My experiences in the hospital are opposite of Eliza's experiences.
There is no way any decent hospital would dismiss a chemo patient with a dangerously low WBC, indigent or not. I find it hard to believe any hospital would and if they did and that patient got sick and died because of it, they could have a huge lawsuit on their hands.
Over the period of a year in and out of treatment for brain cancer and a stem cell transplant where he was quarantined a month, we never met anyone who was treated "less" because of their inability to pay. The biggest worry of everyone we met (and ourselves) was how we were going to pay when it was all over, not that we wouldn't receive top notch care while at the hospital.
I got some good advice from a social worker about halfway through dh's treatment. She said to toss the bills in a drawer and deal with them when it was all over. Best advice ever because #1- I didn't have the money to send at that time and #2- the hospital ended up paying most of our portion anyway.
There is no way any decent hospital would dismiss a chemo patient with a dangerously low WBC, indigent or not. I find it hard to believe any hospital would and if they did and that patient got sick and died because of it, they could have a huge lawsuit on their hands.
Over the period of a year in and out of treatment for brain cancer and a stem cell transplant where he was quarantined a month, we never met anyone who was treated "less" because of their inability to pay. The biggest worry of everyone we met (and ourselves) was how we were going to pay when it was all over, not that we wouldn't receive top notch care while at the hospital.
I got some good advice from a social worker about halfway through dh's treatment. She said to toss the bills in a drawer and deal with them when it was all over. Best advice ever because #1- I didn't have the money to send at that time and #2- the hospital ended up paying most of our portion anyway.