February 19, 2010 1:13 PM

The Best Health Care System in the World?

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Joe Eckert is a public relations professional.


About 6 years ago, I flipped over my bicycle and shattered by collarbone while training for a triathlon. My riding partner and my wife rushed me to the emergency room, where she spent 30 minutes filling out the forms.

After being admitted, I was administered to by a terrific doctor, nurses and technicians and given a shot that made me happy to be, well, just happy. I was incapacitated for a week between the pain and drugs but went weekly to an orthopedist who tracked the healing. I had wonderful group insurance that covered all the major expenses with just a few co-pays.

About 6 months later I was on a business trip in Marseille, when I slipped on wet marble and - you guessed it - shattered the same collarbone.

I went to my room as the hotel called the hospital. Ten minutes later two doctors (not EMTs) were in my room with a portable x-ray, pain relief and a ride to the hospital (when they pronounced it re-broken). On the ride, they took my name and address. At the hospital I was trussed up, given another shot and then taken back to the hotel. I needed no insurance, no long forms to fill out - they treated me because that's what you do when a person is hurt or sick.

("Cut! End of Happy Reel A. Put in Not-So-Happy Reel B.")

About a year and a half ago - I decided to pursue the American Dream (no, not a date with Lindsey Vonn -- not having a boss) and started a communications consulting full time. I've gotten lucky a few times working with talented people in technology start-ups so I had some runway to do this. I was also able to rely on COBRA (VERY expensive) for 18 months - hoping in that time, I'd get a break after the president passed health care reform, the top priority on his agenda.

But when health care reform got short-circuited, I figured it was time to search for individual health care for my family and me.

And this is where it gets weird. My family and I are pretty healthy. Blessed with fairly good health insurance, we have done yearly physicals, tests when appropriate and limited medications when needed. My wife suffered from migraines years back and there were my collarbone incidents. My son has seafood allergies and my daughter very mild asthma. But that's about it.

Then came the big shock.

We go online and fill out a request for coverage from Anthem. Typical policy, co-pays for primary care, $1,500 deductable etc. Hit the button and before I could close the computer screen - you have mail - DENIED. A week later I was finally able to talk to an underwriter who said the sleeping pills I had for my semi-regular trans-Atlantic flights brought the hint of mental instability (because the diagnosis was "insomnia") but I could apply for "reconsideration" with a doctor's note. I declined.

Just yesterday we got the wonderful news that UnitedHealth has approved a policy. Shock number two. There's a small deductable ($10,000), no co-pays on anything. In other words - everything is out of pocket before $10,000, and oh, those migraines my wife had years ago: there's a rider on her head. That means, any head related issues - traumas, tumors, headaches - will not be covered and can not even count toward the deductable. Remember those sleeping pills? Well, if I need counseling - forget it - all out of pocket (people who know me will be particularly concerned about this).

As I said earlier - I've been lucky - blessed with good health, a healthy family and a very good income. I can afford to pay most medical out of pocket (I mainly wanted the policy for the $3 million cap), but could most people? And being relatively frugal, will I forgo a suggested test now and then to save money?

My brother, who's 45 and has worked for a small auto repair shop for 20 years, has never been insured (except for the rare occasions his wife worked in retail). And there are millions and millions more out there like my brother. He has bad teeth and has not had a medical physical since his 30's. If he ends up in the hospital - or gets a debilitating disease - he will lose everything, end up a ward of the state (and that will cost us all).

According to the American Journal of Medicine, 60% of those who file for bankruptcy, do so because of medical bills. My father - who immigrated from Hungary in the 1950's -- worked his entire life, only to lose everything after the early onset of Alzheimer's. He was too young for Medicare, so he was stripped of all his assets to be put on Medicaid (and thank God for that safety net).

I mentioned the America Dream and I do not want to sound like I'm whining. Yes, I knew the risks when I left full-time employ with all its many benefits. But there must be millions of people in America who do not have the "runway" to pursue their dreams precisely because of the fear of no insurance. Isn't America where we encourage risk-taking (see mortgage-backed securities), and where we root for the little guy? Not to mention, the "little guy" may be the future. As larger companies begin to back away from insuring their employees, and as the temp and consulting markets begin to grow exponentially, the number of uninsured is bound to grow.

I strongly believe that we have the best health care providers in the world but despite what some claim, is it really the best health care system in the world?



By Joseph Eckert
Special to CBSNews.com

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 74 Comments
by TacticalCyclone November 26, 2011 2:30 PM EST
The US would have had Universal Health Care long ago if they didn't have the lobbyists buying politicians. Fix the lobby system and then the government can start making decisions which will increase its citizens quality of life instead of being forced to pander to cash interests as a matter of political survival. Why? Because if you take the money out of politics, politicians will have to become accountable to the people who elect them instead of the cash contributors who got them elected.
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by venusvegasvada January 20, 2012 4:27 PM EST
Exactly
by morethinking November 16, 2011 9:58 PM EST
This health care system almost killed me on one occasion. I had cancer, and my insurer denied the claim for surgery, which had to be put off. I paid for it myself, had it, and sued. Sadly for the insurer, I survived to follow through. If any individual withheld medical treatment, they'd be up on attempted murder, but the insurance carriers get off scott free when they deny coverage for any high ticket item (hoping the insured dies so they won't be held accountable). What a system! Europe, Canada, even Australia is looking better and better than this!
Reply to this comment
by venusvegasvada January 20, 2012 4:28 PM EST
Excellent point. When find out you have Cancer, every minute counts. For your insurance company to throw you under the bus is nothing short of murder. I hope you burn them for every thing you can.
by nolalou September 9, 2011 2:39 PM EDT
Great article! I want to scream every time I hear some tea party republican calling Obama's health care reform 'socialized medicine', I only wish it WAS, then we wouldn't have the problems described in the article! The 1st thing that would happen if we had a true single payer system is employers would get out of the business of supplying insurance for their workers, saving them a ton of money! Wonder why our auto manufacturers are having a hard time competing against foreign auto makers? Because those companies located in Europe or Asia don't have to spend money on health insurance, it's already provided by tax payer funded single payer health care!

It isn't the best health care in the world if you can't afford or if you're denied coverage!
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by spydyee August 31, 2011 5:39 PM EDT
by vista8635 February 21, 2010 1:33 PM EST
Life in the state of nature is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.

In what universe? Of higher functioning mammals only humans do this to their own.

Health care is not a basic human right? So what? Neither is clean drinking water.

Actually they both are as decided by the majority of all developed nations in the world as the first action of the United Nations. Oh and so is having a job.

"It is no accident that one of the first actions of the UN was to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. (UDHR or the Declaration). The Declaration was ratified by all then members of the United Nations on December 10, 1948. It is an extremely important document because it not only recognized the connection between the respect for human dignity and rights, and conditions necessary to maintain peace and security. The Declaration is the first international document to recognize the indivisibility between civil and political rights (like those enshrined in the Bill of Rights) on the one hand, and economic, social and cultural rights on the other. The UDHR is the first document to acknowledge that both civil and political rights are necessary to create conditions under which human dignity is respected and through which a person's full potential may be realized. Stated another way, without political and civil rights, there is no real ability for people to demand full realization of their economic rights. And without economic rights, peoples' ability to exercise their civil rights and express their political will is replaced by the daily struggle for survival.

The Declaration, although not a treaty, first articulated the norms to which all countries should aspire. It stated that everyone has the right to an adequate standard of living. This includes the rights to: work for favorable remuneration, (including the right to form unions), health, food, clothing, housing, medical care, necessary social services, and social insurances in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability or old age. There has been a conspiracy of silence surrounding these rights. In fact, most people have never heard of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."
Full text of this article can be found at:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/11-0

Full text of the UDHR can be found at:
http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/

You better get a grip on the reality that the rest of the world has the power to bring sanctions against us at any time for our human rights violations based on the UDHR and if they come up with a universal money besides the US dollar they will.
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by spydyee August 31, 2011 5:28 PM EDT
I have a suggestion. How about we just sit back and wait to see how many medical tourists Vermont has once their system gets up and running. They are going to a statewide single payer system by 2014 at the latest. Sit back and watch.
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by venusvegasvada July 13, 2011 12:25 PM EDT
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Story on Govt and Corp Greed : Responses/Venting : Nothing changes.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti February 22, 2010 1:42 PM EST
We have a failed system of predatory capitalism promulgated by the big corporations and GOP. It is NOT a problem with the government as the fascists are suggesting. We need to be protesting against the FAILED SYSTEM.
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by MargaretWilde February 21, 2010 6:34 PM EST
I believe the way forward for healthcare wherever in the world is to look to good nutrition: surely the best and safest medicine. Optimized nutrition - cooking good fresh, unprocessed food - both helps prevent illness and helps in recovery from illness. Minimizing salt/sodium intake helps prevent degenerative conditions including most cancers, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, heart attack, dementia, stroke, osteopenia, osteoporosis, osteomalacia, hypercholesterolaemia, depression, liver and kidney problems, and improves your health in many other ways without drugs, hunger or expense.

This, I submit, is the way forward.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti February 22, 2010 2:46 PM EST
At the same time, we can all go back to organic gardening so that we can manufacture wealth again in America. Decentralized food production as well as manufacturing for green items is the only way to save us.
by vista8635 February 21, 2010 1:18 PM EST
The term Creative Destruction comes to mind. LOL
Reply to this comment
by vista8635 February 21, 2010 1:06 PM EST
The system is uncompetitive and unsustainable. Maybe genetic engineering will save us.
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