I am English (and a dual citizen of England and the United
States) and I am increasingly frustrated with the misinformation reported
regarding socialized medicine. Several opponents of health care reform --
including major conservative radio and TV commentators and several Republican
politicians -- claim that in England major surgery is not given to those over
59. This simply is NOT TRUE!
My mother had open heart surgery at age 81, is now 88 and
doing well. She received excellent care, did not wait three months for a
specialist; her surgery was immediate. My cousin recently had heart and lung
surgery, he is 70 and his surgery was immediate and successful. Unlike the
United States, all people and particularly the elderly are taken care of
in England. Further, all English citizens do not pay for any prescriptions
after the age of 60.
The biggest difference between their system and ours? Everyone
has access to healthcare. Everyone.
Comprehensive health care in England, like every civilized country except the
United States, is considered to be a right of all people. Apparently, in the
United States the people concerned about their rights don’t care that millions
of Americans currently don’t have the same rights.
Opponents to health care reform probably haven’t lost a job
recently and also lost their health insurance, too. As executive director of a
major non-profit organization in the U.S., I see people everyday who have been
laid off, who need medication, need care, but no longer have insurance and
cannot afford to buy it.
Are there problems with the system in England? Of course
there are, just like there are problems at any other hospital. Is it acceptable
for hospitals to turn away the uninsured? Is that the American Way? What does
it say about the American system when the first question at the emergency room
is not “what is the problem?” but “do you have insurance?” And don’t we all
know someone who has cancer, is struggling with treatments and sickness but
must continue to work so that they don’t lose their insurance and can continue
the treatments? As long as the US system ties health insurance to employment,
the people of this country will be unable to get sick without being financially
devastated.
If the American system is so superior, why is the United
States so low on the list of the healthiest countries? The USA spends the most
on health care of any country in the world yet is ranked only 11th in healthy
population. Canada is ranked 8th and has the longest life expectancy in the
world; they must be doing something right. Australia is ranked 6th; government
involvement seems to work there too.
I am appreciative that my employer provides a health plan
that I can buy into and I am very satisfied with the quality of care that I
receive and I hope that that quality will not be affected. But I cannot in good
conscience support a system that excludes the unemployed, the underemployed and
does not support the elderly.
Rita Inklovich attended college at the
University of London and Shippensburg University, grew up and worked in England
and is employed in the U.S.