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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!bunker!sheldev.shel.isc-br.com!wtm
- From: SUPERVISOR@SWEEP.FO.UKANS.EDU (Phil Endacott)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Re: Health services and retired workers
- Message-ID: <26899@handicap.news>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 15:23:48 GMT
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: SUPERVISOR@SWEEP.FO.UKANS.EDU (Phil Endacott)
- Lines: 85
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- Originator: wtm@sheldev.shel.isc-br.com
-
- Index Number: 26899
-
- [Note from Bill McGarry - forwarded from he Geriatric Health Care
- mailing list by Patt Bromberger]
-
- >Date: Fri, 18 Dec 1992 09:30:45 CST
- >from: Marilyn Jacobson <MAJACOBS%NDSUVM1.BITNET@UBVM.cc.buffalo.edu>
- >subject: RE: Health services and retired workers
-
- >I believe we need to have nationally provided health care. Some
- >would call it socialized medicine. Current health policy provides
- >for the healthy, the employed, and for a portion of the medical
- >care for those over 65. In addition, medicaid is provided for
- >the poor who are categorically eligible, who live in states
- >that provide differing amounts and kinds of medical care. I
- >believe we need to provide basic medical care for all citizens,
- >similar to the educational benefits all citizens are entitled
- >to receive.
- >
-
- Just some musings. . .
-
- Dr. Phillips and I can remember going to our Physician and the
- receptionist NEVER ASKED FOR AN INSURANCE CARD! We had a true
- Doctor/Patient relationship. The Doctor provided the best service he
- knew how and he charged what the traffic would bear. Sometimes the
- Doctor was paid with a freshly dressed pig or perhaps a new tub of
- apple butter!! He didn't care if we had any kind of insurance or
- not. He NEVER FILED A CLAIM TO AN INSURANCE COMPANY. He simply told
- us what his charge was and we either paid him in full or paid what we
- could at the time of service and promised to bring in the balance
- "next Friday when we got paid". Now if we were smart, we had
- purchased a "medical insurance policy". When the Doctors bill was
- paid in full, he would stamp it PAID and THEN we would fill out an
- insurance claim form and send it to our insurance company for
- reimbursement of our paid medical bill. Of course we knew exactly
- what we were entitled to. A broken arm would pay $80.00 (even if the
- Doctor only charged $60!!). If we were hospitalized, we would be
- reimbursed $22 per day!! If these scheduled payments in our
- insurance contract weren't quite enough to cover our actual
- medical costs, WE HAD THE OPTION OF PAYING A SLIGHTLY HIGHER PREMIUM
- TO PURCHASE THE "DELUXE" SCHEDULE OF PAYMENTS. If I drove a truck
- and delivered coal and Dr. Phillips was a high school teacher, the
- Physician knew what our incomes were (approximately, anyway) and he
- charged accordingly.
-
- The key difference between then and now is that the Doctor/Patient
- and Customer/Insurance Co. relationsips described above NO LONGER
- EXIST!! The Doctors of today deal directly with the Insurance
- Companies!! You, the patient/customer, have lost all of your
- bargining power--you are just a number. BUT, you still pay the bill
- with the sweat of your brow!! When companies began to include
- "medical insurance coverage" as part of your work compensation
- package, life became easier for the insurance companies. They only
- had to sell a contract to your boss--they no longer had to
- hustle/compete for your individual business. You just lost control!!
-
- The best way for the Federal government to "fix" the soaring medical
- costs in this country is to tax to the fullest ALL MEDICAL INSURANCE
- PREMIUMS paid by companies/states/governmental agencies as part of
- their employee compensation packages. This will result in companies
- dropping out of the insurance business, and paying their employees
- the equivalent premium as taxable income to the employee.
-
- Wow!! $600 BILLION a year to boost our economy. You say, "but if I
- don't buy insurance, I will have to go bankrupt if I have to spend
- week in the hospital! Well, if you take a narrow, short term view,
- this is true. But in the long term, only 1% of the US population can
- afford to purchase medical service at the prevailing prices. Thats
- going to be lots of EMPTY Doctors offices and lots of empty hospital
- beds!! Medical providers/insurance companies will have to compete
- once again for your income. I can guarantee you that prices for
- medical service will COME DOWN, not continue an exponential rise year
- after year.
-
- Did you know that Ford Motor Company pays more for employee medical
- insurance per car produced than they do for all the steel that is
- used in the manufacture of that car?? Think about it . . . Phil---
-
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