Posted on 08/09/2009 11:05:59 AM PDT by lt.america
Imagine that your two best friends are British and Canadian tobacco addicts. The Brit battles lung cancer. The Canadian endures emphysema and wheezes as he walks around with clanging oxygen canisters. You probably would not think: "Maybe I should pick up smoking."
The fact that America is even considering government medicine is equally wacky. The state guides health care for our two closest allies: Great Britain and Canada. Like us, these are prosperous, industrial, Anglophone democracies. Nevertheless, compared to America, they suffer higher death rates for diseases, their patients experience severe pain, and they ration medical services.
Look what you're missing in the U.K.:
* Breast cancer kills 25 percent of its American victims. In Great Britain, the Vatican of single-payer medicine, breast cancer extinguishes 46 percent of its targets.
* Prostate cancer is fatal to 19 percent of its American patients. The National Center for Policy Analysis reports that it kills 57 percent of Britons it strikes.
* Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development data show that the U.K.'s 2005 heart-attack fatality rate was 19.5 percent higher than America's. This may correspond to angioplasties, which were only 21.3 percent as common there as here.
* The U.K.'s National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) just announced plans to cut its 60,000 annual steroid injections for severe back-pain sufferers to just 3,000. This should save the government 33 million pounds (about $55 million). "The consequences of the NICE decision will be devastating for thousands of patients," Dr. Jonathan Richardson of Bradford Hospitals Trust told London's Daily Telegraph. "It will mean more people on opiates, which are addictive, and kill 2,000 a year. It will mean more people having spinal surgery, which is incredibly risky, and has a 50 per cent failure rate."
(Excerpt) Read more at realclearpolitics.com ...
Sorry, Sis.
Thx.
Warning, I don’t often keep that detail in my noggin very well.
Nevertheless, I care for you as a person!
Prayers, hugs.
Thank you, Quix.
You have always been a dear and valued friend.
What a needed encouraging comment.
Bless you and all those you love this week.
Thanks for being my Friend.
It’s been my privilege and honor to be with you in so many threads.
Bless you and yours, as well.
I’m always here for you.
Good! - Now give it all to the Lord. He can handle it, and we cannot.
Prayer changes things.
THANKS THANKS TONS
for the humbling honor of your sharing such with me.
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