State of the Union: Affordable and Accessible Health Care
- From: Raymond <Bluerhymer@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2009 00:54:00 -0800 (PST)
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
January 31, 2006
State of the Union: Affordable and Accessible Health Care
In His State Of The Union Address, President Bush Proposed A
Comprehensive Agenda To Make Health Care In America More Affordable,
Portable, Transparent, And Efficient. Americans enjoy the best health
care facilities and medical professionals in the world, but our
citizens are concerned about the cost of health care, losing their
health insurance if they change jobs, and a lack of information about
price and quality. The President believed that Americans deserve
high-quality, reasonably priced, reliable health care, and the
security
of knowing they will have it when they need it.
Bull*** --- Bush didn't do anything to offend the medicine men nor
the
drug "drummers. They had the poor sap in their corrupt pockets.
From
the family doctor to the top of the medicine chain, there was no
improvement in health care costs. However, there should have bern. And
it
should have begun with the family doctor - the overated, overpaid
GP.
"Doctors are just the same as lawyers; the only difference is that
lawyers merely rob you, whereas doctors rob you and kill you too."
___Anton Chekhov
HOW TO STOP YOUR DOCTOR KILLING YOU
'The person most likely to kill you is not a relative or a friend, or
a
mugger or a burglar or a drunken driver. The person most likely to
kill
you is your doctor. This book will show you how to look after
yourself
and to protect yourself from this serious threat to your life and
good
health.'
HOW TO STOP YOUR DOCTOR KILLING YOU - Is your family doctor also your
mortician and does he own a drug store as well ?
Probably all true . He may even be invested in the tombstone
business
The family doctor doesn't miss any opportunities to skin you alive in
life and even beyond.
What does your family doctor really know? We really could save tons
of
money by seeing a good nurse for our primary care instead of the
friendly and expensive general practice doctor. (Practice indeed).
I have a friend who became a very successful family doctor in a large
Ohio City who told me that most of what he learned in medical school
he
has long ago forgotten because he does not use it. He said that all
he
really needs is an office in an accessable neighborhood, (close to
the
local hospitals helps), a thermometer, a blood pressure machine, a
stethascope, a Rollidex with the names of the local specialists, a
great office staff that will protect you from inquisitive patients
looking for free medical advice ("I call them my Palace Guards." ),
and most of all, "You must have a nurse with lots of hospital
experience. She has seen it all and generally knows more about
medications than most doctors. What we know about drugs we learn from
the pharmacutical "drummers."
My friend is right.If you stop to think about it. The nurse does
most
of the dirty work before the medicine man even sees you in the cold
room where he guesses what is wrong. The nurse has weighed you, taken
your blood pressure, checked your pulse, taken your temperature if
you
complain of a fever, and lastly, she asks why you are visiting her
boss
so she can give him a heads up to prepare him for his friendly and
expensive chat with you.
Who took your blood and who determines the results of the blood work?
Not Dr. Doomer.
And if you end up in a hospital you generally are put under the care
of
a specialist who Doomer sent you to in the first place. But, be sure
Doomer sees you every day regardless that he does nothing for you put
check your hospital charts and holds your hand while he tells you,
"I'll see you tomorrow."
Eight minutes is the average time spent by family doctors on hospital
visits. Charges range from $90 to $125.00.
My friend told me he makes his "nut" (expenses) from his morning
hospital visits alone.
UGH !
Since the days of Florence Nightingale, there has been a debate over
which medical tasks a nurse should perform. Trained nurse
practitioners
offer primary care that appears to be just as good or better than
what
doctors can provide, say researchers.
NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS
Many Patients Prefer Nurses To Doctors
Daily Policy Digest
Health Issues / Medical Personnel Findings:
Nurses spent more time with patients.
Nurses conducted more tests.
Patients did no better or worse when they saw a nurse instead of a
doctor.
However, patients treated by nurses were more satisfied with their
care.
Nurses cannot (legally) completely replace doctors; but for patients
wishing same-day medical care nurse practitioners provide a very good
standard of care, according to study.
The American Medical Association opposes independent practice by
nurse
practitioners, although it recommends that doctors work in close
collaboration with them. The AMA's president-elect, Yank D. Coble
Jr.,
said a British study fails to account for the fact that most
primary-care patients aren't very sick. Coble says nurses simply
don't
have the rigorous scientific background needed for subtle or complex
illnesses (Nonsense). Neither does the GP. He sends his patients to
doctors who specialize.
Nurse practitioner advocates point out that not every physician is
trained in every disease. General practitioners routinely refer
patients to physicians with specialized knowledge; nurse
practitioners
could easily do likewise.
Source: Daniel DeNoon, "Many Patients Prefer Nurses to Doctors,"
WebMD,
April 4, 2002; Sue Horrocks, Elizabeth Anderson, and Chris Salisbury,
"Systematic Review of Whether Nurse Practitioners Working in Primary
Care Can Provide Equivalent Care to Doctors," British Medical
Journal,
April 6, 2002.
12770 Coit Rd., Suite 800 - Dallas, TX 75251-1339 - 972/386-6272 -
Fax
972/386-0924
601 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 900 South Building - Washington, DC
20004 - 202/220-3082 - Fax 202/220-3096
Copyright 2002 National Center for Policy Analysis - All rights
reserved.
For text Medical Personnel
http://www.ncpa.org/iss/hea/
Objective: To determine whether nurse practitioners can provide care
at
first point of contact equivalent to doctors in a primary care
setting.
Conclusion: Increasing availability of nurse practitioners in primary
care is likely to lead to high levels of patient satisfaction and
high
quality care.
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/324/7341/819
Do we really need these expensive prima donna GPs in the United
States?
Are "General Practitioners" or "GPs" overated, overpaid and
overwhelmed
with too many patients? Can well trained nurses perform the same
duties
as the GPs and at a much lower cost? After all, the GP really does
nothing more than [attempt] to diagnose a patient's problem and then
send him/her on to someone else to fix the problem. The GP is simply
just the usher or maitre d' for the patient. Until the patient has
been
blood tested or x-rayed by someone other than the GP, it is strictly
guess work for the family doctor who does little that a well
qualified
nurse cannot do for the same patient.
The office nurse has already taken the temperature and blood pressure
of the patient before the doctor even enters the picture. And a good
nurse with lots of hospital experience may be better qualified than
the
doctor to advise the patient. Also, the nurse generally knows much
more
about the medications and their interactions with other drugs than
the
doctor who relies on what he was told by the pharmacy company pimp.
Next time you go to your GP, tape the visit. Then, when you get home
review what took place. You will no doubt discover that your neighbor
could have done the same thing if he had a prescription manual.
All visits should be taped for future proof in the event that a
patient
decided later to sue his medicine man. A tape protects both patient
and
family doctor.
I tape all visits to my GP. - Dr Doomer
Recently my last GP medicine man decided to abandon the trade and
move
to another state to go into a succesful construction business with a
brother. When I asked him if he would recommend another doctor for
me,
he said (laughing but serious), "Do you know who Dr. Weil is" ? When I
said
yes, he replied, " I would go to Dr. Weil if I were you."
Also : SEE :
Prescribing Under the Influence
By E. Haavi Morreim .
http://www.scu.edu/ethics/publications/submitted/morreim/prescribing.html
http://lindarhodescaregiving.blogspot.com/2007/01/prescribing-under-influence.html
Gifts to doctors from drug companies have implications for patient
interests.
Public opinion about doctors' pay
CE Ross and J Lauritsen
Public opinion about doctors' incomes was examined in a national
random
sample of 843 respondents; 70.1 per cent of those questioned felt
physicians are overpaid. There was a high degree of agreement among
various groups that physicians are overpaid, but older people and
Whites were more likely to think so than younger people and other
ethnic groups. People who believe that the United States is
characterized by unequal educational opportunity, unfair income
distribution, and limited resources were also more likely to think
physicians are overpaid.
In this brand new edition of How To Stop Your Doctor Killing You,
you'll discover many truths about how you can protect the health of
you
and your loved ones
http://www.vernoncoleman.com/htsydky.htm
Let up prey along with our medicine man
Dear Lord ... Keep me well. I can't afford to be ill.
Also see:
Gangsters In Medicine By Thomas Smith Val...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ...
For
a time, these changes actually improved the practice of medicine in
the
United States
http://www.rense.com/general33/gang.htm
E-Mail this to your rep or senator [who CAN reduce the outrageous
health care deficits by starting with the GPs and replacing them with
qualified nurse practitioners.]
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