PeZook wrote:Ar-Adunakhor wrote:
Tens of thousands for the ER/IC/Hospital alone and god knows how much on the longterm follow-up medication and such.
Uh...you're kidding, right?
Me and my wife earn about 1500 USD a month, my parents make around twice that. There's no way we could
ever pay even 10 thousand bucks for a hospital visit...
Unfortunatley, he's not. I work in an ER in the U.S... the most basic of things done here (we'll take a mild laceration, on the arm, for instance) one hundred fourty dollars. That's just for the patient to come in, and be seen by the doctor. Oh, then the doctor (in my hospital, the doctors are sub-contracted out through a different company and bill seperatley) submits a second bill. This doesn't include anything else.
The highest level of non-critical care has a base cost of 1050 dollars, plus charges for procedures (IVs are by the hour), medications, materials and other services (radiologists and flob...er, the blood doctors also submit seperate bills).
This is just in the Emergency Room.
similar systems in other countries force "real people [to] pay a deeper cost through long waits for treatment or settling for care that does not take advantage of the latest medical science."
I call bullshit; the hospital I work in is a relativley small one, in a small city in New Hampshire. Even with our vaunted private health insurance, we have times where patients are in rooms for 6-7 hours before being seen, or held for 20 before being discharged. it has nothing to do with insurance, it's limited space and staffing and too many patients.