'I can't afford surgery in the U.S.,' says bargain shopper - CNN.com
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
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'I can't afford surgery in the U.S.,' says bargain shopper - CNN.com
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
'I can't afford surgery in the U.S.,' says bargain shopper - CNN.com
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
according to CONSERVATIVE/republican/tea party DEATH PANELS....
if you can't afford surgery
and don't have insurance....
you'll just have to die....
Yes, if you have terminal cancer, get a job!
Fucking idiots!
Yes, if you have terminal cancer, get a job!
Fucking idiots!
If you have terminal cancer and can't pay....see Dude's earlier comments...Medicaid or Medicare....SCHIPS....etc...
'I can't afford surgery in the U.S.,' says bargain shopper - CNN.com
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
according to CONSERVATIVE/republican/tea party DEATH PANELS....
if you can't afford surgery
and don't have insurance....
you'll just have to die....
You could always get one of these new fangled things called a "job" - you can even choose one with benefits to your liking if you want..
'I can't afford surgery in the U.S.,' says bargain shopper - CNN.com
Ah yes, we've got it so good and the UK and Canada have it so bad!
I guess that so does inconsistent statistical gathering standards
Yes, if you have terminal cancer, get a job!
Fucking idiots!
If you have terminal cancer and can't pay....see Dude's earlier comments...Medicaid or Medicare....SCHIPS....etc...
right...........l.
Legal Loophole Ensnares Breast-Cancer Patients - WSJ.com
LONGVIEW, Texas -- In June 2003, Shirley Loewe went to Good Shepherd Medical Center here with a softball-size lump in her breast and was diagnosed with a rare form of breast cancer. She didn't know it, but she had just made a big mistake.
Ms. Loewe was uninsured. Under federal law, she could have gotten Medicaid coverage -- and saved herself a lot of hardship -- if she'd gone to a different clinic less than a half-mile away. But by walking through Good Shepherd's doors, Ms. Loewe unwittingly let that opportunity slip and embarked on a four-year journey through the Byzantine U.S. health-care system.
It was an odyssey that would take her to five hospitals, two clinics, two charitable organizations and two nursing homes in two states. She was denied assistance or care at least six times along the way, for reasons that ranged from not being poor enough to not being sick enough.
Ms. Loewe eventually got treatment, but at personal cost and great aggravation. To qualify for charity assistance, she had to reduce her $15,000-a-year income as a hairdresser by cutting back on her working hours and giving up her home. Later, she lucked into first-class care thanks to a serendipitous encounter at a Little League game
If you have terminal cancer and can't pay....see Dude's earlier comments...Medicaid or Medicare....SCHIPS....etc...
right...........l.
Legal Loophole Ensnares Breast-Cancer Patients - WSJ.com
LONGVIEW, Texas -- In June 2003, Shirley Loewe went to Good Shepherd Medical Center here with a softball-size lump in her breast and was diagnosed with a rare form of breast cancer. She didn't know it, but she had just made a big mistake.
Ms. Loewe was uninsured. Under federal law, she could have gotten Medicaid coverage -- and saved herself a lot of hardship -- if she'd gone to a different clinic less than a half-mile away. But by walking through Good Shepherd's doors, Ms. Loewe unwittingly let that opportunity slip and embarked on a four-year journey through the Byzantine U.S. health-care system.
It was an odyssey that would take her to five hospitals, two clinics, two charitable organizations and two nursing homes in two states. She was denied assistance or care at least six times along the way, for reasons that ranged from not being poor enough to not being sick enough.
Ms. Loewe eventually got treatment, but at personal cost and great aggravation. To qualify for charity assistance, she had to reduce her $15,000-a-year income as a hairdresser by cutting back on her working hours and giving up her home. Later, she lucked into first-class care thanks to a serendipitous encounter at a Little League game
So what your saying is that Medicaid is inefficient and many don't know how to receive help? No arguments here....