@Simon Dog Did you possibly mean 3 months instead of 30?
In the USA medical insurance gives a level of private health care many abroad can only dream about
Quote from: kristina on February 19, 2018, 07:11:29 AMIn the USA medical insurance gives a level of private health care many abroad can only dream aboutYou have that the wrong way round. People I know who have traveled from Europe to the USA say the clinics in the US are nowhere as good as the clinics in most European countries (NB "most European countries" not "all European countries"). As far as England is concerned, I know that the English NHS contracts some of its clinics to Fresenius, and the rules Fresenius have to abide by when working for the NHS have are stricter than the rules in the US resulting in, for example, a better patient to nurse ratio than in America. I cannot remember any incidents offhand, but several time I have been reading a thread written by an American and thought "Blimey, the nurses would not get away with that over here."Also, most European countries have full free healthcare, which is why the average length of life is a lot less in America than in most European countries (well, that and the burgers).
2 Availability for those who cannot cough up the cashIn third world countries, #2 suffers, and in many, no cash, no treatment.
I would keep quiet about that if I were you, because there are lots of Europeans who consider the US is a third world country because of its lack of general free healthcare.
One of the things that helps with affordability is the price discrimination on drugs. The pharma companies charge vastly more to US customers, and set up barriers to make reimportation difficult.
But the UK pays the same price as the US
Maybe president Trump can change the regulation concerning Medicare?
Quote from: cassandra on February 20, 2018, 11:15:53 AM Maybe president Trump can change the regulation concerning Medicare?Careful what you wish for, Trump wants to make matters worse, not better. Only congress has stopped him so far!
Quote from: Simon Dog on February 20, 2018, 09:55:51 AMOne of the things that helps with affordability is the price discrimination on drugs. The pharma companies charge vastly more to US customers, and set up barriers to make reimportation difficult.But the UK pays the same price as the US and the British government still pays most of the cost of all medication. We pay between nothing and $16 per prescription however many medications are on that prescription, and regardless of the actual cost of the medication. What you pay depends on your medical state (I pay nothing) and regardless of how many different medications are on the prescription, the most anyone pays per prescription is the equivalent of about $16 in total, for everything (I have 13 different things on my prescription). This is not just pills and medicines, it includes injections (e.g. EPO, insulin, etc.) and other stuff (e.g. blood sugar testing strips, lancets, etc.).Because of my fragile foot bones I need special shoes. This involves my feet being measured, molds made of my feet so they can cast feet to make the shoes round, then when they are finished hand making these shoes I try them on and they make any minor adjustments needed. This takes months, and costs a fortune, but I pay nothing, the state foots the entire bill (pun unintentional).But most importantly, when/if I get a transplant, the state pays for the anti rejection pills for life (mine or the kidney's, whichever dies first). In the US, one in ten transplants fail when the state stop paying. One in ten transplant operations are a waste of time and money because of this. More importantly, one in ten kidneys are wasted. And for that alone I consider the US a backward, third world, tin can little country.
Our system is great, so long as one can afford it.
Even in the hospital center, after watching me cramp up so much, I couldn't walk, or unclench my fingers, the doctors and nurses told me, that it was all in my head.