Author Topic: Patients w/o borders  (Read 701 times)

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Lanya

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Patients w/o borders
« on: November 18, 2007, 02:10:53 PM »
Patients Without Borders
Larry Towell/Magnum, for The New York Times

This woman traveled 75 miles to see a Remote Area Medical dermatologist, who removed two lesions from her back and sent them to a pathology lab. After receiving results, RAM's doctors follow up with patients by phone.
 
By SARA CORBETT
Published: November 18, 2007

Long before the dentists and the doctors got there, before the nurses, the hygienists and X-ray techs came, before anyone had flicked on the portable mammography unit or sterilized the day?s first set of surgical instruments, the people who needed them showed up to wait. It was 3 a.m. at the Wise County Fairgrounds in Virginia ? Friday, July 20, 2007 ? the start of a rainy Appalachian morning. Outside the gates, people lay in their trucks or in tents pitched along the grassy parking lot, waiting for their chance to have their medical needs treated at no charge ? part of an annual three-day ?expedition? led by a volunteer medical relief corps called Remote Area Medical.
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The group, most often referred to as RAM, has sent health expeditions to countries like Guyana, India, Tanzania and Haiti, but increasingly its work is in the United States, where 47 million people ? more than 15 percent of the population ? live without health insurance. Residents of remote rural areas are less likely than their urban and suburban counterparts to have health insurance and more likely to be in fair or poor health. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, nearly half of all adults in rural America are living with at least one chronic condition. Other research has found that in these areas, where hospitals and primary-care providers are in short supply, rates of arthritis, hypertension, heart ailments, diabetes and major depression are higher than in urban areas.

And so each summer, shortly after the Virginia-Kentucky District Fair and Horse Show wraps up at the fairgrounds, members of Virginia Lions Clubs start bleaching the premises, readying them for RAM?s volunteers, who, working in animal stalls and beneath makeshift tents, provide everything from teeth cleaning and free eyeglasses to radiology and minor surgery. The problem, says RAM?s founder, Stan Brock, is always in the numbers, with the patients? needs far outstripping what his team can supply. In Wise County, when the sun rose and the fairground gates opened at 5:30 on Friday morning, more than 800 people already were waiting in line. Over the next three days, some 2,500 patients would receive care, but at least several hundred, Brock estimates, would be turned away. He adds: ?There comes a point where the doctors say: ?Hey, I gotta go. It?s Sunday evening, and I have to go to work tomorrow.? ?

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/magazine/18healthcare-t.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
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Plane

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Re: Patients w/o borders
« Reply #1 on: November 18, 2007, 03:23:35 PM »
What does RAM need to grow?

Lanya

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Re: Patients w/o borders
« Reply #2 on: November 18, 2007, 06:37:37 PM »
That is a good question.  I think it would need forgiveness of student loans for doctors,  nurses, surgical techs, dentists, radiologists, etc. who could stay in the area for longer than they can now. 

But an even better question is why do we have people getting care at the fairgrounds?  That seems pretty wasteful of time, lots of stuff to move and ready for patients and docs. 

Why can we not have people all covered by Medicare?   That would make  more sense to me than camping out at the fairgrounds.   Many pennies and dimes and dollars go into a large pot, everyone gets health care. 
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BT

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Re: Patients w/o borders
« Reply #3 on: November 18, 2007, 08:25:53 PM »
I am curious why people prefer to be checked at the campgrounds also. Wise County Virginia has three hospitals and numerous medical facilities. The county also has public health services that offer everything from prenatal care to outpatient drug counsellings.

This area of the country was a battle front for the war on poverty and LBJ's Great Society. It's coal mining country and they were the poster kids for the program because urban blacks would have been a harder sell in the midlands.

If the government was unable to provide a solution then with a unified presidency and legislature what makes you think they will get it correct now.