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	<title>Comments on: Where&#8217;s Health Care Reform Now?</title>
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	<description>Survival Strategies</description>
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		<title>By: narconon07</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-841</link>
		<dc:creator>narconon07</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Aug 2010 13:20:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-841</guid>
		<description>The Republicans have become full fledged Fascists. They&#039;ll do and say anything to keep Dems from governing this country.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Alexa Rae Narconon Specialist</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Republicans have become full fledged Fascists. They&#39;ll do and say anything to keep Dems from governing this country.</p>
<p>Alexa Rae Narconon Specialist</p>
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		<title>By: sarum</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-637</link>
		<dc:creator>sarum</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Feb 2010 03:41:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-637</guid>
		<description>Just watched the video about Canadian healthcare.  I know some Canadians that have healthcare there and here.  They tell me that their Rx that they get from Canada will be the same exact prescription, same strength from the same company - the pills will even look exactly the same - but a very strange observation is made - the pharmaceuticals that are obtained in Canada work better and have less to no side effects compared to their US versions which are supposed to be exactly the same according to the manufacturer!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just watched the video about Canadian healthcare.  I know some Canadians that have healthcare there and here.  They tell me that their Rx that they get from Canada will be the same exact prescription, same strength from the same company &#8211; the pills will even look exactly the same &#8211; but a very strange observation is made &#8211; the pharmaceuticals that are obtained in Canada work better and have less to no side effects compared to their US versions which are supposed to be exactly the same according to the manufacturer!</p>
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		<title>By: sarum</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-636</link>
		<dc:creator>sarum</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Feb 2010 03:32:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-636</guid>
		<description>I think that most doctors find that doing the right thing by some patients would be a real career killer for them so they have to rationalize that for the greater good - they can help more people and pay off their loans by staying in business and being extremely mindful of the parameters set by insurers and pharmaceutical giants.  Meanwhile, the cost to the nation is huge.  Patient dumping is not relegated to the uninsured.  It happens to good people who pay big monthly bills to be insured - it happens to us all the time.  It is a huge cost to the insurer yet if it is addressed at all it most likely would be in the form of limiting how many doctors a patient can see for a particular issue.  Meanwhile, those of us who have had life-threatening results from pharmaceuticals find ourselves unwelcome in many medical practices and are not giving any guidelines as to how to recover or even a prognosis of if recovery is even possible.  Then, human collateral that we are, Social Security gets to pay our bills, not the pharmaceutical company or the doctor who hoped that we would simply die rather than them having to get involved in a possible class action against the pharmaceutical company.  I have long wished to see a national data base for the express purpose of research and  collating data to determine problems with pharmaceuticals and develop new answers.  Also a national data base could be used to learn how people truly do thrive or wilt after major surgeries and why.  Unfortunately we no longer have any trust in anyone&#039;s integrity to manage such a system without personal data leaks and abuses so we miss out on the good results that could come from such an instrument (tool.)  &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There are bad doctors too.  A few years ago a dentist drilled holes in my teeth in order to cause rot.  He didn&#039;t think that I knew what he was doing.  I knew exactly what he was doing but what I did not know was what I could do about it.  I never met a doctor/dentist willing to admit that one of their own did something wrong.  Never met any attorneys like the ones I see on Boston Legal either.  Now, a few years later, I am disabled, on Medicare and Social Security, and there is no way I can squeeze out monies to fix my now rotting teeth.  &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I am stuck on this democracy and capitalism thing and how the US public school system taught us that under the other forms of government, individual initiative and work ethic was stifled and killed - but I&#039;m seeing that the corruption and greed that has grown unchecked under our form of government has sufficed to cause the same result.  (Also thinking of some of your other articles here - now that I have found you and am reading you.)  So what I am trying to say in relation to the topic at hand is that doctors, like people in lots of jobs, simply cannot afford to care too much because the system kills those who do - ahhhhhh . . . . let me count the ways.  That is why they have to go to Haiti to show they care, or to get all that caring out of their system for awhile - because it&#039;s a real career killer here.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think that most doctors find that doing the right thing by some patients would be a real career killer for them so they have to rationalize that for the greater good &#8211; they can help more people and pay off their loans by staying in business and being extremely mindful of the parameters set by insurers and pharmaceutical giants.  Meanwhile, the cost to the nation is huge.  Patient dumping is not relegated to the uninsured.  It happens to good people who pay big monthly bills to be insured &#8211; it happens to us all the time.  It is a huge cost to the insurer yet if it is addressed at all it most likely would be in the form of limiting how many doctors a patient can see for a particular issue.  Meanwhile, those of us who have had life-threatening results from pharmaceuticals find ourselves unwelcome in many medical practices and are not giving any guidelines as to how to recover or even a prognosis of if recovery is even possible.  Then, human collateral that we are, Social Security gets to pay our bills, not the pharmaceutical company or the doctor who hoped that we would simply die rather than them having to get involved in a possible class action against the pharmaceutical company.  I have long wished to see a national data base for the express purpose of research and  collating data to determine problems with pharmaceuticals and develop new answers.  Also a national data base could be used to learn how people truly do thrive or wilt after major surgeries and why.  Unfortunately we no longer have any trust in anyone&#39;s integrity to manage such a system without personal data leaks and abuses so we miss out on the good results that could come from such an instrument (tool.)  </p>
<p>There are bad doctors too.  A few years ago a dentist drilled holes in my teeth in order to cause rot.  He didn&#39;t think that I knew what he was doing.  I knew exactly what he was doing but what I did not know was what I could do about it.  I never met a doctor/dentist willing to admit that one of their own did something wrong.  Never met any attorneys like the ones I see on Boston Legal either.  Now, a few years later, I am disabled, on Medicare and Social Security, and there is no way I can squeeze out monies to fix my now rotting teeth.  </p>
<p>I am stuck on this democracy and capitalism thing and how the US public school system taught us that under the other forms of government, individual initiative and work ethic was stifled and killed &#8211; but I&#39;m seeing that the corruption and greed that has grown unchecked under our form of government has sufficed to cause the same result.  (Also thinking of some of your other articles here &#8211; now that I have found you and am reading you.)  So what I am trying to say in relation to the topic at hand is that doctors, like people in lots of jobs, simply cannot afford to care too much because the system kills those who do &#8211; ahhhhhh . . . . let me count the ways.  That is why they have to go to Haiti to show they care, or to get all that caring out of their system for awhile &#8211; because it&#39;s a real career killer here.</p>
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		<title>By: sarum</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-624</link>
		<dc:creator>sarum</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Feb 2010 20:41:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-624</guid>
		<description>Just watched the video about Canadian healthcare.  I know some Canadians that have healthcare there and here.  They tell me that their Rx that they get from Canada will be the same exact prescription, same strength from the same company - the pills will even look exactly the same - but a very strange observation is made - the pharmaceuticals that are obtained in Canada work better and have less to no side effects compared to their US versions which are supposed to be exactly the same according to the manufacturer!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just watched the video about Canadian healthcare.  I know some Canadians that have healthcare there and here.  They tell me that their Rx that they get from Canada will be the same exact prescription, same strength from the same company &#8211; the pills will even look exactly the same &#8211; but a very strange observation is made &#8211; the pharmaceuticals that are obtained in Canada work better and have less to no side effects compared to their US versions which are supposed to be exactly the same according to the manufacturer!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: sarum</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-623</link>
		<dc:creator>sarum</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Feb 2010 20:32:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-623</guid>
		<description>I think that most doctors find that doing the right thing by some patients would be a real career killer for them so they have to rationalize that for the greater good - they can help more people and pay off their loans by staying in business and being extremely mindful of the parameters set by insurers and pharmaceutical giants.  Meanwhile, the cost to the nation is huge.  Patient dumping is not relegated to the uninsured.  It happens to good people who pay big monthly bills to be insured - it happens to us all the time.  It is a huge cost to the insurer yet if it is addressed at all it most likely would be in the form of limiting how many doctors a patient can see for a particular issue.  Meanwhile, those of us who have had life-threatening results from pharmaceuticals find ourselves unwelcome in many medical practices and are not giving any guidelines as to how to recover or even a prognosis of if recovery is even possible.  Then, human collateral that we are, Social Security gets to pay our bills, not the pharmaceutical company or the doctor who hoped that we would simply die rather than them having to get involved in a possible class action against the pharmaceutical company.  I have long wished to see a national data base for the express purpose of research and  collating data to determine problems with pharmaceuticals and develop new answers.  Also a national data base could be used to learn how people truly do thrive or wilt after major surgeries and why.  Unfortunately we no longer have any trust in anyone&#039;s integrity to manage such a system without personal data leaks and abuses so we miss out on the good results that could come from such an instrument (tool.)  &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;There are bad doctors too.  A few years ago a dentist drilled holes in my teeth in order to cause rot.  He didn&#039;t think that I knew what he was doing.  I knew exactly what he was doing but what I did not know was what I could do about it.  I never met a doctor/dentist willing to admit that one of their own did something wrong.  Never met any attorneys like the ones I see on Boston Legal either.  Now, a few years later, I am disabled, on Medicare and Social Security, and there is no way I can squeeze out monies to fix my now rotting teeth.  &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I am stuck on this democracy and capitalism thing and how the US public school system taught us that under the other forms of government, individual initiative and work ethic was stifled and killed - but I&#039;m seeing that the corruption and greed that has grown unchecked under our form of government has sufficed to cause the same result.  (Also thinking of some of your other articles here - now that I have found you and am reading you.)  So what I am trying to say in relation to the topic at hand is that doctors, like people in lots of jobs, simply cannot afford to care too much because the system kills those who do - ahhhhhh . . . . let me count the ways.  That is why they have to go to Haiti to show they care, or to get all that caring out of their system for awhile - because it&#039;s a real career killer here.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think that most doctors find that doing the right thing by some patients would be a real career killer for them so they have to rationalize that for the greater good &#8211; they can help more people and pay off their loans by staying in business and being extremely mindful of the parameters set by insurers and pharmaceutical giants.  Meanwhile, the cost to the nation is huge.  Patient dumping is not relegated to the uninsured.  It happens to good people who pay big monthly bills to be insured &#8211; it happens to us all the time.  It is a huge cost to the insurer yet if it is addressed at all it most likely would be in the form of limiting how many doctors a patient can see for a particular issue.  Meanwhile, those of us who have had life-threatening results from pharmaceuticals find ourselves unwelcome in many medical practices and are not giving any guidelines as to how to recover or even a prognosis of if recovery is even possible.  Then, human collateral that we are, Social Security gets to pay our bills, not the pharmaceutical company or the doctor who hoped that we would simply die rather than them having to get involved in a possible class action against the pharmaceutical company.  I have long wished to see a national data base for the express purpose of research and  collating data to determine problems with pharmaceuticals and develop new answers.  Also a national data base could be used to learn how people truly do thrive or wilt after major surgeries and why.  Unfortunately we no longer have any trust in anyone&#39;s integrity to manage such a system without personal data leaks and abuses so we miss out on the good results that could come from such an instrument (tool.)  </p>
<p>There are bad doctors too.  A few years ago a dentist drilled holes in my teeth in order to cause rot.  He didn&#39;t think that I knew what he was doing.  I knew exactly what he was doing but what I did not know was what I could do about it.  I never met a doctor/dentist willing to admit that one of their own did something wrong.  Never met any attorneys like the ones I see on Boston Legal either.  Now, a few years later, I am disabled, on Medicare and Social Security, and there is no way I can squeeze out monies to fix my now rotting teeth.  </p>
<p>I am stuck on this democracy and capitalism thing and how the US public school system taught us that under the other forms of government, individual initiative and work ethic was stifled and killed &#8211; but I&#39;m seeing that the corruption and greed that has grown unchecked under our form of government has sufficed to cause the same result.  (Also thinking of some of your other articles here &#8211; now that I have found you and am reading you.)  So what I am trying to say in relation to the topic at hand is that doctors, like people in lots of jobs, simply cannot afford to care too much because the system kills those who do &#8211; ahhhhhh . . . . let me count the ways.  That is why they have to go to Haiti to show they care, or to get all that caring out of their system for awhile &#8211; because it&#39;s a real career killer here.</p>
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		<title>By: Tweets that mention Where’s Health Care Reform Now? — US Health Crisis -- Topsy.com</title>
		<link>http://ushealthcrisis.com/2010/01/wheres-health-care-reform-now/comment-page-1/#comment-616</link>
		<dc:creator>Tweets that mention Where’s Health Care Reform Now? — US Health Crisis -- Topsy.com</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 2010 08:08:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ushealthcrisis.com/?p=474#comment-616</guid>
		<description>[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by francine hardaway, francine hardaway, francine hardaway, ushealthcrisis, Andrew Hunt and others. Andrew Hunt said: RT @ushealthcrisis: http://bit.ly/dx7MmI Where is health care reform today? / &quot;Over there. In a box.&quot; (Python joke) [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by francine hardaway, francine hardaway, francine hardaway, ushealthcrisis, Andrew Hunt and others. Andrew Hunt said: RT @ushealthcrisis: <a href="http://bit.ly/dx7MmI" rel="nofollow">http://bit.ly/dx7MmI</a> Where is health care reform today? / &quot;Over there. In a box.&quot; (Python joke) [...]</p>
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