July 13, 2008
U.S. Health Care Gets Boost From Charity
"60 Minutes": Remote Area Medical Finds It's Needed In America To Plug Health Insurance Gap
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Play CBS Video Video Lifeline Remote Area Medical was founded to bring free medicine to remote parts of the world but now also helps thousands of the estimated 47 million Americans who have no health insurance and others who are underinsured. Scott Pelley reports.
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(AP)
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How To Reach RAM:
Remote Area Medical Foundation
1834 Beech Street
Knoxville, TN 37920
865-579-1530
Visit Remote Area Medical to make donations using Paypal.
Remote Area Medical Foundation
1834 Beech Street
Knoxville, TN 37920
865-579-1530
Visit Remote Area Medical to make donations using Paypal.
"For the 50 million or so people in this country, the one thing that is on their mind is 'What if I have a catastrophic event, a car crash, a heart attack,'" he replied. "'Because I either have no health insurance or I'm underinsured.' And, so this is a very, very weighty thing to be thinking about, knowing that your family is in great jeopardy."
Late Sunday, Joanne Ford's number was among the last. Pelley found her sitting by a stairwell. She's retired, living on disability with no insurance, and her glasses don't work anymore. She got in only to find out the vision care line had closed.
Asked what she was going to do, Ford told Pelley, "I don't know. I have a lot of friends and I have a lot of church support. I was very active in my church and I have a lot of friends in church. I just hate to ask. I've worked all my life. I hate to ask. That's why things like this are so wonderful."
"There is no shame in seeking healthcare," Pelley remarked.
"No. You're right. You know, it really, I am sad that we are the wealthiest nation in the world, and we don't take care of our own. So. But it will be okay," she said.
And it did turn out okay after all. Someone at RAM noticed Ford's situation. They put her in the vision care line and examined her for a new pair of glasses.
But at the gate, many were waiting when the weekend ended.
In the expedition to Knoxville, RAM saw 920 patients, made 500 pairs of glasses, did 94 mammograms, extracted 1,066 teeth and did 567 fillings. But when Stan Brock called the last number, 400 people were turned away.
"What's going through your mind when you're reading off the last two or three numbers and you see so many more people at the gate than are going to be able to come in?" Pelley asked.
"Yeah, you know, that's the lousy part of this job. I mean, it's nice to be able to know that you've helped a bunch of people. But the reality is that we can't do everybody. At the moment, we're just seeing the thousands and thousands of people that we can, and the rest of them, unfortunately, have got to do the best they can without us," Brock said.
Since we first broadcast this story, Remote Area Medical has received close to $2.5 million in donations from 60 Minutes viewers. And Stan Brock has testified on Capitol Hill about health care.
Later this month, RAM will hold its biggest expedition of the year in Wise, Va. (Click here for a schedule.)
If the last few years are any guide, volunteers will see some 2,500 patients. And at the end of the weekend, they will turn away hundreds more.
Produced by Henry Schuster
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 438 CommentsTake the truck driver in the story, a family of five with health insurance, his problem was an infected tooth and he complained that he has a $500 deductable.
First any discount Dentist will pull a tooth for $100. Second a $500 deductable represents less than $10 a week. This guy with a good job and health insurance can''t budget $10 a week??? But he can drive 200 miles back and forth to get free health care. My calculation of the gas cost is $80 alone for the gas for this trip assuming a 20mpg vehicle. It probably was not, it probably was an SUV. Did he stop for Starbucks on the way, and do the three kids have cell phones?????????
I could go on, such as the woman with bad eyes who drove 100 miles each way t get free glasses when she could go to WalMart, Costco, or BJ''s and get discount glasses for slightly more than the $40 in gas she spent.
But the real issue here is the Doom and Gloom that CBS 60 minutes spews at every oppotunity. Seems like Dan Rather never left...........
At the same time, it angered me that there are illegals, specifically Mexicans, that cross the US border, have their kids in the US and then suck/sap/leach away at medical/dental resources that are entitled to taxpaying LEGAL American citizens.
These are the same people that are "picking the food that US workers will not perform".
They don''t pay a dime or centavo to the US for this free care and then we get screwed on picking up the bill.
We don''t see the Canadians rushing into the US for free healthcare? Why? Because CA, AZ, NM and TX "tolerate" this behavior.
It is no wonder that the segment highlighted the healthcare shortcomings of the USA.
Once again, the middle class takes it in the shorts...
I pay for this insurance and then the insurance company wants to tell me where I can go to have this MRI done. Is this the American way? You pay for this insurance and then they want you to wait until
the insurance company gives you the okey to go have the medical problem evaluated. At this time it has been 3 weeks since I had the severe episode of Vertigo. I need the MRI so the Physician can properly diagnois the problem.
I was wondering if any of them were watching, feeling anything, caring even a little bit? No. Shame on them, bravo to you. You deserve many kudos for this program segment, and I applaud you...I am somewhat pleased and surprised to hear myself saying that to the media, but I appreciate your revealing of the distress that we are suffering out here in health-care no-mans-land.
I just hope somebody besides we low-income, working poor, senior citizens etc. actually heard what you had to tell. Thank you for at least a few moments of truth, and bravo to the earlier commenter who made the point that it sucks to be forced to obtain care from the capitalist money-mongers who peddle shoddy medical services for higher and higer prices, by the elite who receive their care from the fed and never even blink an eye to the absurdity and hypocrisy of the situation.....I have diagnosed the situation as ITS....Ivory Tower Syndrome. I fear there may not be a cure.
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