all right um how do you feel about the health insurance problems
well uh i agree that they have problems but i i'm afraid i'm very much against universal health um my daughter is uh
uh stationed in England right now and of course you know they've had uh group health uh over there for some time um
uh-huh
yeah
i was over there last uh a year ago when my granddaughter was born
and uh she had some problems and uh i was horrified from beginning to end first of all they are about fifty years behind
uh-huh
they don't have and their medical technology he doctors since they aren't responsible really to each patient don't feel they have to sit down and talk to you about the problems
um-hum
when they want to do something to a patient whether the patient is a few days old or eighty or ninety they do it they don't ask permission
wow
my daughter went um upstairs into intensive care to see the baby and they were doing surgery on the baby and she didn't even know they were going to surgery on the baby uh
oh my God what a terrible thing for her to go through
yes it was it was really terrible that's why i went over there i mean she was she cried she called and was you know really you know upset um the day we were leaving the hospital finally
um we were getting all ready to go home and finally you know the baby was okay and everything was fine and the doctor that had been working with her poked his head in the door and he said by the way he said in six weeks he want you to come back uh
for a test uh uh a test that we want to do on on her um for uh uh
multiple sclerosis
ah
and he turned around and left
and we just kind of looked at each other and said what
uh for what and i i tried for fifteen minutes to find the doctor and he was unavailable
so uh i've had some bad experiences with it i i uh perhaps not you know uh i don't know a good solution do you have any ideas
yeah
well no i i i had never had experiences like you did which sound terrible to go through
well the the thing is these are the HMO's that they have now which are cheaper and you can in my daughter my other daughter belongs to an HMO or they used to thankfully they've just changed um you don't
um-hum
uh-huh
you only get a choice of doctors that are in your area not necessarily of doctors that are good or not uh see i i've worked for i worked for John Hopkins for two years
right
right
uh-huh
uh at the hospital there and i've worked for a private doctor for two years and um
i got to slap in the face as far as the medical profession was concerned in the United States uh now the doctor that i worked for was good but there was another one in our complex that uh she didn't feel should even be practicing medicine and i said well why don't they
get him out of there she said well he hasn't done anything wrong it's just that he has poor judgment and i thought oh gosh i mean you're the doctor telling you this you know
oh
some horror stories like that but then with the HMO um the they sent here to a pediatrician that had one gentleman that was uh
uh in his late seventies
and an Indian doctor that she couldn't understand and that had no patience with children
ah
and you know it was kind of that was kind of a bad experience too so when they changed she finally got
you know a good pediatrician but uh uh it it it's
it's just a little scary when you don't have as much when you can't just go say here's a good doctor i'm going to go to this doctor you know um
right
and i i fear that the doctors are going to not be as you know right now they're in a lot of fierce competition so they they keep up to date you know at least most of them the good ones
um i i i don't know i just fear that uh that it may go downhill if we do indeed you know change to something like that uh
that doesn't give any incentive
no it doesn't uh also
uh we uh my husband was a civilian but we were uh stationed overseas for a while and so i had to go to
myself and the children had to go do military doctors huh wow now that's another story you know so but it's the same
same thing i mean these doctors didn't want to be here okay they were forfilling fulfilling their military obligations and you know they uh of course i guess if you a doctor gets into the field you know they uh
well enjoy the field but um the i have found
uh through people that i know that have HMO's that most of the doctors that they see there may be one or two good ones and the rest of them are either foreign speaking
i mean not speaking but like Indian doctors you can't understand them because of their their um uh accent
uh-huh
uh or uh Chinese or and i have nothing against them in fact i went to a doctor for years that was a Chinese doctor but i could understand what he was saying
um-hum
you know so i just it just this is a bad subject for me to be on only because i've had some real bad experiences and i've known some people that have uh
yeah
i guess so
i just joined an HMO i just got a new job and i haven't heard i haven't been i haven't even actually paid for it or actually started my coverage yet but that's what they have is HMO and
been
right well i'll tell you now what you do
is you go uh to the doctors and just meet them
um-hum
and get feel on you know you can usually tell if you go to a doctor and if you you give him
i don't know some ache or pain or just how they you know reply um if they're going to be good or not the doctor that will sit down and talk to you and that will you know do things like that uh
is uh uh
is usually pretty good but uh uh you know you i'll try him out
well what they told me at at work they told me that uh
they said that the most once you get to know the doctors well you get you get your choice of doctors but there's huge waiting lines for the good ones and there's no waiting lines for the bad ones so you don't really get the good ones even if you choose them you don't get them for years and years if at all
yeah ow it should okay see that's it
so
yeah so that's see that's what scares me about going into universal health
yeah
okay i mean you could you could really be in serious trouble if you wait to see one of the ones that you feel are better if uh uh you know if we went to that and that was all there was uh
um uh
how would they decide who get's which doctor
oh well they don't it would it would still be like it is now um the ones in your area
oh i see local
you know and that would be closest to where you live uh and you know those are the ones that you would see i mean i would presume um
but uh but also now in England how they work it is you go to see a regular MD
if he determines that it's necessary then he'll send you to a gynecologist or a surgeon or you know you can't just go there
right that the same for the HMO and and because the doctors work for the HMO the people i work with are telling me you know HMO's are great if you're generally healthy
uh
and you just go for the checkup every year or whatever it's just three dollars but if you have a problem then it's real hard to get the doctor to refer you to a specialist because they're told you know not to because it cost the HMO money
yes
um-hum
yep
um hum
that's right and uh i mean you know that could potentially be um
rather