The dem candidate for governor in CT has
revealed his plan-
DeStefano released his $350 million proposal on the same day Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney signed into law a landmark bill designed to guarantee that virtually all Massachusetts residents have health insurance....
"Connecticut needs real leadership to make universal health care coverage a priority," he said. "An estimated 356,000 people in Connecticut _ including 71,000 children _ do not have the security of health insurance to allow them to obtain preventive care or cover their medical needs should they fall ill."
Woo Hoo. That's great. Huge problem. Fix it. Hurry. Then there's this:
DeStefano wants the consortium to re-examine all the state requirements for health insurance coverage and procedures, such as mandatory hospital stays for child birth and mastectomies. He said such mandates may have to be repealed to keep costs down and extend coverage to everyone.
The idea of removing a woman's body part on the fly is horrific enough. I don't even want to think about it.
The US ranks -wait for it-
thirty sixth from the lowest infant mortality rate.
That's behind (worse than) Malta, Slovenia, Macau and, well, Europe.-
http://www.geographyiq.com/ranking/ranking_Infant_Mortality_Rate_aall.htmPortions of this site are based on public domain works from the U.S. Dept. of State and the CIA World Fact BookThe limited searches I've done suggest that infant mortality rates could be tied to the level of health care the mother receives after giving birth. Some women might choose to limit or even avoid a trip to the hospital. Swell: another manner of control over one's own health care. But when that isn't the choice, what's the real cost?
In Switzerland (ranking 2nd), maternity stays are one of the only exceptions to "cost sharing" in their plan. -That sounds like the entire hospital stay is free.-
http://www.ess-europe.de/en/switzerland.htmA "normal" stay is 3 days.-
http://web.mit.edu/medical/spousesandpartners/feature2_1100.htmThe stay is 2-3 days in Cuba (in 34th place)
http://www.globalexchange.org/countries/americas/cuba/sustainable/natTradMedicine/nursecare061101.htmlIronically, Canada (in 22nd place) used a study by US pediatricians to pitch for hospital stays of at least 2 days, finding "Women who are discharged "involuntarily" are more likely to be dissatisfied and have more problems than women discharged voluntarily"
http://www.cps.ca/english/statements/FN/fn96-02.htmAre we completely unteachable on the issue of health care?