Gael
Senior Member
- Location
- County Down, N Ireland
How would you evaluate the health care to be in the country you presently live in?
Ours is a hybrid system - mostly private practice doctors and surgeons with some salaried medical staff in the mostly public hospitals. Funding comes from 1.5% income tax surcharge (means tested), private health insurance (subsidised), gap payments for services or bulk billing. Approved prescription pharmaceuticals are subsided with a per annum cap for people with chronic conditions. Once the cap is reached, all prescribed medicine is free for the rest of the year.
Health insurance is taken out by individuals and families, not employers, and you can stay with the same company for the whole of your life if you want or you can shop around for the best deal. Payments can be deducted from your wages by your employer on your behalf or you can pay yourself using any of the usual ways that people pay their accounts.
Waiting times for elective procedures are always problematic unless you have private insurance and public hospitals sometimes seem to have forgotten that patients are real people, not just medical conditions.
Overall, I rate our system very highly but it is not perfect.
I wouldn't swap it for the American system.
The NHS is not perfect...but it is so great to have, especially when you come from a country,
such as America which has no medical insurance for most people.
I was fortunate to be able to have insurance through my jobs, but if you don't have that,
you are in big trouble
Most people don't realize that there is health insurance in America for the very poorest, ( Medicaid)
and it used to be pretty comprehensive,
Very much doubt that that is stull the case though,I hear the Republicans have been having a go at it.
NHS???
Much gratitude for living in a country that has it !
And, I get free medicines as well !
(meds free for older people )
For myself I can say that during the 70s and 80s and even into the 90s I had no complaints, I was in California and my employers paid my insurance. I only paid from $4 to $25 per paycheck and the doctors in the networks were great.
After 2000 everything changed for me. Now I was paying $400 a month (I had a baby) and the network of doctors got smaller. These days I have an employer that will not extend any kind of benefit so, I have to go though the Marketplace.
The insurance I got gets paid $350 a month and gives me a choice of 6 doctors (all rated 2-stars out of 5) who are located in some town I would never drive into. Needless to say, I feel like I am obligate to pay for insurance I will never use for wellness. Many people here is South Florida just choose to fly down to South America and go to those doctors.
While I technically live in America, I live in remote Alaska which is a third world country of it's own. Our island village of 1200 has a medical clinic with one general practitioner (and I'm not convinced she has a license). Anything more than a head cold, from a broken bone to childbirth, requires a medi-vac jet or helicopter out which can bankrupt anyone without insurance in a heartbeat. I've never had insurance but now that I'm on social security I guess I'm covered? Fortunately I seem to be an anomaly because I have no health issues, never get sick and don't even have a file at the clinic. But I do work hard to stay that way besides being obviously lucky.
As for dental care, we do have a traveling dentist show up from time to time but otherwise it means an expensive ferry trip to Ketchikan for a real dentist. Keeping my teeth's what is bankrupting me!
You sure can't be happy with that arrangement especially considering how things once were set up for you.
What do you mainly attribute these changes to? The different employer you presently have or other influences as well?
I think it is our struggling economy that drives employers to run lean and mean. Especially after our healthcare reform, many employers will no longer offer healthcare. As for why the insurance companies offer so little in exchange for so much.... I don't know. I am better off paying a dentist cash than paying dental insurance.
I live in paradise in more than one way. I live in the countryside in the Dominican Republic. Here there are hospitals, doctors, and lab tests which are free and the doctors will make house calls. There are clinics and you will need to pay for treatment. The biggest secret is to know enough so you don’t need medical help.