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ALEGRE'S CORNER
We're not finished folks - not by a long shot!

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A Dr.'s Letter to Obama Published in Sun Paper...

by: texan4hillary

Sat Feb 28, 2009 at 19:10:12 PM EST


One of the lead dr's for medicare 4 all has written an op ed to be published in the sunday houston chronicle and i hope other papers shortly. send it on to the whitehouse. kennedy etc..send it to your friends. this is very important.
texan4hillary :: A Dr.'s Letter to Obama Published in Sun Paper...
A doctor's letter to Obama

Dear Mr. President:

Last week, in the public clinic where I work, I treated a 6-year-old girl who had visited the emergency room for cellulitis, an infection of the skin, over her hand. Usually a relatively minor condition that is easily treated with a 10-day course of antibiotics, cellulitis can sometimes cause severe consequences, including life-threatening sepsis, if not treated promptly.

The reason this patient was notable was because she was uninsured and had been sent home with a prescription that her mother tried to fill but
was unable to afford. How much did the antibiotic suspension cost? $500.

When I saw her three days after her ER visit, her hand was swollen twice the normal size, purple, tender and warm to the touch, with a red streak(signifying an extension of the infection from the skin to the bloodstream) up to her elbow. I took one look at her and quickly made
the decision to admit her for IV antibiotics, including a consultation with pediatric surgery to ensure that the infection had not spread
between the deep layers of her skin.

What struck me most about this visit, other than the child's deformed
hand, was the mother's shame at not being able to afford her child's
medication. I assured her that I did not blame her, that our health care
system was unconscionable, and that we needed a health care system where
everyone was included and everyone paid according to his or her ability to pay. She agreed.

I'm not surprised she agreed. From 1943 to today, opinion polls consistently show that a stable majority of Americans favor a government role in the financing of health care. In the lead-up to President Truman's national health care proposal, 82 percent of Americans agreed that something needed to be done to make health bills easier to afford.

Today, 65 percent of Americans, including 59 percent of U.S. physicians, support a tax-financed national health insurance plan. Why wouldn't my patient's mother support national health care?

What she probably doesn't know is how much she already pays for the
health care her child does not get, or gets late. Her uninsured family
pays an extra 10 percent out of its paycheck in taxes to pay for our
health care system. Her daughter's hospitalization will be covered by
emergency Medicaid, for which she pays through her sales taxes, income
taxes, property taxes and other hidden taxes. She will still have many
out-of-pocket costs, of course.

I was struck this week by remarks by David Axelrod, your adviser.
Referring to the difference between Washington insiders and most polls
over the stimulus package, Axelrod said, "This town talks to itself and
whips itself into a frenzy with its own theories that are completely at
odds with what the rest of America is thinking." The moral, he said, is
"not just that Washington is too insular but that the American people
are a lot smarter than people in Washington think."

I agree. As I talk about a single-payer national health program across
Texas (yes, Texas!) and other states, I am repeatedly amazed by the
ability of Americans to understand the complex issues of health reform
if it is adequately explained to them. People quickly understand that a
sustainable solution will come only when we contain costs and eliminate
fragmentation.

The more I listen, the more I hear that all Americans want a health care
system that is affordable, accountable, accessible, comprehensive,
universal and just - not another Band-Aid that will condemn thousands of
us to unnecessary pain, suffering, bankruptcy and death. Listen for yourself, and you will hear Americans clamoring for true health care
reform.

By Washington standards, single payer is politically unfeasible. But
step outside the beltway and you will be surprised by the genuinesupport that exists for a publicly funded, privately delivered, expanded
and improved Medicare for all.

This mother should not be made to feel ashamed. Nor should her child be relegated to suffer like a Third World beggar. Your compromise plan that
keeps the private, for-profit insurance industry in the game will perpetuate the shame and the begging. Already, there is a grassroots
movement building against private health insurance and for single payer.
It will reach Washington, whether Washington is ready or not.

Sincerely yours,
Ana M. Malinow, MD
Pediatrician in Houston, Texas
Past president, Physicians for a National Health Program
Co-founder, Health Care for All Texas

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What a wonderful letter! (4.00 / 4)
Thank you, Dr. Malinow.  I am sure you will "pay" some price for your honesty.  But I thank you from the bottom of my heart and on behalf of my twin brother, who works 50 hours a week without health insurance.

From Texas! (0.00 / 0)
Great letter.

The Doctor From A Boston Hospital (4.00 / 2)
who's with this group closed his testimony at that hearing on Wednesday by saying he was treating a cancer patient who's refusing chemo.  The patient doesn't have insurance and can't afford chemo, so he's basically just waiting to die now.

This is America dammit.  Health care is a right just as an education is a right - police and fire protection - hell even public libraries are a given in our society.

But health care for ourselves and our kids?  THAT's considered a priviledge - a luxury for only those who can afford it or have jobs with benefits.

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I can sure commiserate (4.00 / 2)
I went a very long time without health insurance, myself.  Dec. 23, 1999, I ended-up in the emergency room needing an "emergency" sugery.  Before they would even take me, I had to pay the emergency room fee, in order just to be seen.  I was writhing in pain, and my mother had to leave me there and go get the money.  I also had to go upstairs to talk to billing about how I would pay for my "emergency" surgery.  Then I had to leave the hospital and go to the surgeon's office, who was to perform the surgery, and make arrangements for payment.  Keep in mind, that I could have dropped-dead at anytime while having to do this.  I was supposed to stay overnight, but within 15 or so minutes of bringing me out of surgery, they woke me up and told me I had to get dressed and go home.  Their excuse was, "it is Christmas eve."  The cost was horrendous, and nobody gives a damn that you will have to starve in order to pay all the bills that incur.

I was a pharmacy assistant a long time ago.  Here is a tip.  If the doctor gives you a script that you can't afford, go back and tell the person in the office that you can't afford the meds.  They have a closet full of drug samples that they are given by the drug reps.  They can give you samples to take, that won't cost you anything.  The doctor can also write a script for something less expensive that will probably do the same thing.  Hope this helps.


questions: (4.00 / 1)

"Her uninsured family pays an extra 10 percent out of its paycheck in taxes to pay for our health care system."

Can anyone here flesh this out a little?  Are the uninsured specifically targeted to pay 10% of their paycheck in extra taxes?  Or is everyone who pays taxes paying an extra 10%?  And how is this money paying for our privatized system?  Is it related specifically to the uninsured portion of population -- covering emergencies?  Because I don't think the uninsured gets any financial assistance for medical expenses?  At best they are put on a reasonable payment plan, but they still have to pay for it all.  Sometimes a doctor who takes the Hippocratic Oath seriously simply will not bill an uninsured patient for the doctor's portion of the money due.



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