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A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
Frederick submits: =================== Our monthly health insurance payments are now more than our monthly mortgage payment. For us, health insurance is our single most expensive monthly expense, and that doesn't count the co-pays and deductibles we must pay before insurance kicks in. =================== I wonder if yours is a special case or if this is played out across the USA. [rhetorical question] What I find curious, and we've been down this road with Scott and rick on a previous thread, is why it is seemingly appropriate for Scott to cite a newspaper article, reporting on one particular healthcare-related anecdote, but inappropriate for KMAN, Michael, or BCITORGB to cite anecdotes about friends and relatives who have had admirable care. More to the point, I know of not one person in my circle of acquaintances who as had to wait for a necessary procedure. But what I find interesting about Frederick's story is that KMAN, Michael, and BCITORGB don't know what it is like being denied insurance coverage because of diabetes or cholesterol issues. We have no idea about the trauma or stress one might feel as the insurance companies jack up the premiums or outright deny coverage. I do. It sucks. So what? Nobody said life was easy or fair. Now I find a way to pay for my own health care, I don't expect anyone else to pay for it in my stead. Frederick states that "health insurance is our single most expensive monthly expense, and that doesn't count the co-pays and deductibles". I don't have the figures at hand; perhaps the taxes I pay in Canada, and the portion thereof that goes to healthcare, are equal to or greater than Frederick's monthly premiums (somehow I doubt it). However, I do know that I'll always have that coverage. Don't bet on it. Government programs have a tendency to go bankrupt. Just as the VA, and the people who try to get care from the VA who are "entitled" to that care. And, as we ponder Frederick's premiums, we might wish to ask why the USA spends more (significantly more) on healthcare per capita, but is unable to match Canada and most western European nations on issues such as infant mortality and life expectancy. Now there's a healthcare scandal worth writing newspaper articles about. Why? Infant mortality is nature's way of limiting populations. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM Š 2005 Scott Weiser |
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