Costco Pharmacy Sensipar, 30mg tablet, 30 (1 per day) $415.15
my best friend hates going to the doctor, because she really can't afford to do it. a few years ago, she slipped on some ice on steps going into the subway in NYC. She tore something in her knee, and it really should be operated on, but instead, she lives on Motrin because she can't afford the surgery.
Let me apologize for my countryman noahvale, he is from Atlanta, Georgia, USA, and not representative of everyone there or of the nation.
The US and other governments around the world don't seem to have a good handle on the cost containment of their health care system.
Quote from: greg10 on September 03, 2010, 05:08:21 PMCostco Pharmacy Sensipar, 30mg tablet, 30 (1 per day) $415.15 have you tried getting a prescription card from sensipar?? only $5.00 co-pay with card..Most patients who have commercial prescription insurance are eligible to participate in the program. The patient is responsible for the first $5.00 of out-of-pocket costs. ..
Why would Canadian doctors come to the U.S. to practice?
Quote from: greg10 on September 03, 2010, 05:08:21 PMThe US and other governments around the world don't seem to have a good handle on the cost containment of their health care system. ..Interesting note: The dialysis cost of £25k a year is half the US cost, indicative, I think, of the excessive administration costs of the US commercial health system and associated insurance companies.
No, Medicare is not socialized medicine - at least not yet. It is a single payer system utilizing public funding to pay both public and private providers of care. As originally written as law, Medicare was intended as supplemental insurance for those over the age of 65 - for their retirement years. ERSD funding for those under age 65 wasn't added until 1972. It was the first step towrds UNIVERAL HEALTHCARE - not socialized medicine - in the U.S.[EDIT] - The Veteran's Administration is an example of socialized medicine in the US. The VA provides medical services to retired, disabled, or recently discharged military personnel who are eligible to receive benefits. VA medical benefits can only be used at VA hospitals and medical centers, which are owned and operated by the government; health care providers working within the VA are government employees.Socialized medicine - as practiced in the UK and Scandanavian countries - means the state is in control of all aspects of healthcare from financing through taxation and compulsory national insurance contributions, operating all aspects of the delivery of health care (including having physicians working for the state and deciding who receives scarce limited resources) to having none or limited private access to care. I'm sorry for the wife of Gwyn's collegue. However, please don't try to lay it on "conservatives." This was a personal decision made between a husband and wife. However, I too have made some bad decisions that affected my health and quality of life and can easily blame the system. I won't because at this point in time I can still choose where I wish to go for dialysis, which hospital serivces I wish to utilize, who I wish to see to take care of my medical needs and which transplant faciliities I wish to be listed on. I want medical decisions to stay between me and the providers. Even when I had employer based insurance I could always go out of network if I was willing to pay the difference. MY CHOICE on how to spend MY INCOME.I will reitterate - some fall through the cracks. No healthcare systme is perfect. But I fight any initiative that takes away my right to healthcare choices.