For those of you who have been living under a rock for the last year: The Unites States of America is the only industrialized country without Universal Health Care. That means that 45 million Americans can’t go the hospital without paying hundreds, if not thousands of dollars for a doctor’s visit. It is estimated that 22,000 people die every year as a result of not being able to receive routine preventative treatment. The disparity between the insured and uninsured is currently the worst it has been in the history of the country, and The National Coalition on Health Care warns that this disparity will continue to grow every year.
There is nothing knew about this information, and yet, still, factions of government and right wing media still rally against the call for change. Rush Limbaugh, a man who needs no introduction, recently said on his radio show that the Democrats want to reform health care so that they can, “...deny health care to those that oppose them.” The rest of the industrialized world has created a system that works, a system that gives all of its citizen’s access to a doctor, so why is it so difficult for some to fathom that America might take similar steps to create a universal system of their own? Instead, because of delusional opposition, America must wait with its hands tied as the political process attempts to work its course.
Critics to health care reform have attempted to use the ‘expense’ angle of the re-haul as an excuse to do nothing. However, as things stand now America manages to outspend all other countries in the world with its current system, approximately 2.24 million dollars – 40 percent more capita, despite being the only industrialized country without universal health care. Spending more and getting less is always a raw deal.
The NCHC also reported that the current system has negatively impacted the rate at which jobs are growing, as companies have to deal with the expensive costs of insuring workers. It also states that the current American medical system puts American businesses at a disadvantage in world markets.
If expense isn’t the weapon of choice being wielded by angry naysayers than the idea of ‘depriving people of important services’ typically follows. Limbaugh shouted on the radio that, “all of us will be slaves" because of the “arbitrary and inhumane decisions of distant bureaucrats working in Washington.” This idea of death panels was a myth created by Betsy McCaughey, a Republican Lieutenant Governor, who eventually resigned from her position after receiving intense scrutiny for her made up death panel position. Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin propagated the story of death panels despite it being refuted many times over. Palin would also resign stating personal reasons.
In an NPR story titled What Americans Really Think About Health Care it was found that 51 percent of Americans feel that the country will be better off if health care reform passes – not exactly a resounding yes. Linda Wertheimer, a report who travels the globe for NPR news, summed up the current stalemate in her podcast by saying, “...Change is something that people thought that they wanted in the election season, but confronting actual change, maybe not so excited.”
Another Laine on the Freeway
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Swine Flue
Massive panic has resulted from the most recent Swine Flu epidemic, but what is it exactly that has people so concerned? Well, to start, Swine Flu was first known to be transmittable from pig to human in 1918, when influenza killed 20 to 40 million people. However, before we sound the alarm, it’s important to note that swine was not the cause of the 1918 epidemic. In fact, according to WebMD, it worked quite to the contrary - humans gave the flu to the pigs. Over many years and decades this flu has mutated among swine, something largely attributed to the overcrowding of farms, also know as factory farms. These types of conditions provide a ripe atmosphere for the virus to surface as it did in 1918 where tens of thousands of animals are all crammed together, allowing for the perfect conditions for the virus to spread and mutate.
This brings us to where we are today, living in fear that maybe this is the one, the epidemic that we have been warned about for years. Michael T. Osterholm, who is the Director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research spoke on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer about what it would like if conditions like what were experience in 1918 happened again: “We can predict now 12 to 18 months of stress, of watching loved ones die, of potentially not going to work, of wondering if you’re going to have food on the table the next day. Those are all things that are going to mean that we’re going to have to plan unlike any other kind of crisis that we’ve had in literally the last 80-some years in this country.”
That said, it seems reasonable to assume that social interaction at schools and work would be seriously effected by the worries of swine flu. However, very little has changed from a student’s perspective. From what I have experienced on campus, and at work, students and co-workers are no less likely to shake hands or high five than in any previous year. They talk, mingle, and hug as they always have, and while there does seem to be a higher awareness level of avoiding germs, washing hands, and staying home if you’re sick, I don’t see fear changing normal social habits.
Students have done an excellent job of putting the H1N1 virus into perspective, and, as research from the University of Maryland suggests, the H1N1 virus might not be all it was cracked up to be. While their research does say that the virus is spreading more rapidly than other seasonal flu’s, it does not appear to be much more severe. Daniel Perez, the lead researcher and program director of the University of Maryland-based Prevention and Control of Avian Influenza Project, said that the fact that it spreads faster than other seasonal viruses shouldn’t come as a surprise either, given that it’s new and human bodies haven’t had a chance to build immunities to it.
Students have taken the scare in stride, but will this change once a case of swine flu makes its way onto campus? Once your friend or, dare I say, roommate, comes down with the Swine Flu? How will you react then?
This brings us to where we are today, living in fear that maybe this is the one, the epidemic that we have been warned about for years. Michael T. Osterholm, who is the Director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research spoke on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer about what it would like if conditions like what were experience in 1918 happened again: “We can predict now 12 to 18 months of stress, of watching loved ones die, of potentially not going to work, of wondering if you’re going to have food on the table the next day. Those are all things that are going to mean that we’re going to have to plan unlike any other kind of crisis that we’ve had in literally the last 80-some years in this country.”
That said, it seems reasonable to assume that social interaction at schools and work would be seriously effected by the worries of swine flu. However, very little has changed from a student’s perspective. From what I have experienced on campus, and at work, students and co-workers are no less likely to shake hands or high five than in any previous year. They talk, mingle, and hug as they always have, and while there does seem to be a higher awareness level of avoiding germs, washing hands, and staying home if you’re sick, I don’t see fear changing normal social habits.
Students have done an excellent job of putting the H1N1 virus into perspective, and, as research from the University of Maryland suggests, the H1N1 virus might not be all it was cracked up to be. While their research does say that the virus is spreading more rapidly than other seasonal flu’s, it does not appear to be much more severe. Daniel Perez, the lead researcher and program director of the University of Maryland-based Prevention and Control of Avian Influenza Project, said that the fact that it spreads faster than other seasonal viruses shouldn’t come as a surprise either, given that it’s new and human bodies haven’t had a chance to build immunities to it.
Students have taken the scare in stride, but will this change once a case of swine flu makes its way onto campus? Once your friend or, dare I say, roommate, comes down with the Swine Flu? How will you react then?
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