Quote from: iolaire on April 14, 2015, 11:32:52 AMQuote from: monrein on April 14, 2015, 11:26:48 AM...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.I'm fully supportive of universal healthcare for the US. But recently I've learned there is zero space for holiday dialysis in Ireland until June at the earliest. So that makes me wonder if centralized medicine is the driving factor and they are under built for dialysis in Ireland. Also my coordinator told me a NHS center in London was closed down because the NHS is trying to get everyone on home hemo to save money. So I could see how that type of situation like in Ireland and the UK could be turned into fear mongering...Hello iolaire London here... I have not heard of a London dialysis-centre being closed down, but there again I don’t really know how dialysis-centres in other London districts cope and what they (have to) do or plan ...Concerning home-hemo: I have tried - from the very start - to „remain independent“, get my training and be able to „do“ home-dialysis, but I was told it would be much better for me to have my dialysis-sessions in a dialysis-centre because of my complicated health-history and my forthcoming transplant... ... and I also could be much better medically observed in a dialysis-centre... Mind you, that was five months ago... Best wishes and good luck from Kristina.
Quote from: monrein on April 14, 2015, 11:26:48 AM...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.I'm fully supportive of universal healthcare for the US. But recently I've learned there is zero space for holiday dialysis in Ireland until June at the earliest. So that makes me wonder if centralized medicine is the driving factor and they are under built for dialysis in Ireland. Also my coordinator told me a NHS center in London was closed down because the NHS is trying to get everyone on home hemo to save money. So I could see how that type of situation like in Ireland and the UK could be turned into fear mongering...
...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.
I don't think wait times are any different in Canada than the US...
Quote from: kristina on April 19, 2015, 01:31:05 AMQuote from: iolaire on April 14, 2015, 11:32:52 AMQuote from: monrein on April 14, 2015, 11:26:48 AM...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.I'm fully supportive of universal healthcare for the US. But recently I've learned there is zero space for holiday dialysis in Ireland until June at the earliest. So that makes me wonder if centralized medicine is the driving factor and they are under built for dialysis in Ireland. Also my coordinator told me a NHS center in London was closed down because the NHS is trying to get everyone on home hemo to save money. So I could see how that type of situation like in Ireland and the UK could be turned into fear mongering...Hello iolaire London here... I have not heard of a London dialysis-centre being closed down, but there again I don’t really know how dialysis-centres in other London districts cope and what they (have to) do or plan ...Concerning home-hemo: I have tried - from the very start - to „remain independent“, get my training and be able to „do“ home-dialysis, but I was told it would be much better for me to have my dialysis-sessions in a dialysis-centre because of my complicated health-history and my forthcoming transplant... ... and I also could be much better medically observed in a dialysis-centre... Mind you, that was five months ago... Best wishes and good luck from Kristina.I would say, from personal experience in the UK (East Anglia) there is very little enthusiasm for home haemo and I am a rarity!!! At our centre and satellite units there are only FOUR home haemo patients. There is little encouragement for home haemo and it was difficult to access the training despite it being cheaper
I would say, from personal experience in the UK (East Anglia) there is very little enthusiasm for home haemo and I am a rarity!!! At our centre and satellite units there are only FOUR home haemo patients. There is little encouragement for home haemo and it was difficult to access the training despite it being cheaper
Quote from: Riki on April 18, 2015, 11:38:46 PMI don't think wait times are any different in Canada than the US...I have heard that there can be considerable delays in getting CAT/MRI/PET scans in Canada, especially for non-emergencies. Can anyone on the list enlighten?When I needed an MRI (based on an Xray suggestive of AVN) here in the US it took three days - and two of those three days were waiting for the insurance company to pre-approve payment. Of course, the flip side to that is I only had instant access because of payment .... an uninsured person without cash up front (probably at several times the insurance paid rate) would not experience a delay ... they would be outright denied the scan.If you need an MRI for him pain in Canada, how long will it take from the day your MD writes the order?
Who in the US doesn't have access to health care? How would doctors, nurses, techs and researchers be paid under a non-profit health care system? The government? And where does the government's money come from?
Question: I wonder why the US has never had universal health care like Canada and the UK.
In fact, medicare could easily be expanded from only covering those over 65 to covering everybody that didn't choose to buy/get private insurance.
3. Providers tolerate medicare as a portion of their case load, because they can make their real profit on private prepay and insurance. I don't think the clinics could survive, and provide a return to investors, if they did all their treatments at $245 (medicare price). 100% Medicare, without significant changes, would significantly reduce the payments to service providers.
Iolaire, I've always wondered the same. How do businesses/corporations allow themselves to underwrite Medicare via ever higher premiums demanded by insurance companies? I would love to know which insurance companies provide health insurance for, say, Apple or Exxon or BP (maybe that would be Lloyd's of London) and how much those corporations pay in premiums.Anyone know?
don't know why the insurance companies allow my facility to bill them $1550 per session versus the Medicare cost of say $245...
But when I read "...provide a return to investors" in any post about the provision of access to health care/dialysis, it does give me pause.
Not really. The rates that Medicare reimburses for medical care, if used for all health care, would cost us just a bit over 9% of GDP, whereas today, we spend nearly 12% of our GDP on just health care.