FROM http://healthcare.change.org/blog/view/yes_you_pay_for_the_uninsured
You can make a difference. Go to WWW.SICKOCURE.ORG get some info, sign the petition for HR676 and contact your representatives.
Then go to WWW.WHITEHOUSE.GOV/CONTACT and contact the White House directly.
This past week has been "Covering the Uninsured" Week. As mentioned before, I do not know why the people in this great country are comfortable with the shame of 47 million uninsured and at least half as many underinsured - one illness or traumatic accident away from bankruptcy. But in this economic climate, we should finally lose our comfort zone, for selfish reasons, if no other. When the uninsured receive emergency care, who foots the bills? Chances are, you do.
I'm going out on a limb and presume no cabinet appointees are reading this entry, meaning you pay your taxes. Some of those tax dollars go to funds for safety-net hospitals, particularly those who have a disproportionate share of Medicaid and uninsured patients than other hospitals. Established in 1981, the Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital reimbursement programs are meant to balance out public hospitals and other entities who couldn't survive on comparatively low payments from Medicaid and the no or little payments that fall under the category of "uncompensated care." So when someone who works full week as a construction worker (as 8 of 10 uninsured Americans are part of families where at least one person works full time) ignores the warning signs of early diabetes because he doesn't have insurance, doesn't manage his chronic disease because he can't afford the doctor's visit to prescribe insulin, can't afford the blood monitors or insulin either, and therefore fights through the increasing pain and discomfort until he has to go to the Emergency Room for care because he can't take it anymore, only to discover he has advanced stage diabetes and will require a four-week course of antibiotics and a foot amputation, effectively ending his construction work career as well as his ability to pay - yes, his care is paid for by the rest of us. And obviously, since primary care is cheaper and could prevent these expensive complications, we're not getting a great deal.
But it's not just about government creating a safety net for us all or picking your pocket (depending on your political point of view). You're also seeing higher premiums because we don't cover the uninsured. Providers must find some way to recoup the emergency medical care they provide that will never be compensated because the patient has no ability to pay. That way is to charge insurers more for their services. And, as you can probably guess, the insurer passes that on to its customers. A report by Center for American Progress puts a dollar figure on it -- $410 per individual and $1,100 per family. That's 8% of your premium paid for no other reason than we haven't covered every American yet. As you might suspect, there's huge variance between states. Massachusetts, for all the flaws of its universal health care model, only has seen $180 per individual and $500 per family of this cost shift. In New Mexico, it's a shocking problem -- $830 per individual and $2,300 per family.
By the way, none of this is new. We've known that there's a financial cost to having millions upon millions of Americans uninsured for a long time, but have been as comfortable ignoring it as we have the moral cost. But as with so much else with the economy, it's only getting worse. 47 million are uninsured at any given time, but nearly one-third of Americans (87 million) went without insurance for part of last year. As we shed jobs, we also shed coverage - and over 14,000 people lost their insurance just in December and January. And yes, that means you'll be paying even more.
Make no mistake, more people than ever are fed up with our broken health care system. But for those who continue to resist any government question is, When will it be enough? How much more do you have to be overcharged for your premiums for no other reason than because we haven't fixed this problem before you think it's worth your attention? And, finally, are all the name-calling, fear-mongering and tired 20th century clichés worth the money coming out of your pocket, let along the lives and limbs and eyesight of your fellow citizens that fail every day for no other reason than we haven't fixed this problem?
(Photo credit: njmcgregor on Flickr.)


Comments: 40
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Second, put an end to tort harassment. Everybody knows that John Edwards made tens of millions of dollars by suing healthcare for using a procedure that he convince a jury was the cause of mental retardation. Does everybody know that his case would have been thrown out of court if what science knows today knew then? Did he have to give the money back since modern science proved his case wrong? Oh, I forget we are talking about "better solutions".
How about eliminating government mandates regarding coverage? I am a single white male. Why am I forced to have coverage regarding all of the female vagina issues? Females use health care at an average of 40% more than males. There is no reason for my costs to be higher simply because, by law, I have to have female coverage.
If you think I should have to pay for your weird issues then you should be forced to be covered for morticycles in your car insurance to bring MY costs down.
I don't understand the Marie Antoinette attitude, "I have mine, so everyone else go eat cake".
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A huge number of people that DO have insurance are just plain hateful towards those that don't.
I had this argument over ten years ago with a family member. They had heard me say to someone else that I did not have health insurance, and so they butted into the conversation to say it was my fault their premiums were so high.
I scoffed at first, pointing out that the only medical care I had received in the past ten years had been paid for out of my pocket (two doctor visits and two prescriptions). The family member continued to deride me for not having any health insurance; and when I pointed out that I certainly could not afford it, they told me I should take on another job or two so I could afford it. I, in turn, pointed out that I could not take a second job, as my first job required me to be available 24/7, and that I was not interested in putting the job I had at risk since it was the highest paying job I had ever had. My replies were brushed off irritatingly as "just an excuse" and the family member continued to grumble about how my lack of insurance was costing them money.
I let the conversation drop at that point. I knew that the family member in question was quite financially stable and had very good health insurance coverage; so it seemed a rather cruel commentary that they would rail against me because the insurance company was taking more from their pocket, and not seem to worry one bit about my lack of ability to afford health care insurance.
We, as a nation, have been had, and it needs to stop, NOW!
I am suppose to have surgery on my eyes, can't and doctors cannot work out a payment plan with me as I still owe 100,000.00 in medical from when I had cancer.
You know..one of those weird female things.
PLEASE go to the websites and make your VOICE HEARD!
We so proudly call ourselves a Christian nation (which means based on Christian principles) and yet all the evidence seems to run counter to that assertion.
The entire system needs over-hauled.
PLEASE make your voice heard.
He is of the ilk that believes anybody who advocates for the less fortunate must be a "bleeding heart liberal".
I have been to these sites and signed umpteen petitions etc for some form of Health Care reform. Those who rail about Government inability to effectively administer a Universal Health insurance program conveniently overlook the fact that Medicare works quite well and has been deemed much more cost effective than most private insurance plans.
Of course, you are corect, and now you need to get your friends and familiy to do the same thing you have.
My family is all in Canada so they wouldn't be much help.?