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Why does the myth that Canadians flock across the US border to receive US health care persist?

I see one Canadian commenting about being forced out of hospital early and having to wait for some tests and treatments.My daughter (just 14 at the time) had to have open heart surgery in the US and fortunately we had health insurance to cover it. We were forced to wait until the 11th hour for the insurance company to “approve” the surgery which was an emergency…as if it was something we were doing just for fun. The people approving it were not medically trained.Then, after the surgery, she was forced, by the insurance company, out of the hospital less than 3 days later. I am not medically trained but was left in charge of her care at home. They gave me a telephone number to call in case I had questions. They had to give her morphine so that when they removed all the various tubes and needles inserted into various parts of her body it did not hurt her so badly. We wheeled her to the parked car and the medics lifted her into the front seat of my car which I put into a reclined position. I drove 20 miles an hour so as to not jostle her. She was too big for me to carry when we got home(plus we were not trained on how to carry a teenager safely) so she crawled on her hands and knees to her bed. I slept on the floor next to her bed for the next few weeks.I still feel weepy when I think of the worry we felt at the time.When my other daughter, at age 8, had to have an emergency appendectomy, the surgery was done around 3 am. That same day around 5 pm they sent her home—just 14 hours later. They force fed her jello to prove that her “system” was working. Again, the insurance company insisted upon this. We spent the next few weeks making daily trips to the doctor as she still had a fever and was in pain.When I was a little girl in Canada I had to have emergency appendectomy as did my daughter. That said, the appendix turned out to be fine and instead I had very painful (with 106 degree temperatures) peritonitis and a childhood kidney disease. While I did wish to be home, they had me there for 7 weeks while they worked to diagnose and treat my illness. (I am fine now.)When I was in a car accident in the US and was unconscious for 7 hours, the hospital was sending me home within 45 minutes of waking up. My insurance was not going to cover an overnight stay. As my husband rolled me out of the hospital, the medics who had taken me out of our totaled car looked at me in amazement, asking how in heavens name they were sending me home. It took me 3 years to recover from that accident and I was in excruciating pain. Despite my high deductibles and expensive monthly payments, my insurance covered only emergencies, so no follow up care was covered. One of the many problems I faced was my jaw out of place due to the sheer impact (I was t-boned). I had to learn how to put my own jaw back in place and did that many, many times. Many years later, after sleeping the wrong way or a after visit to the dentist, I still have to put it back into place again.When my mother, in Vancouver Canada, became ill, they took her into the hospital immediately at her doctor’s request. There was no profit-driven bureaucrat who had to give approval. It was the doctor’s decision. They did some surgery, and she was there for over two months while they tried to help her heal.Back in the US, once my daughter with the heart issue reached adulthood, she was without health insurance due to her pre-existing condition, until Obamacare kicked in that is. It was a life-saver when she lost the end of a finger in an accident.I would like to add that more recently my husband had to have a triple by-pass. The insurance seemed good…a $500 copay. Until after the surgery, when they claimed the hospital he had been approved for was not on their list of our EPO hospitals. As it turns out, there was not ONE hospital on their list who did bypass surgery. NOT ONE. They’ve been trying to get us to pay the $100,000 bill. Blue Cross/Anthem basically sold us an empty box. There was no nearby hospital on the EPO list that did after-surgery rehab either, so we had to forgo that.Choosing healthcare soon? Don’t make the mistake we made, of thinking that a Blue Cross/Anthem EPO will offer you all the usual hospitals and treatment centers. EPO stands for "Exclusive Provider Organization" And in our case, indeed it was exclusive..they excluded most hospitals and treatments centers. BEWARE!Meanwhile, we just got notice that in 2018 our health insurance will be $2,653 per month (almost $32,000 per year) with a 40% copay.Yes, like pretty much anything, the Canadian healthcare system likely needs some improvements. But how does it compare to, in the US, having our health care either not available at all due to the high cost of health insurance (or pre-existing conditions if Trump has his way) or having profit-driven companies determining what care we can have or how long we receive that care, I’d say it is pretty darned good. Canadians have the right to always ask for improvements in the system but unless they have lived in the US, raised a family in the US, paid the huge premiums etc, and had their care cut off or cut short, they have no clue how good they’ve got it.And yes, there is probably more of a wait in Canada for non-emergency treatment or tests. That’s because everyone is covered and there are more people, therefore, using the health system. In the US we don’t wait because a huge portion of the population is at home sick and possibly dying without insurance that will allow them to get treatment. When any American says they don’t want universal health care because they don’t want to wait in line at the doctor, what they are really revealing about themselves is that, they would rather a large portion of the population go without medical care so that they can get in to to see the doctor right away.For any Christians out there, whatever happened to “We are our brother’s keeper”?Galatians 6:2 - Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fullfil the law of Christ.I just received this news:California Fines Anthem Blue Cross $5 Million for Systemic Grievance System Violations.Here is an example they give in the article:One example of the numerous failures of the Anthem Blue Cross grievance system involved an enrollee who was diagnosed with a serious condition. Anthem Blue Cross provided pre-authorization for extensive surgical intervention and reconstruction to treat the enrollee. Anthem Blue Cross denied the claim when it was submitted by the provider. In an effort to resolve the issue, the enrollee, as well as the enrollee’s provider, broker, and spouse made 22 calls to the plan. Even after the 22 calls Anthem Blue Cross failed to recognize or resolve the enrollee’s complaint.Under California law plans are required to recognize an expression of dissatisfaction as a grievance, or complaint. Instead, calls to Anthem Blue Cross’ customer service system resulted in repeated transfers, as well as unfulfilled promises that the plan’s representatives would return calls. It was not until the enrollee sought assistance from the DMHC, more than half a year after the treatment, that Anthem Blue Cross finally paid the claim.Click on this link for the entire article: November 15, 2017

Why are so many veterans publicly supporting Colin Kaepernick's national anthem protest?

Because they know what his protest is really about, and it’s not about disrespecting them.For veterans, kneeling is a sign of paying homage to a fallen man/ideal. Which is exactly his point—making the point publicly for those who can’t.The flag doesn’t belong to “them” because it belongs to all of us. We are not a military state. Our government and its military serve US, the citizens and voters. Looking at it any other way would mean a dictatorship.They fought for our ability to protest injustice. The revolution was a WAR fought protesting injustice. Women went to prison for my right to vote. During the 60s , many protested for civil rights and against the Vietnam WarOur president doesn’t know the words to the Anthem ,and can’t color the flag properly. He wouldn’t lower the flag to honor John McCain, who DID fight for us when Trump claimed a medical exemption that he’s “ cured” of.Police brutality against minorities is real, just as climate change and Russian interference are ALL real. This Administration denies all of it.

What happened to Phil Ochs, folk/topical singer from the late 1960s/70s?

He was claimed by the diseases of mental illness and addiction.Ochs was a wonderful songwriter and a crusader for social justice in the 1960s, but in the 70s he began drinking more and more and exhibiting increasingly bizarre and erratic behavior. In 1973, while traveling in Tanzania, he was assaulted, robbed, and strangled, causing permanent damage to his vocal cords and greatly limiting his vocal range, which brought on severe depression and further escalated his drinking. It also left him increasingly paranoid — he said numerous times that he thought the FBI or CIA were behind his assault.*In 1975, he adopted a new persona called “John Butler Train”, who claimed he had murdered Phil, and was convinced that someone was trying to kill him; at that point he carried a weapon everywhere he went.Ultimately, he ended up broke and homeless, living on the streets of New York City. “John Butler Train” eventually disappeared and Phil returned, but he talked frequently of suicide.Finally he moved in with his sister in Queens in January 1976, and after years of urging from friends and family, saw a psychiatrist, who diagnosed him with bipolar disorder and prescribed him medication.Ochs assured his sister he was taking the medication, but just a few months later, in April of 1976, he hanged himself in her home. He was 35 years old.It was a very sad ending. Phil Ochs was a man who had always fought for peace, but he never found any of his own.My favorite of Phil's songs is “When I'm Gone”. It's sort of a personal anthem of mine; both the music and the message are sheer beauty.(*He may not have been that far off in his paranoia about the government. After his death it was revealed that the FBI had a 500-page dossier on Ochs, whom they deemed “subversive” and “potentially dangerous” — even in death.)

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