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Post 0

Monday, March 10 - 8:25amSanction this postReply
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Yeah, that's all that "critically ill patients with broken necks, burst aneurysms and other types of bleeding in or outside of the brain" need is a 100 mile ambulance ride to Michigan or New York State.

Best o'luck buddy.




Post 1

Monday, March 10 - 8:49pmSanction this postReply
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This is what is in store for the U.S.

 
Yes, but what free market health system will we be able to flee to?




Post 2

Tuesday, March 11 - 8:07amSanction this postReply
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Well, the Asian countries are well equipped to handle most sophisticated surgeries but I'll concede that serious neurological emergencies don't fall into that realm.

http://www.healthvisionasia.com/




Post 3

Tuesday, March 11 - 10:29amSanction this postReply
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Here's another one:

Even huge tumour can't secure care in Ontario

Inside Sylvia de Vries lurked an enormous tumour and fluid totalling 18 kilograms. But not even that massive weight gain and a diagnosis of ovarian cancer could assure her timely treatment in Canada.

Fighting for her life, the Windsor woman headed to the United States. In Pontiac, Mich., a surgeon excised the tumour - 35 centimetres at its longest - along with her ovaries, appendix, fallopian tubes, uterus and cervix. In addition, 13 litres of fluid were drained during that October, 2006, operation.

And there was little time to spare: Had she waited two weeks, she would have faced potential multiorgan failure, rendering her unstable for surgery, according to a letter from Michael L. Hicks, who performed the four-hour operation at St. Joseph Mercy Oakland.

 

The Ontario Health Insurance Plan says it won't pay for the $60,000 cancer treatment because Ms. de Vries did not fill out the correct form seeking preapproval for out-of-country care.

As well, it says no medical documentation was submitted that indicated a delay in obtaining the service in Ontario would result in death or medically significant, irreversible tissue damage.




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