
Jeff Bailey reports:
We had a big turn out, 27 people. I began by saying that I would like to see and will attempt to help arrange a number of programs throughout this year on the state of healthcare in America. I also said that we have many people within our congregation that participate within the system and that their viewpoints would be solicited.
I started the discussion by going around the room and asking each person to give their name and one thing about our healthcare system that they perceive as a positive or a negative. I kept a list of our comments including:
- appreciation for Fallon (it was not noted whether they meant the health plan or the clinics - they are now separate.) - rave review of Michael Moore's Sicko
- a call for Socialized Medicine/Single Payer Medicine (noted by three people)
- a call to sever the employer/health insurance connection
- a case of a sick employee who kept working to keep insurance even though they could barely function was noted
- price gouging by pharmaceutical companies
- too many people without health insurance
- a call to end for profit healthcare and pharmaceutical companies
- an elderly person found it very difficult to understand what drugs they take because they keep changing
- noted that we are the only country in the developed world without a national healthcare policy
- long waits to receive test results (mammograms, etc.)
- gratitude for MassHealth coverage for children
- a call to start with national healthcare for all children from 0 - 18
- Western medicine lags behind in a holistic / integral approach to medicine (also, we have a "take a pill" mentality)
- Pharmaceutical com[panies have far too much money, lobbying power, and influence
- Advances in technology and treatments save lots of lives that would not have been in the past
- Noted that many mid-income people $40k - 75k are now without insurance and one illness away from ruin
- a healthcare provider noted the change from focus on the patient to focus on time efficiency
- new drugs and tests are rushed into use at high cost
- a very unhealthy and stressful environment for hospital workers
- the two worst places for nutrition are hospitals and schools
- a nurse quoted her hospital employer as saying, "the bottom line, we're a business!"
- changes in MassHealth qualification now makes many people have to choose between working without insurance and not working but having insurance
- a loss of personal involvement in own healthcare decisions
- good doctors are being restricted by the insurance companies and for profit healthcare institutions
Dr. Levine also noted:
- that there are problems with socialized medicine in some countries, so be careful what you ask for
- that the Reagan and "W" administrations racked up outrageous recording setting national debts and are the primary
reasons that we have not developed a national policy or healthcare system
- the lack of electronic healthcare profiles / medical records results in a tremendous amount of redundant testing and
treatments
- the cost of malpractice, i.e. the lawyers,. adds a tremendous cost to healthcare (it was noted that "Arnold" solved
that problem in California by putting caps on malpractice settlements.
- Doctors don't have enough standardization in the treatment of specific conditions (do to anti-trust legal issues)
- the high cost of healthcare is less because of greed and that most healthcare professional are not overpaid
- Pharmaceutical companies are a major part of the problem and have one of if not the most powerful lobby in the
country. Clinton allowed them to directly advertise to the public with skyrocketing pricing results
- there is a huge problem with drug interactions because of the pressure to prescribe more drugs by the
pharmaceutical companies and the lack of shared electronic records
- patients have been disempowered and that nurses are not allowed to do their jobs, and the biggest part of their job
that has been taken away is educating their patients
- there is now a severe shortage of physicians ( and a huge surplus of lawyers)
Obviously we have hit upon a hot topic and we have plenty of issues to explore including many that were not mentioned on Monday.