This story is one of several personal anecdotes that I can relate in order to explain my longtime support for health care reform. As several of you are aware, I worked in the front lines of the health care industry for close to a decade, and saw a number of things that disturbed me about our system. This is one of the most upsetting incidents I
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His symptoms continued to worsen, and in October he was hospitalized with the blood clot that killed him. He died Samhain week, 1992. He was 32 years old, and he'd been married less then three years. :(
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Prior to my moving to Tampa Bay and working in the for-profit hospital environment, I worked in a non-profit facility. The difference in patient care and the attitude of the employees was like night and day, with the non-profit obviously being the superior surroundings.
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You want to scare the crap out of an elderly person? Tell them they will be facing mandatory end of life counselling, where some nameless, faceless bureaucrats will be determining whether they live or die.
Tell them President Obama's two main advisors on health care reform are proponents of eugenics. Raise the spectre of Hitler that many of them are old enough to remember with first hand knowledge.
It speaks to the basic fear of the elderly in this country - that they are superfluous, a burden and generally unvalued. Once you've set fire to that, all the logical reasoned debate in the world can't counteract it.
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I also think there is a desperate need for the decriminalization of assisted suicide.
This is not what senior citizens are being told, however. They are being told that under the new health care system, they will be *required* to undergo end of life counselling. They are being told that a bunch of bureaucrats will be looking not at whether they want to undergo the treatments connected with a severe dramatic, probably fatal in the long run illness, but at whether it would make more financial sense to keep them on over the counter arthritis medicine for the rest of their lives instead of doing a simple (but expensive) joint replacement operation.
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I agree with that a large chunk of the problem is the poor parameters set by our government of which income levels necessitate assistance. While there are lamentable levels of outright poverty in the country, there are also plenty of working poor in this nation that are left out of consideration.
What really gets me are the folks who are opposed to higher taxes, but are willing to pay out large amounts of spare cash on lottery tickets and alcohol on a weekly basis, when probably one week's expediture on such items would cover a proposed tax.
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One big anger-inducing irony? When I worked for GE, they hired folks to work for them in customer service in Canada and Northern Ireland. Why? Because of their excellent command of English with an unobtrusive accent AND their residing in nations that offered socialized medicine. Yep, a big corporation that tries to screw around with its employees and is likely to be opposed to American health care reform, but is happy to hire foreign labor in order to take advantage of the benefits offered by those countries and enlarge their profits. Creeps.
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