Georgia peach. Atlanta sports fan. I buy Christmas presents all year.
uhhleeese:

aokp

The whopping medical bill faced by the family of Canadian freestyle skier Sarah Burke, who died from a head injury while practising at Park City, Utah, has triggered a spasm of embarrassment among Americans over their health-care system.
Burke, of Squamish, B.C., died at a Salt Lake City hospital nine days after crashing on the half-pipe course at Park City. The accident tore a vertebral artery in her neck, causing bleeding into her brain.
Her care wasn’t covered by competitor insurance provided by the Canadian Freestyle Ski Associationbecause the Park City event was unsanctioned.
That left the Burke family with a bill initially estimated at $550,000, later revised downward to around $200,000, some of which will be covered by B.C. Medicare.
Burke’s husband, Rory Bushfield, also set up a web site to solicit donations, while the event’s sponsor, drink-maker Monster Energy Co., belatedly promised to assist the family.
But the Salt Lake City Tribune reported Tuesday that the medical-bill flap has been cited by U.S. and international media “as proof of what ails the U.S. health-care system.”
Wendell Potter, a former U.S. insurance industry executive but now a critic of the American system, wrote in the Huffington Post this week that the Burke family’s plight compounded their grief.
“The irony is that had the accident occurred in Canada, her family would not be having to come up with more than half a million dollars to pay for her care,” wrote Potter, an analyst for the Center for Public Integrity. “Her care would have been covered because, unlike the U.S., Canada has a system of universal coverage.”
An estimated 700,000 American families file for bankruptcy each year because of medical debt, he wrote.
“No one in Canada finds themselves in that predicament, nor do they face losing their homes as many Americans do when they become critically ill or suffer an injury,” Potter wrote.
Calgary Herald columnist Robert Remington, who along with Potter was cited in the Tribune story, quoted an un-named commentator who summed up the Burke family’s experience this way: “Sorry for your loss. Here’s your bill.”
Steve Morgan, a health policy analyst at the University of British Columbia, told Remington that U.S. insurance companies routinely negotiate down such big medical tabs but uninsured Americans pay full retail because they have no bargaining power.
“Morgan says Burke’s case should be a sobering reminder to Canadians of what could happen in a privately-insured market, rather than a public system where everyone is insured against a catastrophic event,” Remington wrote.
Source

uhhleeese:

aokp

The whopping medical bill faced by the family of Canadian freestyle skier Sarah Burke, who died from a head injury while practising at Park City, Utah, has triggered a spasm of embarrassment among Americans over their health-care system.

Burke, of Squamish, B.C., died at a Salt Lake City hospital nine days after crashing on the half-pipe course at Park City. The accident tore a vertebral artery in her neck, causing bleeding into her brain.

Her care wasn’t covered by competitor insurance provided by the Canadian Freestyle Ski Associationbecause the Park City event was unsanctioned.

That left the Burke family with a bill initially estimated at $550,000, later revised downward to around $200,000, some of which will be covered by B.C. Medicare.

Burke’s husband, Rory Bushfield, also set up a web site to solicit donations, while the event’s sponsor, drink-maker Monster Energy Co., belatedly promised to assist the family.

But the Salt Lake City Tribune reported Tuesday that the medical-bill flap has been cited by U.S. and international media “as proof of what ails the U.S. health-care system.”

Wendell Potter, a former U.S. insurance industry executive but now a critic of the American system, wrote in the Huffington Post this week that the Burke family’s plight compounded their grief.

“The irony is that had the accident occurred in Canada, her family would not be having to come up with more than half a million dollars to pay for her care,” wrote Potter, an analyst for the Center for Public Integrity. “Her care would have been covered because, unlike the U.S., Canada has a system of universal coverage.”

An estimated 700,000 American families file for bankruptcy each year because of medical debt, he wrote.

“No one in Canada finds themselves in that predicament, nor do they face losing their homes as many Americans do when they become critically ill or suffer an injury,” Potter wrote.

Calgary Herald columnist Robert Remington, who along with Potter was cited in the Tribune story, quoted an un-named commentator who summed up the Burke family’s experience this way: “Sorry for your loss. Here’s your bill.”

Steve Morgan, a health policy analyst at the University of British Columbia, told Remington that U.S. insurance companies routinely negotiate down such big medical tabs but uninsured Americans pay full retail because they have no bargaining power.

“Morgan says Burke’s case should be a sobering reminder to Canadians of what could happen in a privately-insured market, rather than a public system where everyone is insured against a catastrophic event,” Remington wrote.

Source

(via lifesgrandparade)

  1. euphemia-cooper reblogged this from thedirtychef
  2. stormreach reblogged this from aokp
  3. diariodelcaballero reblogged this from magalomania
  4. revisionof reblogged this from lordaardvark and added:
    America. Because the grief and agony of losing a loved one is not intense and emotionally crippling enough without a...
  5. littlebluej reblogged this from fearandwar
  6. dystopianutopiacom reblogged this from randomactsofchaos
  7. sakuton reblogged this from guttercrow
  8. guttercrow reblogged this from clockworkjerk and added:
    This makes me want to punch people who are against universal health care in the face.
  9. clockworkjerk reblogged this from mquester
  10. glitteroctopus reblogged this from untitled-mag
  11. untitled-mag reblogged this from fearandwar
  12. drinkingwinewithdogs reblogged this from peachsss
  13. troublecleft reblogged this from peachsss and added:
    Source Hey guys, look! An issue that isn’t the internet being taken away that could potentially affect you TODAY!
  14. ablogforthings reblogged this from mquester
  15. mquester reblogged this from peachsss
  16. knlranch reblogged this from think4yourself and added:
    I was wondering if something like this would happen…. It’s like one tragedy isn’t enough….
  17. gaberinaldimusic reblogged this from peachsss
  18. peachsss reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  19. pastaistheopiateofthemasses reblogged this from truth-has-a-liberal-bias
  20. debbieray reblogged this from williamholman
  21. inspider reblogged this from aquapunk
  22. hnjohnso reblogged this from greentent
  23. halfcentonline reblogged this from sarahlee310
  24. thedirtychef reblogged this from mauricesmall and added:
    An estimated 700,000 American families file for bankruptcy each year because of medical debt, he wrote.
  25. semiprofessional reblogged this from sarahlee310
  26. latitudechaoz reblogged this from williamholman
  27. sarahlee310 reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  28. williamholman reblogged this from aokp
  29. aquapunk reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  30. jello404 reblogged this from introvertedart
  31. greentent reblogged this from sinidentidades
  32. rigelandsirius reblogged this from think4yourself
  33. crystalspyryt reblogged this from think4yourself
  34. newsandtrade reblogged this from think4yourself
  35. randomactsofchaos reblogged this from think4yourself