Originally posted by Unity_99
That means nothing to the millions without health care or the ones who have lost their homes battling cancer or one accident.
We in Canada have appointments usually very swiftly unless doc is on vacation. Get hospital and if low income, medicines free or for very low monthly payments, and all lab work, and walk in clinics available as well.
The real culprit in American systems is the Insurance Corps. The US has this really odd way of taking tax dollars, and then giving it all away to Corporations for their profit, in other words, stealing tax payers to give the most pyramidal private corp service imaginable, to reward and enrich their friends, instead of using tax dollars to directly run the services, which anyone can figure out is the best and most cost efficient way and of course, universal.
But in the US, they call all direct use of tax dollars that way, PINK, RED, COMMIE RUN FOR THE HILLS......!!!!
Thus have fully brainwashed people into paying for their abuse and being fleeced.
Originally posted by horseplay
I'm terribly confused over this Obamacare issue.
I thought at first it was some kind of govt subsidized ins that would be a step above medicaid
Now it seems like it is a forced issue, and all american citizens will be required to pay into it ?
If people like me cant afford insurance now, how can we afford to be forced to pay into it?
I broke my hand thursday, I'm sure of it. Because I'm terrified of the expense of going even to a doc in a box, I've just wrapped it up and am dealing with it. it sucks. my hand is so swollen i have no knuckles and it's swollen all the way into my wrist and up into my fingers. Advil is not phasing it.
the sorry thing is if I was an illegal immigrant and pregnant I would probably have free care. I don't get it.edit on 31-3-2012 by horseplay because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by horseplay
I'm terribly confused over this Obamacare issue.
I thought at first it was some kind of govt subsidized ins that would be a step above medicaid
Now it seems like it is a forced issue, and all american citizens will be required to pay into it ?
If people like me cant afford insurance now, how can we afford to be forced to pay into it?
I broke my hand thursday, I'm sure of it. Because I'm terrified of the expense of going even to a doc in a box, I've just wrapped it up and am dealing with it. it sucks. my hand is so swollen i have no knuckles and it's swollen all the way into my wrist and up into my fingers. Advil is not phasing it.
the sorry thing is if I was an illegal immigrant and pregnant I would probably have free care. I don't get it.edit on 31-3-2012 by horseplay because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by ~Vixen~
Health insurance doesn't affect the quality of service provided, however it does affect other associated factors such as timeliness of service rendering and availability.
Once Obamacare is implemented I believe that we'll see a huge surge in the number of patients seeking medical attention/consultation. Rather than people coming in when needing care, the new attitude towards healthcare will be "if I'm going to be forced to pay for it, I'm going to get my moneys worth out of it." We will be inundated with otherwise frivolous issues that would normally be treated with a little bit common sense. I'm not saying that medical needs shouldn't be addressed, but rather that those truly needing urgent attention will find themselves in longer lines, and waiting a longer period for available appointment slots.
Originally posted by Gorsebeacon
You are smart. I'm so tired of my fellow Americans I don't even know where to start. USers always talk crap about the Canadian health care system and they have not even done research to find out what it is really like. They hear one story about someone waiting six months to see a doctor and assume the entire Canadian healthcare is messed up. I'm beginning to hate my countrymen. That is not good because I know I am not alone.
Originally posted by DaTroof
Doctors are money hungry frauds.
Sell the treatment, not the cure, then lie about why the cure was not suggested.
Originally posted by DaTroof
Doctors are money hungry frauds.
Sell the treatment, not the cure, then lie about why the cure was not suggested.
The patient in the emergency department smelled of advanced cancer. It is the smell of rotting flesh, but even more pungent. You only ever have to smell it once. She had been bleeding irregularly, but chalked it up to “the change.” Peri-menopausal hormonal mayhem is the most common cause of irregular vaginal bleeding, but unfortunately not the only cause. She hadn’t gone to the doctor because she had no health insurance. The only kind of work she could get in a struggling rural community was without benefits. Her coat and shoes beside the gurney were worn and her purse from another decade. She could never afford to buy it on her own. She didn’t qualify for Medicaid, the local doctor only took insurance, and there was no Planned Parenthood or County Clinic nearby.
I had never encountered this clinical scenario during my training in Canada. I had never seen a woman suffer because she couldn’t afford something as simple as a Pap smear, never mind deal with the indignities of shopping around her sorrow and hard luck to try to patch together what would inevitably be inadequate medical therapy. It is this reality of medical care in America for which I was wholly unprepared. Many times I found the residents comforting me.
Originally posted by horseplay
reply to post by xuenchen
i hate typing 1 handed. im a fanatic over typos.
i may go somewhere today, it's killing me.
im just disgusted with the system. and i still believe my husband would be alive today if he would have had insurance.
guess that's part of my attitude problem.