Originally posted by McPants
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A big problem we have here is the huge discrepancy in quality of preventative care here between the middle class and the poor--a situation which I don't think will be remedied by making less access for the majority of people the standard through nationalized health care. For example: I live in STL, three blocks from one of the best hospitals in the country. Fantastic cancer center here. Women who live within a seven block radius of the hospital (an upper-middle class - a modestly wealth and well-educated, predominately caucasian population), the 5-year survival rate from first-time diagnosed (that is, not recurring) breast cancer is something around 90%. Very high, because almost all cases are diagnosed very early. By contrast, in the area more than seven blocks (a mere seven blocks) away has a majority African American, less-educated population--working class and below the poverty line. The survival rate is below 50%. Most of the diagnoses are at a much later phase--even end stage, with protuding masses. Why the difference? It's not a health insurance issue, for the most part. It's lack of education and significant lifestyle issues (including transportation to the hospital, job demands, lack of community support for preventative medicine, cultural stigmas, and diet/exercise issues). It is tragic that a seven-block demarcation determines survivability. Here, there has been a massive push through the churches to educate--a popular form of community outreach in the underserved community. And we've now got breach cancer testing vans that go into the community. It remains to be seen how much a difference it makes. We'll see...
No system is perfect. We should just figure out what the problem truly is. If it is a lack of preventative lack, for example, there are other options, rather than taking away the superior care that so many of us receive (and, despite all our problems, we really do have excellent health care here) to help the needy get the care that they need.
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