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[OM] Re: [OT] Health Care

Subject: [OM] Re: [OT] Health Care
From: Winsor Crosby <wincros@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 25 Feb 2007 09:55:01 -0800
I worked in a situation for a few years reviewing medical files. Most  
MRIs are actually unnecessary adding nothing
to the traditional diagnosis. I also knew some MDs most of whom said  
the same thing. One bragged that he was helping his son buy a second  
MRI machine so that he could get his income up to a million dollars a  
year instead of the paltry half million he was at then. All paid by  
your health insurance premium. Sometimes they get caught paying  
kickbacks to other doctors who refer to them for an unneeded MRI.   
MRIs are kind of like those drugs ads on television that tell you to  
ask your doctor for the drug. That kind of changes his role from  
doctor to pusher.

The other thing is the list of of things usually put up as something  
your have to wait for. If you had seen as many people as I have,  
permanently disabled and in constant pain from failed back surgery  
and failed knee surgery a delay may not seem so awful. We must all,  
at our ages, have known someone that was tortured with surgery and  
subsequent treatment for cancer when there was never any hope for  
recovery of the patient, but whose insurance  was a pot of money for  
everyone involved. I have first hand experience with that.

The past 10 years have put most people into HMOs where the whole  
thing changes because of prepay and it is the interest of their  
bottom line to deny tests or treatment. You see horror stories all  
the time if you pay attention. It is calculated that HMO overhead is  
about 20 percent of the premium, not counting profits. So out of  
every dollar only 60 or 70 cents goes to health care, maybe less with  
those that pay their CEOs half a billion a year. With Medicare it is  
97 cents. Interestingly overhead cost for Social Security and  
Unemployment insurance are both less than 3 percent.

In the USA some people can schedule an MRI in 3 days, but you can't  
if you are in an HMO or uninsured which includes most people.


Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA




On Feb 25, 2007, at 9:14 AM, Richard Ociepka wrote:

> In the USA you can schedule an MRI in three days.
> How long does it take in a country with universal health care?



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