Originally posted by miryclay:Good point about Universal Healthcare. It's easy to do when the scale is limited. It was born here in Canada in a place called Saskatchewan which has a communal ethos and is relatively small. It's harder to move that to a larger population.
I've always thought that in the US isn't incumbambant upon the people to support those without health insurance? Isn't it a great source of pride for those citizens who rally together for a loved one?
Is anyone atm being denied care during the pandemic because of lack of paperwork?
Also, most people have insurance through their employers, but now that unemployment has gone trough the roof, millions of Americans are again without any insurance. A visit to the emergency care can cost you thousands of dollars.
Just to give you an example, last year I had food poison with vomit and fever. I had to drive to the emergency care close to my home, only to be denied treatment because that clinic was not covered with my insurance. So I had to take my last ounce of energy to drive to the other side of the city, hoping that I didn't vomit on the way, and when everything was done, I got a $100 bill for just a simple pill they gave me, insurance included and everything.
Fortunately I don't have lupus, diabetes or any other major genetic disease.