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Edited on Mon Mar-09-09 03:59 AM by Heddi
but I work with several RN's who are 1) from Europe and worked there as RN's or 2) are from the US and did short-term assignments in Europe and I've never heard any stories that are as horrible as what you've described. Again, not discounting what you're saying, but the folks I've worked with have never conveyed the conditions that you describe.
And I, myself, have been to hospitals throughout Europe and while wards are popular moreso than the US, I've seen private and semi-private rooms, and the wards had separators between the beds.
There was adequate staffing and this is from what I've seen and what i've heard from RN's that worked in the hospitals there.
I do know that nurses in the UK do not use or have the skills that US-trained RN's do, as far as medications they can give, starting IV's, etc. One nurse I work with is from Scotland and said he felt he was being asked to do Junior Doctor skills here in the US--starting IV's, giving drips, giving IV meds....not allowed to do that.
However, I take exception to your comment "you can't be turned down by an ER in case of emergency"---well, that's partly true. If it's a LIFE THREATNING emergency you must be STABILIZED and then MOVED to another hospital that takes private pay, medicare, medicaid, or people without any insurance coverage. If you are uninsured and go to the ER with bronchitis, and the ER is a private hospital, they do NOT have to treat you and can refuse to treat you.
And the treatment you receive while being "stabilized" in the private or non-community ER...you get billed for that. And you get billed mightily.
And seeing as I work at a community hospital, where 80% of the patients we see are uninsured, I can't tell you how many times someone without insurance goes to Private Hospital X for, say, 2nd degree burns (this happened just a few weeks ago). The ER put a bandage on their arm and put them in a taxi to go 60 miles (on their own dime) to MY hospital because, according to that ER, the burns were "too severe" to be treated there (but not too severe to send the patient in a taxi, not ambulance, to our hospital). They were SECOND DEGREE BURNS on the ARM from STEAM. That is *NOT* an emergency that couldn't be covered by their services.
But, being a private hospital, they don't have to cover ANYONE, unless it is to stabilize their condition so that they are stable enough to be TRANSFERRED to another hospital.
And that dude will undoubtedly get a bill for several hundred dollars for being seen in the private ER for 30 minutes and getting $2 worth of bandage on his arm.
Another issue I have is that community and public hospitals aren't a pancea for lack of adequate health care. The Emergency Room is not the place for minor upper respiratory infections, or ear infections to be treated. Yet MY ER is clogged with people who have NO access to routine health services. So they come to the ER for an ingrown toenail, for an ear infection, for a stomach ache. Meanwhile, their care could be provided much cheaper in an outpatient setting (which is more appropriate), their time would be much better served than sitting in an ER for 12 hours to get antibiotics, and we'd actually have ROOM and STAFF for the *REAL* emergencies that come through.
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Edit to Add:
The more I think about it, the more I'm unsure what your post has to do with what I posted, and what the numerous nurses on this thread have agreed with---as it stands, our health care system is NONEXISTENT. There are far too many people using the public hospitals as it is with the lack of funding that we get.
My hospital's budget being cut by 47% has didly to do with European-Style medicine. Again, your stories just are the complete opposite of what I've heard from numerous (not one...not three...but dozens!) of RN's that have lived and worked in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, England, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Germany, Belgium, Italy....and those are just the places I can think of off the top of my head.
Have you stepped foot into a COMMUNITY HOSPITAL...an INNER CITY hospital anytime lately? If you think that I work in the Taj Mahal, with golden spigots and $20 bills for toilet paper, you're sorely mistaken. Community and public hospitals are FALLING. APART. AT. THE. SEAMS.
We don't have even close to enough staff to deal with the "normal" nights of patients, much less now that so many inner-city services have been just completely done away with, especially with so many more people in our area without insurance due to layoffs. The very few free or sliding-scale health centers that are available for outpatient medical care have MONTHS long waiting lists. So that means that every cold sore and bloody nose comes walking through our ER doors.
And I don't blame the patietns. where the hell else are they going to go? Private MD's don't have to take them if they can't pay upfront. Private hospitals have NO obligation to take any uninsured unless their condition is LIFE THREATNING and even then they only have to stabilize the patient until they're stable enough to be transferred to my hospital. This is called "dumping" and it happens more than I could ever convey. Many times, that means intubating the patient and shoving them back on the ambulance to come to me. Or defibbing them in the ambulance as they come up the hill to my hospital.
Community and public hospitals are a great thing and a very needed thing for our society, and that's why I work at one (granted, I could go up the hill to the private hospital and get $5 an hour more....thanks but no thanks. I enjoy my drug addicts, alcoholics, inmates, domestic abuse, homeless, mentally ill, poor, immigrant patients. I don't want Miss MIllie who expects a foot rub with her 9pm meds and complains to the DON if she doesn't get it).
I emplore you to re-think your view that 'oh well, at least the poor have public hospitals" because that is NOT going to be occuring much longer. Most public hospitals are tied to public universities. Education and Health Care are #1 on every budget that is cut, along with other social services. So when the university has to suffer budget cuts, the hospital suffers budget cuts as well
Secondly, there is a tremendous increase in the number of uninsureds thanks to the massive layoffs and firings
Thirdly, medicaid and medicare and welfare and SSI and all those other wonderful programs that help pay for hospital stays are being cut as well. So the little funding and repayment we get to begin with is being cut even more.
Fourthly, because the public health outpatient centers are being closed (because of budget cuts by the university/state), we are seeing an influx of patients who cannot get treatment outside. They come to the ER for medication refills. For ear infections. For colds. Things that are much better treated in an outpatient setting must now TOTALLY be treated by the public emergency service
Fifthly, community hospitals AROUND THE COUNTRY are being closed down left and right because of lack of funding. There *ARE* many communities that have NO public hospital, no community hospital that primarily serves the poor. That means the poor HAVE to go to a for-profit hospital and will get billed out the asshole for routine services that they can no longer get for free or discounted b/c there are no community hospitals for them to go to.
There is only so much blood that can be squeezed from a turnip, and you seem to think that the blood is just endless, and the turnip can be squeezed and squeezed without ever suffering. Well, as an RN in the community hospital setting, I'm telling you that the turnip is running dry as a bone. We cannot keep up with the demand that the anti-universal-health-care'ers are placing on our shoulders. THERE IS NOT ENOUGH ROOM, ENOUGH STAFF, OR ENOUGH MONEY to deal with the normal patient load, much less an increase of even 15%, which is a very conservative estimate of how much our patient load will increase over the next 2 years.
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