Friday, October 14, 2016
Sick by Jonathan Cohn
aft(prenominal) reading the book Sick, by Jonathan Cohn, I began to analyze the assorted situations that occurred to the people all everywhere the United States and I genuine the opinion that the United States wellness cargon dust is non ethical. In many ways, the health care system acts more than like a transaction and worries more about the currency instead of the patients life that could be on the line. Throughout the book you nates see the bad parley between the insurance companies and hospitals, and too the insurance companies denying loomage to plastered medical expenses even when that mapping or medical intervention may be mandatory to help the patient. I think the care that patients receive is work but the insurance, billing, and whole ancestry part the health system needs to be fixed.\nMy commencement example comes from chapter three in the book and deals with fairness. In chapter we are introduced to the Hilsabeck family, a young pushful couple living in an upscale neighborhood in Lakeway City, Austin Texas. The couple was expecting gibe but unfortunately they would be premature. The twins spent twofold weeks in the hospital and had a very slim peril of living, but by the bedight of god they overcame the odds and were subject to come home. The mother, Elizabeth, noticed that the boy, Parker, was not moving much and afterward a some months he was diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy. The medical bills were stacking heights for the Hilsabecks but their insurance seemed to cover most of it, at to the lowest degree so they thought. The Hilsabecks insurance was finished a Health upkeep Organization or health maintenance organization, which meant the HMO would all pay for the bills only if the Hilsabecks stayed within a preapproved mesh of doctors and hospitals. This also meant that the insurance would disclaim to cover those services deemed unnecessary, which was the object lesson for the Hilsabecks and would dominate their li ves for the next few years (Cohn, 207, p. 57). Elizabeth had to take Parker to phys...
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