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A Friend Stopped By | 10/15/2009 5:00 am

Fools Rush In, by E.D. Hill

How to fix the health-care crisis in baby steps …
By E.D. Hill

Editor’s Note: Emmy Award-winning journalist E.D. Hill is a nationally known TV and radio host and author. She spent the past ten years hosting several daily programs on Fox News Channel and was Bill O’Reilly’s sidekick on The Radio Factor, heard on 400 stations. She currently hosts "Good Day" with E.D. Hill on americaswebradio.com Tuesdays and Thursdays 8 - 9 AM EST. E.D. and her husband have eight children and pets too numerous to mention. She splits time between their ranch in Texas and the East Coast. You can contact E.D. at hillfriends.com.

Have you ever had a friend who you thought was tried and true until, one day, with a sweet smile and earnest eyes, she asks you to become the chairperson of some gala? She will, she solemnly promises you, help in every way. Please, be a doll and help her out. It’ll be easy! I had a friend like that. She’d just been through the wringer with a scum-sucking, philandering, dweeb of a now-ex-husband and I wanted to help. "OK," I said, as the word "sucker" began to appear on my forehead like Harry Potter’s scar.

The general complaining we heard from people about their health care 18 months ago was much like general complaints about our own mothers.

I’ve been naïve about a lot of things in my life. I had no preparation for what was I was about to undertake. I’ve always had an aversion to what I consider wasteful spending at events that purportedly have the purpose of raising as much money as possible to fund a worthy project. I decided the entire event from top to bottom needed to be done differently than the way they’d done it the past 25 years. I devised what I thought was a brilliant, inexpensive plan. The outcry was deafening. People liked things the way they’d always been. Sure, they thought it was a good idea to try to cut costs — to an extent — but they didn’t want the whole thing upturned in one swoosh. Which leads me to our federal government. Odd jump, I know, but stay with me.

Everyone is wringing their hands about how to change the entire health-care system. Eleven million to 15 million people (according to most high and low estimates) are chronically uninsured. They need help. So why can’t the government focus on those who are the most in need? In the 1991 comedy "What About Bob?" Bill Murray portrays Bob Wiley, a multiphobic man who stalks his psychiatrist, Dr. Leo Marvin, after Marvin gives him a copy of his new book, Baby Steps, and leaves on vacation. Murray uses the "baby step method" — baby steps to get on the bus, baby steps down the aisle, baby steps … —  to get to Marvin’s vacation home in New Hampshire. I like baby steps. They’re safe and small. They give children practice at a very important task. After mastering baby steps they are ready to walk, even run. So why can’t the government take baby steps?

The government likes things BIG. Medicare is a government-funded and -run social insurance program. (Former President Harry Truman was the first beneficiary. Why is it politicians always jump to the front of the line?) Its own 2008 report assumes funds will be gone by 2019. Medicaid, the state-run program for low-income residents, faces funding problems and relies on money from the federal government. Both programs are part of U.S. Social Security, which, by dollar amount, is the largest government program in the world and the costliest item in the federal budget. State governments need help funding burgeoning unemployment programs. I will not argue that these programs are unnecessary; however, they rarely help correct existing problems and are inefficient.

122 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Amy Stewart Hale

My point exactly…and what I’ve been fighting to expose the reality of for 10 years since this reality began for my family.

The same group of doctors that deemed me unininsurable are also the clients that when I got truly sick and had to have the surgical procedure which made me well and created my debt, are also the same clients who cancelled all their work with me when I had debt to them. Even though I had always fulfilled my obligations to them.

Creating the debt that has affected my ability to gain profit, pay my bills, and support my family.

At some point roadbocks set up by others to silence an artist becomes a manipulation of power that shows corruption by those controlling the situation. And in that becomes a violation of both my civil rights and now due to the legal proof we now have, my human rights…and I am an American Citizen by birth.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

simpletownUSA.com

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 8:37 am
Amy Stewart Hale

I am giving you a bingo Jim.

Thank you for clearly making a point.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

simpletownUSA.com

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 1:29 pm
Amy Stewart Hale

Another point to my expectation to pay my doctor directly.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

simpletownUSA.com

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 12:38 pm
Dab-a- do
Mr. Clark, you are so right. I started reading the comments and thought I would try to give some information about how insurance and our present health care system works. However, the consumers do not understand how it works at all and have been brain washed by the insurance companies into thinking there cannot be another way of handling the problems. Baby steps is another way of putting off til some future time any changes in the way business, which health care is, continues.
By Dab-a- do on 10/17/2009 7:29 pm
jim clark
Thanks Dab-a-do…  It seems to be a constant and never ending battle just to get people to pay attention to who is stealing from them.  I enjoy talking to people with different opinions.  But I don’t enjoy talking to those with strong opinions and obviously no knowledge of what they speak… I will keep trying…
By jim clark on 10/17/2009 8:23 pm
jim clark
Here is another example of where baby steps get you.  This morning I learned that a 20+ year employee of a cape canaveral hospital lost his job for economic reasons, but not before he trained his replacements.  Thier lives have been a decades long struggle with family health problems and a very special medical needs child.  Yes let’s take baby steps.  the greatest county in the world is not smart enough to figure this out…. 
By jim clark on 10/18/2009 10:14 am
Amy Stewart Hale

…and why I negotiate my healthcare costs with my doctor myself, rather that paying into a system we know doesn’t and hasn’t worked for a very long time.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

simpletownUSA.com

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 12:43 pm
Amy Stewart Hale

Thank you.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

simpletownUSA.com

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 8:25 am
Amy Stewart Hale

Precisely Mr. Clark. Thank you.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 3:39 pm
Smarterthan That

And Obamacare is not going to change one thing about which you complain. It will only lead to rationing and less effective health care. Tort reform, more competition, stop the fraud, not a government take over of our life and death.

The government has NEVER been the answer.

Never will.

By Smarterthan That on 10/18/2009 8:44 pm
Amy Stewart Hale

I’m fighting for the option to pay for my own health care…and cut out the middleman or insurance agent. It’s more affordable in my current reality than paying for a premium and deductible I know I will never be able to use.

Please stop disrespecting the President of my Nation…Many People respected, though did not agree with the former administration.

It’s rude.

Thank you,

Amy Stewart Hale

PennDragon Studios

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/18/2009 9:31 pm
Smarterthan That

I respect your opinions Amy Hale, however, I do not respect this President in any way. I respect the office of the President, but not this President. I do not have to, that is my right as an American. So far any way.

Many people did not respect our past President. I had many issues with his Presidency.

I do not respect Barack Obama, nor do I have to. He is a liar and is manipulating my countrymen towards a path that many do not want, nor voted for. It is my duty to speak out and warn those that will listen. Thank God that our forefathers did not consider it "rude" to speak out against tyranny.

By Smarterthan That on 10/19/2009 1:02 pm
Amy Stewart Hale

See I respected both the Office of My President and My President when I didn’t always agree with him. I would choose my words wisely, sir.

Amy, PennDragon Studios

By Amy Stewart Hale on 10/19/2009 1:22 pm
Chris Glass`

Until doctors, hospitals and insurance companies stop being for profit institutions there will be no reform. My husband used to see a local gastroenterologist that scheduled three patients every fifteen minutes. The actual time spent with the patient was less than two minutes unless there was a condition that couldn’t be ignored. He was irate when we switched physicians because my husband’s symptoms were being ignored. This doctor not only misdiagnosed my husband but also ignored neuromuscular symptoms that could have led to his being diagnosed with Myasthenia Gravis several years before we knew to see a neurologist.

All of the new doctors that we see today demand the co-pay before allowing patients to see the physician. One recent ENT visit that I had recently charged me $220 for the initial consult. For treatment I was expected to reschedule at another time for another fee. I decided to live with my sinus infection.

Every year we watch our insurance rates rise with less care being covered. I fully understand that the reason most people are forced into bankruptcy is because of the cost of medical care. I have opted out of getting treatment for some irritating conditions because we have cap on what our insurance will pay for a lifetime and I don’t want to deny my husband coverage for his illness.

We don’t need a federal program for more red tape we need real reform in health care and insurance. Sick people are dropped from insurance companies daily or have their claims denied. A huge number of physicians refuse to see a patient without insurance unless the bill is prepaid before the visit. Hospitals are dumping indigent patients on skid row or at shelter. Some patients are getting same day surgery before being sent home where there is no help. This isn’t medical treatment it is a joke.

By Chris Glass` on 10/15/2009 9:13 am
Grande Camper

"Until doctors, hospitals and insurance companies stop being for profit institutions there will be no reform." 

I agree that is so true.  Sorry to hear of your husband’s misdiagnosed and ignored symptoms.  Hope things get better for your family.

By Grande Camper on 10/15/2009 10:35 am