Wow, now I really understand the basis of Michael
Moore's movie, Sicko, which unfortunately I have not
yet seen.  Please correct me if I am wrong.  The US
already has a model, medicare, which generally
provides better care than the private insurers.  So am
I correct in assuming that the problem is with the
middle class who do not qualify for Medicare, but
cannot afford the private health insurance.  And even
if they do qualify, do not get good coverage.

This reminds me of another issue we faced in Ireland. 
My husband had an existing health problem when we got
to Ireland.  But in order to get the extra private
health insurance, he had to lie and pretend that he
was just fine, otherwise they would have turned him
down.  But the difference between Ireland and the US
system seems to be that when my husband was admitted
to hospital via emergency he was completely covered
for all treatments.  In fact, the extra coverage
seemed to be just for a private room and other frills,
which was not available anyway.

In Canada, one of the flaws in our system is that it
does not cover medication or dental care.  I have
"extra" coverage through my job, which covers both of
these essentials.  So our system is not perfect.  But
again, medication in Canada is cheaper than in the US.

Thanks Ron, for this item from your father,

Aine Suttle


--- Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hello All:
> 
> Interestingly, my Dad just sent me some information
> that may be of
> interest to this topic. The source of the following
> information is at
> the bottom of the post.
> 
> Ron
> 
>
================================================================
> 
> MEDICARE NEWS:
> 
> 1.  Emergency Room Waiting Times: The average wait
> time for heart attack
> patients  at  American  emergency rooms rose 150%,
> from 8 to 20 minutes,
> between  1997  and 2004, according to a recent study
> published in Health
> Affairs.  Researchers  attributed  the  increase  to
>  an overall rise in
> emergency  room  visits, emergency room closures and
> barriers to routine
> or outpatient care.
> 
> 2.  Complaints:  New  York  state residents with
> Medicare filed only 343
> complaints  with  the  state’s Medicare Quality
> Improvement Organization
> between 2005 and 2007, a statewide response rate of
> .01% for the state’s
> three  million  people  with  Medicare,  according
> to a 18 DEC report by
> IPRO,  which contracts with the Centers for Medicare
> & Medicaid Services
> (CMS)  to  resolve  quality-of-care complaints.
> While the .01% complaint
> rate is the second highest in the nation, the
> response rate is viewed as
> inadequate  by  state  officials.  By  comparison, 
> the  New  York State
> Department  of  Health  had  received  4,856 
> general  complaints  about
> hospitals  and  21,481  about  nursing homes during
> the same period. The
> IPRO  complaint  process  differs from that of the
> Department of Health.
> Although  people  with  Medicare  can  use either
> organization to report
> substandard care, complaints to IPRO must be
> submitted in writing and do
> not  result  in  financial  penalties.  Instead,  if
>  IPRO  determines a
> provider  or institution provided a substandard
> quality of care, it will
> develop and monitor a quality improvement plan.
> 
> 3.  Health  Insurance  Impact  on Deaths: Recent
> studies by a government
> advisory  group  underestimated  the number of
> Americans who die because
> they  lack  health  insurance, according to a recent
> report by the Urban
> Institute.  According  to  their  recently released
> study, Uninsured and
> Dying  Because of It, estimates by the Institute of
> Medicine that 18,000
> Americans  died in 2001 due to a lack of health care
> coverage may be off
> by  as  much  as  20%. The Urban Institute instead
> estimates that 21,000
> people  died  in 2001 because they lacked health
> insurance, amounting to
> one  death  every 24 minutes. Between 2000 and 2006,
> the Urban Institute
> believes   that   165,000  people  died  because 
> they  were  uninsured.
> Researchers  at  both  the Institute of Medicine and
> the Urban Institute
> say  Americans  face  an average 25% increase in the
> likelihood of death
> when uninsured. Uninsured Americans are at greater
> risk of death because
> they  do  not  receive  diagnoses, chronic disease
> checkups or essential
> medications  as quickly or as often as those with
> coverage, according to
> the Urban Institute. With life-threatening diagnoses
> like cancer, stroke
> or  hypertension,  the  lack of frequent or timely
> treatment can lead to
> premature  death.  The  Institute  came  up  with
> higher mortality rates
> because  it estimated that older Americans without
> insurance face higher
> mortality rates than their younger counterparts.
> 
> 4.  Physician  Access:  New  research suggests the
> percentage of doctors
> accepting   new  Medicare  patients  has  remained 
> stable  since  2004.
> Researchers  for Congress’ Medicare Payment Advisory
> Commission recently
> presented data showing that 80%of office-based
> doctors surveyed accepted
> new  Medicare  patients  in  2006.  Data for 2006
> also shows that 93% of
> doctors who depend on Medicare for 10% or more of
> their revenue accepted
> new  Medicare patients, a figure that has remained
> unchanged since 2004.
> Patient  surveys yielded similar findings. A survey
> of 2,036 people with
> Medicare  and  2,025  commercially  insured 
> Americans between 50 and 64
> found  that  people  with  Medicare  often  have  an
> easier time finding
> providers  for  specialty  care. Eighty-five percent
> of respondents with
> Medicare  reported no trouble locating a specialist
> in 2007, compared to
> 79%  of  privately  insured  Americans. Data on the
> search for a primary
> care provider was less encouraging, but has remained
> relatively constant
> since 2005. Seventy percent of Medicare patients
> surveyed had no problem
> finding  a  new  primary  care  physician,  a  drop
> from 75% in 2005. In
> contrast, 82% of privately insured patients had no
> problem finding a new
> primary  care  physician,  an  increase of 7% since
> 2005. In addition to
> locating  providers,  survey  data  shows  stable
> rates in accessing and
> receiving  care.  Three-fourths  of respondents with
> Medicare who have a
> primary  or  routine care provider had never
> experienced care delays. In
> contrast,  only 67 percent of privately insured
> Americans gave a similar
> response.
> 
> [Source: Medicare Watch www.medicarerights. org 22
> Jan 08 ++]
> 
>
=====================================================================
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: angela jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Monday, February 04, 2008
> To:   [email protected] <[email protected]>
> Subj: [OTlist] universal healthcare
> 
> > Thank you so much to everyone responding on this
> issue of Universal Healthcare or healthcare
> > outside of the U.S. system. The information and
> links are great. I will be passing the info on to
> > many therapists interested in this topic as well
> as continuing to look into the links that you
> > have forwarded.
> >  
> > Gratefully, Angie Jones MOTR/L 
> 
> 
> 
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