Source:
the Sydney Morning HeraldKicking a dying man - a tale of US 'care'
HELEN PITT
March 25, 2010
The day Barack Obama's healthcare reform package passed, I received a letter telling me my seven-year-old son's American health insurance would be discontinued. I was sent the same ''termination'' letter three times, multiple pages of convoluted insurance-speak I had come to know well after living for a decade in California.
I went to live in the US in 1999 for my American-born husband William to have treatment for a brain tumour. Over 10 years he had four brain operations, six weeks of radiation, numerous rounds of chemotherapy, immunotherapy and multiple prescription medications.
My husband might have been battling cancer, but the battle with the insurance companies proved just as sickening. Each time William had a brain operation we would receive a bill - usually in the vicinity of $50,000-$80,000 for the operation and three-day hospital stay - despite the fact we paid a hefty premium and the insurance company intended to pay costs.
I've heard often that unsuspecting and unwell patients who are insured have paid hefty medical bills because they are vulnerable, confused, tired of being harassed by hospital billing departments or simply didn't understand the insurance jargon that the bill was the responsibility of the insurance company, not the patient.
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The term ''socialised medicine'' was invented by the American Medical Association in 1947 to disparage president Harry Truman's proposal for a national healthcare system. It was a ploy to protect the interests of the US medical insurance industry, and the term was resurrected by Ronald Reagan to counter Jimmy Carter's campaign for national insurance. Yet ask any American what's so bad about "socialised medicine" and they are clueless.
Read more:
http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/kicking-a-dying-man--a-tale-of-us-care-20100324-qwn4.html