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Patricia Lane's avatar

Anywhere that ‘Big Corporations’ take on health care , there will be calamity. Even here in Blue New York , the corporate entity has taken over not for profit hospitals . The number 1 problem is : Care Standards go down . 2 . Pay for the workers goes down .3. Staffing goes down. 4 . Another empire to enhance the CEOs and higher ups with big sums of money. 5 . Another “ who cares” company who cares only about their profits. We as consumers are left listening to their recorded propaganda sometimes for forty minute as we wait ‘in the order as we’ve been received’, trying to contact a drs office.

I had a Drs appointment several months ago , i showed up on time for my appointment. The office was closed. No one there . The date and time were correct. Soon after this robust practice of thirty years+ was closed.

The patients are not the winners here . Nor are medical staff .

The Corporate heads are the only winners... they win the Greed award. Again.

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docrhw Weil's avatar

Correlation isn't causation; the South has long been poorer and more agricultural than the North, and until the 1960s was solidly Democratic but still had lousy health and education statistics. A lot of that was due to treatment of its African-American population, and in low lying areas the climate isn't the best, but still it is shocking to see the difference. Another thing that really pops up on the county level is the areas with high Native American and Alaskan native populations. Those are clearly places of sinful neglect. Really what Americans should see is that graph between life expectancy and expenditures, and so much for "socialized medicine". But in a country where prescription drugs are widely advertised, it's easy to see how money has distorted health care away from all logical delivery.

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