I don't OP much, but I'm putting on my pragmatic hat now. I think that unfortunately we're gonna get what we're going to get from these bastards in our congress and they will act the whole time like their pubic hairs were plucked painfully one by one whilst drinking hot lead just to get WHERE WE ARE NOW.
If community clinics are to become our public option they need some serious re-tooling.
I know there are many benefits to these clinics and many do a wonderful job despite their limitations. I go to one now and the fact that my doc there helped me diagnose a minor chronic problem that other docs I trusted had brushed aside makes me eternally grateful that such a system exists and there are a few good docs in it.
However...
Community Clinics are great in inception, but in this country are sorely lacking in resources, goals, and sadly in some, heart. As they exist now, it is medicine of last resort and in no way resembles the private clinic or office of your local GP.
These are some of the disparities that I would wish be rectified before we plunge headlong into funding this:
1) Make sure that equal resources are allocated at every level. Community clinics should do everything in house that a normal clinic does, and any referrals should be subject to the same sliding fee scale. Clinics in poor neighborhoods and towns should be as comfortable and well-stocked as the clinic in the 'nicer' neighborhoods. Pain medicine for acute afflictions should be offered when appropriate and out-of-house chronic pain management should be willingly offered and on the same sliding scale as other treatment. That same sliding scale should be available for out-of-house tests like x-rays, sonography, thermography, blood tests, etc and all tests should be covered, not just basic ones. There should be a system to at least triage some minor acute emergencies to reduce the number of people sent to ER's when treatment at one's clinic would have been more appropriate.
2) Make those clinics are at least part UncleSamgovt owned and not extensions of the 'faith-based' octopus that is attempting to eat out public education. I know this is a little optimistic, but I think we should set standards that are requirements for participating in the national clinic funding via this bill. Much of our community system already depends on systems like the catholic hospital in which you can not utter the name of the Pill. The health of women, transgendered, gay, etc depend on being able to find healthcare in a non-judgemental and secular setting. Now even more so, it seems.
3) Make sure the eligibility requirements as measured in this country is brought up to a standard that guarantees a basic income in this country including protections for the worker and make all state medicare requirements nationally reflect that standard. The working class does the heavy lifting of our society, but earns little praise or recompense for it, generally getting kicked to the side when they eventually wear out. The poverty levels need to reflect a true living standard for citizens and eligibility for medicare and subsidies must reflect that level in all states, even Alabama. There has to be recognition of occupational repetitive illness as a factor in debilitating illness and better long-term care of people injured on-the-job via medicare, etc.
4) The adjacent dental offices need to be accessible not just to children and dire emergency, but to adults who wish to have preventative and maintenance care of their teeth as well. This should also covered to some extent and the remainder be billed according the a sliding scale as well. Bad teeth can fuck you up. So can no teeth. Teeth are not cosmetic and should never have been considered such except for procedures like caps and whitening.
5) Last but not least, modify the unrealistic means testing standards for medicare eligibility. You should be able to own your home, a decent car and have a retirement savings. And there should be no coming after your estate for 'repayment' when you die. This is punative of the middle-class and poor, many of whose illnesses took root in the jobs they performed as contributing members of their society, swallowing the last of their assets to pay for the profit of others.
We need to start shaping the community clinics NOW, sending a message to our congresspeople that blatant discrepancies in care based on income are not going to fly, especially as more and more middle class are forced to use these clinics due to the sliding scale and medicare assistance. We need to jump now before the spin, before the hands go out for the funding. We need to keep this from becoming a faith-based morass like education is becoming. We need to do this for us.
I think we should get ahold of our progressive reps and cite these points and others not addressed in this OP. I intend to send some version of these thoughts on to my rep and senators. We need to demand that there be no ghettoization of treatment! No double-standard two-tier system! I sm posting this OP as a cautionary tale, because I, and many of my friends have been dealing with this sort of thing for years. If you have not, nor anybody you know ever encountered this, then you are either extremely fortunate...or unfortunate as there are many 'poor' people who are wonderful friends with so much life experience to share. I don't wish the experiences I've had with bottom-tier health care on any of you, so lets make it better for all building a strong support for a future universal system of care. I think all reasonable people no matter their take on the bill can agree that we can work together to insure fair treatment for all.
The next life you save may be your own.
If we feed the Pony properly the 'sausage' on the other end will be firmer and stink less. To mix a metaphor.
Just some thoughts. If you have thoughts to add, I would love to hear them.