I have never had my wisdom teeth removed. They just grew in with no pain or problems. Unfortunately, my jaw bone inhibits me from actually reaching them when I brush my teeth and I got cavities in all of them. When the dentist filled two of them, he found the cavities were deeper than he thought and decided that what I really needed was to get them extracted - an operation he wanted to do right then and there with just a little Novocaine and he said I would be fine with just some Tylenol after. I told him thanks but no.
Recently, about a year ... maybe two later, I just sat down with an oral surgeon to plan on finally having it done. I will be put asleep before it happens and be taking Percocet after. Although, I think it will still be a miserable experience, I keep thinking that just leaving them in and one day getting an infection in the nerve will be far more miserable because then I'll have lots of pain before the surgery, as well as all of the pain after.
Fortunately, I pay for dental insurance and it will cover most of the cost of this and I will only have to pay a few hundred dollars. Although, the amount I have paid for the insurance over the years may all equal it out. It's hard to say for sure, but it has also paid for lots of other stuff like preventative measures - cleanings, periodic X-rays - not the really good X-ray I needed for the the surgeon, but all the other ones.
One of the paralegals at our office has an illness and with all of the medications that she has to take, all of which our health insurance company indexed to the highest tier - $60 each. Plus the tests that she needs that require her to meet our $2,500.00 deductible before they cover her, she has been spending almost all of the extra money she makes (the money that exceeds her ordinary monthly bills) on her medical needs. The thing that gets me about this is she has health insurance. This reminds me a lot of what I went through last year with my shoulder surgery - I needed my entire Christmas bonus to pay for my shoulder surgery and physical therapy, and I had health insurance.
A few weeks ago, I watched Sicko. I did not find it the profound revelation of a movie that so many others seem to have seen it as. I thought it was interesting, but I really wanted to hear more about both sides. I wanted to understand what average people (not seemingly wealthy people) thought of their medical insurance in these countries with government funded medical insurance. I mean there simply must be disgruntled people in those medical systems, right? Because if not, I think we should adopt one of their medical plans today.
NPR did a series on most of these countries, trying to cover how each one worked. Often, they would find a family from the United States who had been forced to relocate to one of these countries so that they could receive the medical treatment they needed for their ongoing conditions. Clearly, these systems have their benefits. However, what about people coming here for treatment? I have heard that happens. Does it happen? How much does it happen? Are there lots of people in these other countries receiving substandard treatment? Does that happen here too? How long do they have to wait for their surgeries? What about at the ER? And what will the cost really be - yes, our taxes will be higher but our employers could also afford to pay us more.
One of my physical therapists had done her internship over in England. She had said the medical system was not so bad over there. It had its shortcomings, but it was not bad. One of the women I know who lives in Toronto always seemed to get all the treatment she needs. I don't know. The thing I find really unfortunate is how hard it seems to be able to find this type of information. You would think more news agencies would take the time to do a really thorough exploration of issues like these. Issues that really seem to matter. They may find that if they did more people would read them.
Recently, about a year ... maybe two later, I just sat down with an oral surgeon to plan on finally having it done. I will be put asleep before it happens and be taking Percocet after. Although, I think it will still be a miserable experience, I keep thinking that just leaving them in and one day getting an infection in the nerve will be far more miserable because then I'll have lots of pain before the surgery, as well as all of the pain after.
Fortunately, I pay for dental insurance and it will cover most of the cost of this and I will only have to pay a few hundred dollars. Although, the amount I have paid for the insurance over the years may all equal it out. It's hard to say for sure, but it has also paid for lots of other stuff like preventative measures - cleanings, periodic X-rays - not the really good X-ray I needed for the the surgeon, but all the other ones.
One of the paralegals at our office has an illness and with all of the medications that she has to take, all of which our health insurance company indexed to the highest tier - $60 each. Plus the tests that she needs that require her to meet our $2,500.00 deductible before they cover her, she has been spending almost all of the extra money she makes (the money that exceeds her ordinary monthly bills) on her medical needs. The thing that gets me about this is she has health insurance. This reminds me a lot of what I went through last year with my shoulder surgery - I needed my entire Christmas bonus to pay for my shoulder surgery and physical therapy, and I had health insurance.
A few weeks ago, I watched Sicko. I did not find it the profound revelation of a movie that so many others seem to have seen it as. I thought it was interesting, but I really wanted to hear more about both sides. I wanted to understand what average people (not seemingly wealthy people) thought of their medical insurance in these countries with government funded medical insurance. I mean there simply must be disgruntled people in those medical systems, right? Because if not, I think we should adopt one of their medical plans today.
NPR did a series on most of these countries, trying to cover how each one worked. Often, they would find a family from the United States who had been forced to relocate to one of these countries so that they could receive the medical treatment they needed for their ongoing conditions. Clearly, these systems have their benefits. However, what about people coming here for treatment? I have heard that happens. Does it happen? How much does it happen? Are there lots of people in these other countries receiving substandard treatment? Does that happen here too? How long do they have to wait for their surgeries? What about at the ER? And what will the cost really be - yes, our taxes will be higher but our employers could also afford to pay us more.
One of my physical therapists had done her internship over in England. She had said the medical system was not so bad over there. It had its shortcomings, but it was not bad. One of the women I know who lives in Toronto always seemed to get all the treatment she needs. I don't know. The thing I find really unfortunate is how hard it seems to be able to find this type of information. You would think more news agencies would take the time to do a really thorough exploration of issues like these. Issues that really seem to matter. They may find that if they did more people would read them.

4 comments:
Ah yea, Sicko was a pretty interesting flick. I was disgusted by the end of it.
Erm... I'm not looking forward to getting my wisdom teeth removed either...
What do you think about socialized healthcare?
Remember me from a while ago? I used to go by BJ. :)
Will ~ Yeah, I remember you. I do not think i can really answer your question as I feel like I still do not know enough about the different systems to offer a good opinion. I will say that I find the United States system to be lacking. Maybe it's the best in the world, I honestly have no idea, but if our citizens cannot afford to use it ... it does not do us much good.
Your coworker's plight reminds me of my old firm; secretaries making $25k or less a year having $4000 deductibles (for their family) before our health insurance paid a single penny. If it weren't for my fear of something catastrophic (that would bankrupt me), I wouldn't even fool with health insurance; my premiums seem to always exceed my actual cost.
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