cariad, are you ever given the cost of procedures before you have them done? If so, do you ever "shop around" for cheaper services?
I'm sure I could request billing records, etc, but I don't think that having that information would help me to contain costs. I wish it would. If getting on the transplant list means that I HAVE to have this done and then that done, knowing how much it costs becomes irrelevant. I can't say, "Oh gee, transplant committee, I can't justify the cost of having an ultrasound of my iliac vessels done AGAIN because the pics from the first weren't clear enough for you, so in an effort to save my insurance company and/or the American taxpayer some money, I respectfully decline."Sometimes I think working in the medical field is a license to print money. We all want to be safe and healthy and reassured that everything is being done to keep us that way, and we don't care what it costs. The difficulty is since we don't get to choose when we need medical services, free market principles just don't apply. I honestly don't know how to contain costs. Further to your hospital dialysis story, I had a mysterious infection about 7 years ago and was hospitalized. I was really, really sick and pretty much out of it a lot of the time. Once I got home, the bills started coming in, and I got several bills from doctors who I wasn't even conscious enough to remember. I have no idea if these people really came in to see me. I had to call their offices and ask who the hell they were! It was creepy having to pay for services that I didn't get the chance to even request.
All in all, for me, we must continue to keep the principle of not-for-profit, universal health care intact whilst at the same time looking for ways to cut costs, take more personal interest in and responsibility for our own prevention of illness...(this is a huge area that needs to be explored and I go nuts watching what an awful job so many people do of looking after their bodies) and be willing to accept the fact that we pay higher taxes for what comes down to a cultural value. I'm willing to pay more taxes and have less fancy health care frills in order to have a more community based, rather than individualistic approach to health care. I feel the same way about education.