dajo9 said:
tequila4kapp said:
More factoids:
> 10% of UK's population - 7.4 million (out of 68M) people - are on hospital wait lists.
The average wait time for hospital treatment in the UK is 3.5 months.
The average wait time to see a specialist in Germany is "several months"
In Canada it takes a median of 27.4 weeks to go from Specialist referral to treatment.
In Spain the wait time is over three months for a specialist appointment and 121 days for surgery
Wait times for specialists in France:
- Ophthalmologist: 80 to 190 days.
- Dermatologist: 61 to 126 days.
- Cardiologist: 50 to 104 days.
- Gynecologist: 44 to 93 days.
- Rheumatologist: 45 to 96 days.
- Dental surgeon: 28 to 67 days.
- Pediatrician: 22 to 64 days.
- Radiologist: 21 to 48 days.
I honestly do not know the answer but I am certain it is not going purely to a single payor system like exists elsewhere. That is rationed healthcare and that will work even worse in the US with our 2 party system that is completely incapable of ever having spending controls or eliminating government programs.
Sometimes I think more market based solutions. Sometimes I think a hybrid system where a Medicare for all covers preventative care type stuff and people purchase buy up plans. I don't know. It is a highly complex system / problem.
I recently scheduled to see a urologist. I have to wait about 2 months and that is after changing doctors (3 months wait) because i wanted to see a doctor this year because I have hit my deductible this year. So by changing doctors I can shift costs from me to the insurance company (does that make any sense?). Why do Americans pretend this is not a problem in America?
I need surgery for a hernia from my previous stomach surgery. My doctor referred me to a surgeon in Portland. After waiting for 9 months for a video consultation, it was cancelled an hour before the appointment. They told me to schedule an appointment with another department. I've been trying to schedule an appointment with them for about 18 months, but the scheduler is always "busy with another call, but will call me back within 3 business days". I'm still waiting. 30 months I've been waiting. Waiting and now I'm finally asking my new primary care physician for a different referral. Fortunately, my hernia isn't growing and isn't considered urgent, but I'd still like to have it taken care of sometime during this decade. I'm sure I'm not a unique case and I do consider this a problem.