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It wouldn't do anything to address the number of clinicians or the quality of care they could provide. ETA: I grew up as a military dependent and my experiences and those of my family are the principle reason that I don't think a single payer system or even a heavily governmentally run system will result in a net gain in the area of health care for most people. I think we may need to subsidize care for more people at the bottom end of income, and we may need to pass laws that require private insurers to cover more people or laws that require people to purchase insurance, a la Romney. But we don't need a general private system that functions like the military system. (Or like the English system if you saw the news reports this week about one of their facilities that patients described as "third world".) If the Obama policy had instead said that the VA would pay for private treatment of combat injuries, I probably would have entirely celebrated that. |
I agree that the VA has a many shortcomings, but I think it can also provide health care opportunities that many vets don't have with private insurance.
I live minutes away from the second largest VA hospital complex in the country and I have many friends and family who have either worked there or received care of the years. My grandmother was a charge nurse there for over 30 years. Many families move down here for the care offered at the facility. They have struggled since the start of the Iraq War to keep up with the demand for clinical psychologists who can treat trauma injuries, but they have seen progress. One of my sister's friends had an older brother come back from the war who could not even speak or function due to things he had seen, and the doctors at Bay Pines have helped him to re-build his life although he still has social difficulty. I just have a strong belief that the government should care for its vets, no matter the price. It is important to note though that some vets already use private insruance, my grandfather does.... |
Yes, I agree that it's a fundamental government responsibility to provide for the medical care of veterans wounded during their service. It's just one of the costs of providing for a common defense.
I think that the government should also honor the committments that it made to those who served to provide health care according to the terms that were in place when the person served. It's pretty interesting to compare the current level of service older veterans may be getting vs. what they were told them could expect, just in terms of general care. |
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The other issue is the VA has not been well funded for the last upteen years. To find that funding, is owed and due to all veterans and their families. I think most people agree with that. As far as the psychologists, I know for a fact mental health care is just plan missing at most VA. The IAVA has some really good ideas how to help veterans with some issues. There is just not enough licensed clinicians to see clients, intake them, keep up the appointments, steer them to one on one or groups, and possibly prescribe appropriate affordable meds, if needed. Then there is the issue of patient adherence. Most of the vets I speak to are waiting until there is a mental emergency before they actually see someone. By the time it gets to that point, there are so many layers that have to be honed through, that full psychiatric hospitalization is required, but cannot be enforced until a law is broken... Which is sadly, the case... :( Quote:
I am saying all veterans and their families DESERVE the best treatment. The fact is what does that treatment look like these days? My uncle went to Vietnam twice in the Marines. Now while he smoked probably to quell "the nightmares", he did get mesothelioma that looks like it came from the Agent Orange use. This occurred some 30 years later... Now while he could have pursued the VA, the amount of benefit they were giving for treatment, was piss poor compared to Emory's plan... This is outrageous! I am sure we all have anecdotal stories of loved one or ourselves who are maneuvering through this health care system and but, when a health incident occurs, I personally think Veterans deserves to choose wherever they can get the best care. |
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My dad does get private insurance from his job, but he doesn't want to use just when he gets "VA benefits" and now he's finally starting to realize that VA is crap. IDK if this is VA or just veteran's benefits in general, but anyone who has family that are recently retired (or about to be retired) need to make sure that the gov't/VA (i'll have to ask my dad which one it is) acknowledges your marriage, and acknowledges your children (and whether or not they are in college). My mom & dad got married when I was 5....and not until this year has VA acknowledged their marriage. Not only that, but they never acknowledged that I was in college, thus my dad never got the benefits he gets for having children in college. My dad had been hounding them EVERY year I was in college and it wasn't until I graduated that they decided "oh yeah, your daughter was in college, sorry" but they'll only give him 1 year worth of back $ that he deserves. |
The fact is, this issue shouldn't even have been raised. When have you ever heard someone, contemplating where their tax money was going, say, "Damn, all of those veterans are getting my hard earned money... this needs to be stopped!" Exactly, it sounds crazy.
There are many problems with billing private insurance companies for service members' injuries. Businesses could view employees who serve as a cause for their premiums to go up. Some companies might shy away from hiring service members at all. And for those people who purchase their own insurance, they may simply not be able to afford it, especially with the very real possibility that their rates will be higher because they're in the military. Also, veterans and their families could risk maxing out their benefits paying for these costly treatments. The fact is, the military (aka the government) is sending these people into harm's way. Therefore, the government should be paying to treat veterans. Is it a perfect system? Of course not. But to suggest that we, as citizens of the U.S., should no longer support our veterans and give them treatment that they desperately need is absolutely ridiculous. |
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As far as the marriage/children thing, that is a VA-specific problem, since the DOD keeps pretty good records of marriage and children stuff--they have to for a lot of reasons. I don't think the VA knows or cares about my existence; my father isn't in that bad a condition where they could have gotten financial assistance with college. |
I should have added that I also know people whose HMOs denied them certain treatments saying that they were things the VA should cover.
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yes, but if that's the "private insurance" that the VA wants to bill... well, I can see there being big issues. I can see private insurances denying veterans with combat complications coverage, as they do for people with AIDS. It could really be a mess.
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HMOs are becoming the prevalent insurer because they are the least expensive. PPOs can be just as restrictive. The only insurer in my area that is common that is NOT an HMO is Blue Cross and they can still be pretty restrictive and they can refuse to pay for things after the fact. The insurance world is a big huge complicated mess, honestly.
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I don't think my dad's condition is that bad, but then again, i'm not in his body. I know that he can't sleep for more than 3 hours w/o getting pains, so he's constantly tired, his hands & feet are completely numb and he can't feel them, and something is constantly hurting him. |
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I'm bumping with this link. It's not directly connected to the topic of the thread but it's connected to VA hospitals and quality of care, etc. I glanced at recent topics to see if it was listed but didn't see it. I apologize if this duplicates a discussion elsewhere.
Three patients treated at VA facilities have tested positive for HIV after being treated with equipment that the VA hadn't properly sterilized. http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...I6AlAD97KFK101 As the article notes, they don't have proof that the patients contracted HIV at the facilities. ETA: The article says something about around 5,000 people having already been notified of their follow up test results. Am I correct is assuming they mean the HIV test results? If so, isn't 3 in 5,000 a really low HIV rate by any standard? (We've got about 300 million folks in the US, and I think that the estimates are that about 1 million are living with HIV, right?) I'm not suggesting that it means the VA issues aren't a problem or anything nuts like that. I just found the rate kind of interesting. I guess people careful enough about their health to submit to colonoscopies are living really low risk lives for the most part. |
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