American Health Care : American Hospitals – Expensive But the Gold Standard

Posted on 18 June 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

It is more than amazing.  On top of that medical tourism medtravel may well see more than its projected increases in use and implementation over the next several years.

While it is true that many in the US choose or almost forced by economics to seek health care outside the US it was their choice.  Medical tourists who had cash and wealth – King of Jordan , foreign politicians , oil sheiks did not choose anywhere else generally but the US – be it the Mayo Clinic , John Hopkins or other such respected venues. US health care may of been expensive to many – yet it was available and set the standards of excellence , as opposed to British health care or E.U.  Even though most of the health care institutions overseas are touted as “high quality”  or “as good as “  no one sets these as the highest standard to compare to.

Note the following article of the health care cuts – to the most needy of top of that – by the bureaucrats of the upcoming US socialized non-socialized medical system.

If you have any sense that you may be getting sick in the years ahead, I suggest you get sick immediately. If you will be in need of surgery or any other medical procedure, do it now! If not immediately, be certain that you hand yourself over to the health care professionals before Oct. 15 of this year. That is the date on which President Barack Obama hopes to sign his health care bill once it has gone through the congressional baloney grinder.


At the heart of President Obama’s plan is his stated goal to cut medical costs. That might sound good to you, but it means cutting services, nurses, technicians, medical tests and, most prominently, the use of expensive technology. The president’s top medical advisers are quite frank about this. Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, brother of Rahm Emanuel and a health policy adviser in the Office of Management and Budget, has chided Americans for the expense of their being “enamored with technology.” Dr. David Blumenthal, another key Obama adviser, charges medical innovations as being responsible for fully two-thirds of the annual increase in health care spending. Their solution is to limit expensive innovations. A 2008 Congressional Budget Office report agrees with their cost analysis but concludes happily that such innovations “permit the treatment of previously untreatable conditions.” As I shall show, there are more humane ways to cut health care costs.


Also at the heart of President Obama’s plan is the restriction of services for people 65 and older, who by virtue of modern medicine may actually be 10 to 15 years younger in terms of good health than they would have been a generation ago. Alas, they still have higher health risks and costs than younger people. Thus, they are going to bear the brunt of the Obama administration’s cost cuts, for 27 to 30 percent of Medicaid spending is spent for caring for people at the ends of their lives. With the government taking over more of the nation’s health care costs under the Obama regime, it already has been decided that government monies are spent more economically on younger people than on older people. If a 65-year-old needs the cost of a hip replacement covered, the government will say it would better spend that money on a younger person, whose hip will last longer. Or perhaps the government will decide the money is better spent on preventive medicine for younger people.


In the federal stimulus legislation that the president signed Feb. 17, we find funding for a Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research. “Comparative effectiveness research” is a term used by economists in health care for making health comparisons based often on age, which leads to limiting care based on a patient’s age. In Great Britain, comparative effectiveness research is actually used to deny patients treatment for age-related diseases, such as heart disease and macular degeneration. When the federal stimulus bill was going through Congress, there were warnings regarding the consequences of comparative effectiveness research. Rep. Charles Boustany Jr., a heart surgeon, warned that it would lead to “denying seniors and the disabled lifesaving care.”


Yet the policy remained in the bill, along with requirements for doctors’ offices and hospitals to maintain databanks on patients while creating a national network to monitor patients’ care. The good side of that is that a central database can send out the latest information on treatments, though doctors who keep up with their medical journals already know about these treatments. The dark side is that it will allow the federal government to control how our doctors treat us. The bill speaks of “appropriate” and “cost-effective” care and provides penalties against doctors, beginning in 2014. Now there is an Orwellian twist to the Obama promise of “hope” and “change.”


As Betsy McCaughey has written in a groundbreaking analysis of the Obama health care proposals, Draconian cost-control measures are not the answer to health care reform, and they are based on erroneous data. Health care’s spending increases over the past five years have been about half what they were in the recent period before that. Average family spending on food, energy and health care has remained the same for decades. Moreover, contrary to myth, there are not 47 million uninsured Americans, but actually about 22 million. Rather than pass a health care reform that mercilessly would limit health care to older citizens (and to chronically ill citizens) while still increasing federal expenditures by at least a trillion dollars, she suggests a modest reform, to wit, debit cards for the uninsured and the needy.


Appearing in a recent installment of Spectator.org, McCaughey wrote, “Providing sliding scale assistance, based on household income, to families to purchase . coverage would cost $20 to $25 billion a year.” That is one reform that would deal with our present problems. There are others, which I shall take up in later columns. What we do not need is Orwell’s Big Brother overseeing the rationing of health care to senior citizens, particularly senior citizens with years of life ahead of them.

http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/tyrrell061809.php3

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Further Tales of the Medical "Que" Up There in Canada

Posted on 23 April 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

                  We need accountability in health care  notes a grass roots Canadian campaign newsletter.

                   The self written and distributed newsletter notes that “….. then there is the “stupid”  decision to cut back on emergency services at the Seven Oaks Hospital in Winnipeg Canada.  It seems that after a major update to the emergency department of this major regional medical center’s emergency department that the working hours of the emergency department were cut back.  Talk about the left hand not knowing what the right hand was doing – in plain site.   The amazing part is that even with press releases on the openings of the updated unit complete with a ribbon cutting ceremony and a how to reach pdf being written and offered on the actual hospital website the cutbacks went into place.

Phase 1 of New Emergency Department is now complete!

Phase 1 of the new Seven Oaks Hospital Emergency Department is now complete.  A Ribbon Cutting Ceremony officially opening the new facility was held on August 19. 

 “This state-of-the-art department was designed to ensure we can provide our citizens with the best emergency care possible,” said Health Minister Theresa Oswald. “This expanded emergency department means improved care for patients and their families, and a better work environment for our health-care professionals.” 

Please see the attached .pdf files for information on the new facility and Press Release.

 Further Tales of the Medical "Que"  Up There in Canada

Phase 1 of New Emergency Department is now complete!

        If one looks at a map of the coverage area of the catchment areas of the Seven Oaks Hospital  (SOGH) is clearly visible.  There are no other major regional medical centers what so ever in the adjacent local and rural areas just north of the only major center in this very large geographic areas of the Province of  Manitoba.

Manitoba is the easternmost of the three Prairie Provinces. Comparatively level, Manitoba generally ranges from 490-ft./150 m to 980-ft./300 m above sea level. Baldy Mountain is Manitoba’s highest point, at 2727 ft./831 m. Agricultural land lies in a triangle, bordering Saskatchewan and the U.S., cutting diagonally across lake Winnipeg. The northern 3/5 of Manitoba is Precambrian Shield. In northernmost Manitoba lies tundra and permafrost (permanently frozen subsoil). All waters in Manitoba flow to Hudson Bay. Before settlement, a large area of southern Manitoba was flood plain or swamp. An extensive system of drainage ditches had to be constructed throughout south central Manitoba to make the region suitable for cultivation.

Area:
250,946 miles / 649,950 km

Land Surface:
211,721 miles / 548,360 km

North to South:
761miles / 1225 km

Width (South):
279 miles / 449 km

North Boundary (Width):
260 miles / 418 km

Coastline:
400 miles / 645 km

Water surface:
39,225 miles / 101,593km

Widest Point:
493 miles / 793 km

source:  http://www.travelmanitoba.com/default.asp?page=130&node=585

      Further the writer of this article notes:  ” Cutting back these emergency services goes against the concept of community based hospitals, which if managed properly are more cost effective and can provide the same level of care as the Health Sciences Center ( the major teaching hospital and medical center in the major and dominant city  of Winnipeg in the whole Canadian Province of Manitoba ).

new logo Further Tales of the Medical "Que"  Up There in Canada hsc 5 Further Tales of the Medical "Que"  Up There in Canada

820 Sherbrook Street Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3A 1R9  
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Welcome to Health Sciences Centre Winnipeg.

Located in the heart of Winnipeg, Health Sciences Centre (HSC) is one of Canada’s largest tertiary care facilities. We play a unique role in providing health care services to residents of Manitoba, northwestern Ontario and Nunavut.

We are a major referral centre for complex health problems that require expert consultation and management. We are also Manitoba’s designated trauma centre and the centre for transplants, neurosurgery, burns and most hospital-based pediatric care. Our highly skilled teams of patient care professionals provide acute and continuing care to the ill and injured. Our support teams ensure that visiting and receiving care at Health Sciences Centre is a comfortable and safe experience.

May hope flourish in this place.

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source:  http://www.hsc.mb.ca/

   The writer of the pamphlet goes on to say “  What I have found over the last few weeks , and time period,   is that many healthcare workers ( in the City of Winnipeg and Manitoba Canada areas), in general , are very opinionated  about the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (W.H.R.A.).

287 Broadway
Winnipeg, MB R3C 0R9, Canada

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287 Broadway
Winnipeg, MB R3C 0R9, Canada

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Canadian Doctor: Shortages So Bad North Of The Border Some Towns … – Dr. David Gratzer, writing in the Wall Street Journal, also makes a good point about just how dependent the Canadian health care system is on America’s. Indeed, Canada’s provincial governments themselves rely on American medicine. …

Why we need a public options for health care and debunking … – Every time we try to have a discussion about a public single payer option we hear how we shouldn’t have it and Canada as used as an example of how bad public health care options are. This article debunks the myths surrounding Canadian health … As a Canadian living in the United States for the past 17 years, I am frequently asked by Americans and Canadians alike to declare one health care system as the better one. The article continues, debunking myths about Canadian …

Wash Park Prophet: Canadian Health Care Works – The things that work in the Canadian health care system are explained here. I suspect, although the article does not say so, that in addition to having lower administrative costs and saving money with preventantive care, that many providers are also paid less richly in Canada than in the United States (although providers in Canada have essentially no bad debt losses, while American providers are swimming in bad debt). Posted by Andrew Oh-Willeke at 6/09/2009 12:08:00 AM …