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Oct 31, 2009
More Medical Fixins'
Posted by: Steve Hemmingsen - 10/31/2009 12:00 AM

You can hardly look into any corner of our arcane health care system without finding something that needs fixin.’  Money spent on kids’ castles…albeit donated…that could be better spent on cures, overpriced insurance and drugs and on and on. 

 

Here’s one more twig for this fire of reform that glows hopefully and then dims depending on the day and who is handing out the biggest campaign contributions; bribes.   This one isn’t even high on my personal list of things that needs doing, just one more twig. 

 

On the way home from my recent New England road trip, I stopped to visit an old friend who is battling cancer.  I mean “old” in the sense of life-long friend, not age.  Age has never been a factor with her.  She’s in home health care, which is a great program, but with a catch.  Isn’t there always a catch in our health system?

 

As I understand it, if you’re in health homecare you are, more or less, under medical house arrest.  If you’re seen outside your home, you could lose your home health care. 

The intent is clear.  There are people who would take advantage and flat out commit fraud, people who would use home health care as a cleaning service and party on.

 

This is hardly the case with my friend.  She is very sick, very, but that is not to say that she is immobile on good days.  She has been very active in her community, the same community in which she has lived and raised her children since I was a third grader…or was it fourth…the same house? 

 

Knowing her as I do, I would think a short field trip on a good day, a cup of coffee uptown instead of in bed, maybe a lunch with friends, would be therapeutic.  But, under the rules, as I understand them, such an event could leave her high and dry on the bad days; a real life Catch 22.  The solution seems simple since we’re so big on decisions being made by doctors and patients.  Couldn’t a doctor point out that the patient would have difficulty tending to her or himself fulltime, but could stand a little uplift, a bit of R and R, a furlough from time to time? 

 

Isn’t this an exact example of what the right wing nuts are worried about if the government gets deeper into our health care, the loss of individual freedom and judgment?  Yes, it is.  But I’m still willing to risk it and fix it as opposed to leaving the medical privateers in charge.  A privateer was a pirate who operated with a government license.  In the end, a lot of them still wound up on a gallows. 

 

Anyway, my friend an I still had a good visit, talking about the politics of medicine and education and the lunacy of life in general.  As gripes go, I doubt if this one is very high on either of our lists at the moment, just another good program that needs some tweaking. 

 

 

 

Comments

What ? Could we dare think anything to do with goverment would apply common sense to a given situation ? People on
medical SSI also see this double jepordy.
If they try to work even part time....the goverment often revokes their
SSI. Because, they proved they CAN work.
Maybe they can only work 10 hours a week,
not a full 40. But, the goverment often fails to recognize the differance.
Only Uncle Sam can mess up what should be
easy and simple.

Posted by: claude m. - Oct 31, 2009 12:17 PM

For many long-term care recipients the home is an ideal environment. These people may be confined to the home but continue to lead active lives engaging in church service, entertaining grandchildren, writing histories, corresponding, pursuing hobbies or doing handwork activities. Their care needs might not be that demanding and might include occasional help with house cleaning and shopping as well as help with getting out of bed, dressing and bathing. Most of the time these people don’t need the supervision of a 24/7 caregiver

Posted by: fun no more - Oct 31, 2009 1:10 PM

Yes the frustrations w/health care grind on. But you know, most of our laws, rules & regulations wouldn't be necessary IF people were truly honest, not greedy & try to take advantage of systems & others.
We WERE leaning toward nationalizing health care UNTIL we had to "TAKE A NUMBER" at the S/S office in SFalls recently dealing w/deceased relative matters. And when we got to the window, did we receive the info we needed ? NOT, nor did they truly give a rats #%*&. And to top things off the "guard" telling us to take a # was on a personal phone call about buying land.. Gov't at its 'best'.
Things look dim no matter what way they go. ~fsl.

Posted by: fsl - Oct 31, 2009 4:49 PM

It's not health care reform - it is eugenics.

Why do you think that they are trying to vaccinate so many people so quickly.

vaccines containing mercury, squaline, live virus, adjuvants, aluminum ...

A "jobless recovery" means that they are not going to create jobs; they are going to eliminate people.

Watch and see...

Posted by: Jesuit jammer - Nov 01, 2009 6:06 AM

PomPom Pelosi is cheering again. Her health plan...including a public option...is moving ahead. Problem is...and the right wing talk show hosts are right on this one...it doesn't cover anybody. Beware of smoke and mirrors, reform fans. The Dems are failing in the red zone and trying to cover it up. I fear my worst thoughts are coming true; we're going to wind up with the insurance companies more firmly in charge than ever. Hey, but better pirates than the government, huh?

Posted by: Hemmingsen - Nov 01, 2009 7:46 AM

No program is without problems that need to be dealt with. But I for one am willing to pay into Medicare which has been one of the best things to happen to seniors. And as to problems we all might have encountered with one underpaid front-line government worker or the next, I would rather those problems than get the shaft from a company that has overpaid executives and boards of directors becoming ever more wealthy at the expense of my family's health. I believe that some of the problems Steve describes with his friend are a result of government being overly conscious of the almighty whining tax-payer who might complain if his ill friend were to be seen around town able to do anything. I don't see that private insurers and companies have used any more common sense than with the situation described. Just because there are problems doesn't mean the other alternatives are better.

Posted by: don't know everything - Nov 01, 2009 11:46 AM

Kudos to Hemmingsen for providing an argument counter to his own beliefs on healthcare.

Discourse and policy would be greatly improved if everyone had the intellectual honesty to acknowledge both sides of arguments.

Posted by: JN - Nov 02, 2009 3:24 AM

Annual Medicare Fraud: $60 Billion. Annual Profits of Top Ten Insurance Companies: $8 billion.

Posted by: Easy E - Nov 02, 2009 12:06 PM

I think Jesuit jammer is right, the government is turning us all into robots. Mercury?! Aluminum?! One of these days they will be able to flip a switch and control your body movements wirelessly with your metal filled blood. It won't matter that you have healthcare because you're just another pawn in their game of chess....mwuhahahaha!!!!

Posted by: Elvislives - Nov 02, 2009 3:23 PM

Jesuit Jammer and Elvislives are both right... look into it. What do you think is in the chemtrails above us? They're hitting us from all directions. If someone tries to stick me with a mandatory vaccine, it's a fight to the death.

Posted by: IMDWeezul - Nov 02, 2009 4:44 PM

... And you're the same Republicans that thought it was ok for Rounds to take MANDATORY blood tests for all dui cases.

Posted by: Hugh Jazz - Nov 02, 2009 6:44 PM

I almost lost my Home Health Care by driving myself to the doctor. I guess I could have laid down on the trip instead of sitting up to stay off my bad skin, but then I would have gotten a ticket for NO seat belt.

From what I understood, someone had to take me to the Doctor and grocery shopping. I could also go to church if someone else drove.

The alternative to Home Health Care was to put me in the hospital, which would have cost many times more, both me and Medicare.

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Posted by: COCO  [URL] - Nov 09, 2009 9:00 PM

This one isn’t even high on my personal list of things that needs doing, just one more twig.

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