roliepolieoliefan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2000
- Messages
- 7,599
Random, but roliepolieoliefan, are you from Pittsburgh? Did you work at Magee?
I did and yep from Pittsburgh.
Random, but roliepolieoliefan, are you from Pittsburgh? Did you work at Magee?
Do you remember the article in the news a couple of months ago about the patient in NC who got a C-section and there was no baby?
Obviously the hospital staff there should have done a pregnancy test.

Do you remember the article in the news a couple of months ago about the patient in NC who got a C-section and there was no baby?
Obviously the hospital staff there should have done a pregnancy test.

No one is saying that if your dad loses his job that we shouldn't have healthcare, but really, look at the Gov't. Nothing they run succeeds, I don't want the Gov't controlling Drs and hospitals and Insurance. It won't work. Just look at the situation we are in now. The country is in such great shape financially.
I did and yep from Pittsburgh.
This alone tells me that it's all about the benjamins for you...which is fine for you. A majority of the youngsters who want to be doctors aren't in it for the money; they're thinking of the altruistic value of helping people.
To tell you the truth, I'd rather have a doctor treating me who cared more about my welfare than he/she would about the money they're going to make off of me, which is why - given the choice - I'd much rather have a doctor from the "Socialized" countries than this one. It sounds to me as if they're making good money there, anyway.
When I go into my family practice, the whole experience from start to finish isI can hardly see how this format is any different from any other country's format except I get the priviledge of paying $50.00 just to walk into the office and the price goes up from there.
- Take a number
- Wait
- Get into a room
- Wait
- Nurse takes my vitals
- Wait
- Doctor finally arrives at my cell of the gerbil wheel. Spends about five minutes with me. Gives me her opinion. Moves to the next cell.
- Get dressed
- Pay the bill
As for the special situations that the alarmists frequently trot out because they're afraid of change (lethal brain tumors, emergency liver surgeries, alien babies, etc), those situations don't apply, and will likely never apply, to the vast majority of American citizens who are currently uninsured or underinsured.
I'm glad you have great insurance. I'm glad you can afford to pay for your medical treatment. Unfortunately, your experience doesn't match the overwelming number of people in the US. As for me, I'll be happy when 2014 gets here and I can finally tell BCBS where to get off.
Excellent post. Also to add about the pp comments. I have been around Dr's for all of my adult life. This is who I worked for. Almost every Dr out there started out wanting just to help people. Then it turns. Sure they still want to help, but the have to make a lot of money. Talk to the lawyers and mal practice insurance companies to fin out why.I'm all for covering other people. What I am against is changing a system the works for me because of other people. If they would just leave the system that is in place intact and absorb everyone else into the social programs that already exist most of us would be fine.
My household already dumps a pretty big sum into the tax system. I don't give a hoot what they do with it or how it's spread around. But under the thumb of bureaucrats our hospitals will no longer be free to fund exploratory procedures. Developing innovations in medicine either for drugs or techniques cost a great deal of money. Like any investor a willingness to incur a risk demands a payoff, if there is no expectation of a payoff things are stifled. People may hoot and hollar at the way we do things but the way we do things has paid for all the medications in our cabinets, all the fancy equipment at our Dr's disposal, and every new & improved way we do things that has prolonged human life. Life expectancy in 1850 was about 40 years. Then Briton Joseph Lister realized microorganisms could contribute to illness and as his theory took hold life expectancy floated up to about 50 years by 1900. When Penicillin showed up around 1930 you could only expect to live to about 60 but as that took off and interest turned to Research & Development we continued to float upwards to the current age of about 78 years. Species normally don't do this. Our lives increased in both length and quality because of good medicine. Now we are faced with epidemics of drug resistant microbes that are learning to bypass all the safeguards in place. Without funding who is going to have the freedom and means to figure this stuff out? Certainly not the people who were in charge of getting the Swine Flu vaccine to us. They turned to private industry to provide the vaccine and only had to get it out to us and there they failed miserably, too little and too late... thank goodness the illness was mild for most people.
No-one has to see it my way or agree with me but my discontent is about more than just money. Big business isn't always helpful but in some instances there are undeniable benefits and I think this is one of them and without money investors via big business will drop medicine like a hot potato and THEN where will we be? With MRSA and the like on the rise I think we would be in very serious trouble before the end of my lifetime.
Now I'm not a Dr, I studied Economics and Finance so when I look at a problem I do tend to see how dollars move around, good and bad. However, I am dependent on Dr's and Ph D's doing their R & D thing to keep me and my family safe so I am their unlikely advocate. I can see how things are going to play themselves out because a great deal of human behavior is all about money, you may not like it but needing stuff and obtaining the means to get that stuff we need drives us all day in- day out 24 a day 365 a year.
As for kids going into Medical School, this isn't free either. Unless a kid's family is independently wealthy that youngster will hit the age of 30 with a loss of 10 years income when he/she was in school being educated (lets say $40,000 year over 10 years = $400,000) AND at least $250,000 in debt from student loans not to mention room and board and meals and wear and tear on the person. So at 30 you wake yp with a MD next to your name and at least $650,000 in the hole. Why on earth would any sane person absorb this unless he/she was going to be able to earn enough to pay in back AND still have enough left over to slide him or herself plus family into a decent middle class existence? I'm sure not advocating it for my kids. Altruism is wonderful but the security of enough money to live is important too. I grew up REALLY POOR and you can be as noble as you want about it, personally I thought it was awful and aim to put my kids on a path leading as far away from poverty as possible.
As for kids going into Medical School, this isn't free either. Unless a kid's family is independently wealthy that youngster will hit the age of 30 with a loss of 10 years income when he/she was in school being educated (lets say $40,000 year over 10 years = $400,000) AND at least $250,000 in debt from student loans not to mention room and board and meals and wear and tear on the person. So at 30 you wake yp with a MD next to your name and at least $650,000 in the hole. Why on earth would any sane person absorb this unless he/she was going to be able to earn enough to pay in back AND still have enough left over to slide him or herself plus family into a decent middle class existence? I'm sure not advocating it for my kids. Altruism is wonderful but the security of enough money to live is important too. I grew up REALLY POOR and you can be as noble as you want about it, personally I thought it was awful and aim to put my kids on a path leading as far away from poverty as possible.

It's not only hospitals that charge ridiculous amounts, but doctors do as well.
I have to have the pressures in my eyes checked at the opthalmologist's office. The charge for it keeps going up, up, up. This last time I had it done in May the pressures were up, so he wanted to start me on a second medication (eye drops) and had me come back 2 weeks later for a re-check. Then he wants me to come back in July to be checked again. I just can't afford it. Not with what they charge for the 2-minute procedure. I couldn't remember how much I paid the time before, so asked and she said it is $60 each time, but said she wouldn't charge me for the second visit. I told her I really appreciated that.
So, when the bill came I was expecting it to be $60. The actual bill is for $309, "my share" is $169 and $140 is "pending insurance" and I know they won't pay. So they're going to want me to pay $309. I will be talking to them about it this week. Tried to go to the office Friday afternoon, but they only have morning hours on Fridays so it has to wait until this coming week. But I definitely want some explanation, especially since she did charge me for the second visit. I wish I would have gotten the name of the woman who quoted me $60, but I didn't, so that's why I want to go talk to them in person, so that I can hopefully talk to her and not someone else.
I just don't understand how they can charge such high prices for something that only takes a couple of minutes. I just wonder how much they charge for a complete eye exam. Not sure I even want to know!!
My household already dumps a pretty big sum into the tax system. I don't give a hoot what they do with it or how it's spread around. But under the thumb of bureaucrats our hospitals will no longer be free to fund exploratory procedures. Developing innovations in medicine either for drugs or techniques cost a great deal of money. Like any investor a willingness to incur a risk demands a payoff, if there is no expectation of a payoff things are stifled. People may hoot and hollar at the way we do things but the way we do things has paid for all the medications in our cabinets, all the fancy equipment at our Dr's disposal, and every new & improved way we do things that has prolonged human life. Life expectancy in 1850 was about 40 years. Then Briton Joseph Lister realized microorganisms could contribute to illness and as his theory took hold life expectancy floated up to about 50 years by 1900. When Penicillin showed up around 1930 you could only expect to live to about 60 but as that took off and interest turned to Research & Development we continued to float upwards to the current age of about 78 years. Species normally don't do this. Our lives increased in both length and quality because of good medicine. Now we are faced with epidemics of drug resistant microbes that are learning to bypass all the safeguards in place. Without funding who is going to have the freedom and means to figure this stuff out? Certainly not the people who were in charge of getting the Swine Flu vaccine to us. They turned to private industry to provide the vaccine and only had to get it out to us and there they failed miserably, too little and too late... thank goodness the illness was mild for most people.
No-one has to see it my way or agree with me but my discontent is about more than just money. Big business isn't always helpful but in some instances there are undeniable benefits and I think this is one of them and without money investors via big business will drop medicine like a hot potato and THEN where will we be? With MRSA and the like on the rise I think we would be in very serious trouble before the end of my lifetime.
Now I'm not a Dr, I studied Economics and Finance so when I look at a problem I do tend to see how dollars move around, good and bad. However, I am dependent on Dr's and Ph D's doing their R & D thing to keep me and my family safe so I am their unlikely advocate. I can see how things are going to play themselves out because a great deal of human behavior is all about money, you may not like it but needing stuff and obtaining the means to get that stuff we need drives us all day in- day out 24 a day 365 a year.
