Monday, June 29, 2009

Can the US Provide Free, Public Medical Care Like Brazil?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



Contact: Atty. Francis L. Holland
Public Option Health Care Now
http://public-option-health-care-now.blogspot.com
55 (73) 9992-4127
Skype: fazinformatica2005



African America Finds Public Option
Health Care in Brazil


Free, public neighborhood health clinic in Brazil
where treatment is provided to all
as fundamental right.

This morning in Brazil, I went to a Government public health clinic in my neighborhood, made an appointment to meet with a doctor tomorrow morning for a consult and prescription, and I will be charged $0.00 (zero) for this service, because health care is a right in Brazil. The system is called the Unitary Health System (SUS) and its neighborhood clincs, hospitals, and pharmacies are available nationwide. There is also a national free ambulance service called the Emergency Mobile Attention Service (SAMU). Since fifty percent of Brazil is afro-descendant, these systems have major benefits for a half-Black population.

When I scheduled an appointment this morning at my local health center, I showed proof of address (because people must go to the health clinics in their neighborhoods - the clinics that are closest to them) and I showed proof of my identity (incidentally as a foreign permanent resident). I also showed proof that I am up to date with my vaccinations, which are provided for free at the same clinic. (This requirement guarantees that anyone who acceses the system for any reason will also have all of the necessary vaccinations to avoid getting or spreading preventable illnesses.) Tomorrow when I get the prescription, the medications will be provided for free.

There's still one question that an American really wants to ask here: Where's the cash register? At these clinics, there are no credit card swipers, cash registers, and no calls to any insurance companies or Government bureaucrats to confirm whether the patient is covered for one service or all services.

national health care,medical insurance,socialism,physician,medicine,free,public,appointmentAlign Center

At seven in the morning,
patients line up to schedule appointments
which may be from a day to a month away.

Crucially, there isn't even a check within Government records to confirm a patient's right to be served. Since Government-provided health care is a right for all that is not means-tested and is provided by the Government itself, there's no need to confirm people's insurance status. Health care is actually more of a right in Brazil than voting is a right in the United States, because there is no need in Brazil to show that you have "registered" to participate in the free services. And there is no crime a person can commit that would result in the loss of the the right to participate in the Government system.

The existence and operation of the free health clinics, hospitals and blood work laboratories is Brazilians' "insurance" that health care will be available to them. The government buys or manufactures medicines in bulk and provides them for free, either at this clinic or at the hospital downtown, and also has a national Popular Pharmacy program that sells medicines at a fraction of the prices paid at typical pharmacies in the United States, according to one national drug and price list.

While waiting in line to schedule an appointment this morning, an elderly woman mentioned in passing that, in addition to having a home in this town, she also owns a summer cottage and land in the countryside. It doesn't matter here. Yet, if she said the same thing at a Medicaid office in the US, she would probably carried out by armed guards, tasered and/or arrested and charged with fraud.

And yet, even with the absolute guarantee that patients have a right to Government health care through this nationwide system of free clinics and hospitals regardless of income, assets or ability to pay, (some people sue the Government for failure to provide expensive care or new and expensive medicines for unusual conditions) there are still private insurance companies, doctors and hospitals for people who have conditions for which the state system isn't equipped to provide excellent and immediate care, and/or for people who want the "Cadillac" service that we really all should get wherever we are.

To make health care more affordable in the US, setting up a national system such as the one in Brazil, or in the Seattle / Puget Sound area, where all of the medical, nursing and administrative staff work for salary rather than as entrepreneurs, is the surest way to keep costs down. Along with doing away with the bureaucracy involved in means testing, charging individuals for insurance, making sure that they have paid, etc.

With this health care alternative, the crucial part is not that Government control all medicine, but that Government set up a national system of Government-owned clinics, hospitals, pharmacies and laboratories where anyone and everyone can receive the care they need.

Contact: Atty. Francis L. Holland
Public Option Health Care Now
http://public-option-health-care-now.blogspot.com
55 (73) 3288-1716
Skype: fazinformatica2005


http://portal.saude.gov.br/saude/

http://189.28.128.100/portal/saude/visualizar_texto.cfm?idtxt=30301&janela=1

http://189.28.128.100/portal/arquivos/pdf/tabela_farmaciapopular_abril08.pdf

http://189.28.128.100/portal/saude/visualizar_texto.cfm?idtxt=23972&janela=1

http://portal.saude.gov.br/saude/area.cfm?id_area=456

Francis L. Holland Speaking at BCC.jpgFrancis L. Holland Speaking at BCC.jpg
15K Visualizar Baixar
Francis L. Holland in Salvador Bahia.jpgFrancis L. Holland in Salvador Bahia.jpg
9K Visualizar Baixar
Francis L. Holland at Immigration Law Conference.jpgFrancis L. Holland at Immigration Law Conference.jpg
9K Visuali

No comments: