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Meghan Cox Gurdon: The everyday privations of health care rationing

By: Meghan Cox Gurdon
Examiner Columnist
August 13, 2009

A man holds a sign as President Barack Obama's motorcade heads to a town hall on health care reform, Wednesday, July 29, 2009, near a supermarket in Bristol, Va. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)
A man holds a sign as President Barack Obama's motorcade heads to a town hall on health care reform, Wednesday, July 29, 2009, near a supermarket in Bristol, Va. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)

"Rationing" is a word justifiably wreathed with alarm in the United States. With the looming prospect of Obamacare, horror stories are pouring in from Britain and Canada about nationalized medicine: The callous administrators, the long waiting lists for routine treatments, the scandalously high death rates for ailments that are, within our borders, swiftly cured.

But rationing isn't always as extreme as it sounds, as I discovered 12 years ago when I lived in London. I had just climbed out of a black cab and entered the hospital where I was about to have our second child.

I was experiencing the fierce urgency of now, and if you've ever had a baby you will know exactly how urgent and fierce "now" can be.

Very quickly, I was ushered into a grim little room with a gurney. The great thing about hospitals under nationalized systems like Britain's National Health Service is that you don't go through an absurd amount of paperwork before gaining entrance.

The lousy thing is that no one working at the hospital even remotely shares your sense of urgency, or feels the need to pretend he does. This is an unappreciated aspect of the rationing that invariably results from single-payer systems: Those who are fragrantly termed "caregivers" needn't lavish sympathy on patients who can't go anywhere else.

In my grim little room, I seemed to have been forgotten by the authorities. When a nurse finally arrived, her attitude was decidedly brisk.

"You look ready to go," she observed. "Right, do you have your paper supplies?"

"My what?"

The nurse was annoyed. She explained that I was supposed to have brought a supply of towels and cotton wadding. Did I not know this?

I did not, I apologized, eager to appease a powerful individual who might bring me to a bed. I explained that I was used to American hospitals, which, so far as I could recall, provided paper products to their customers. I hoped it would not be too much trouble that I had failed to provide the materials needed by the National Health Service.

Privately I was shocked, though I did not say so. Having traveled in the impoverished Third World, I was used to bringing syringes and other medical supplies with me in case they weren't available. But here, in Britain?

The nurse, only faintly exasperated, led me to another, much nicer small room. I told her I didn't want an epidural, which she said was just as well since there was very little chance of getting one. Paper products were clearly not the only comforts in short supply.

What followed was medically uneventful. The infant arrived, and was weighed and measured. Now, obviously, it was time for us to be wheeled to a maternity ward to recuperate for a couple of days.

But hospital personnel kept popping in to say that they were having trouble "getting a bed" for us. The room we occupied was needed by the next customer, yet there was no spot in the maternity ward for us to take.

So it was that six hours after arriving at the hospital, I was in a taxi again heading home. This time I held a newborn in my arms.

I had just tasted the health care rationing that Britons live with as a matter of course. It wasn't a ghastly experience, but it also wasn't something that Americans, accustomed as we are to comfort and plenty, would regard as acceptable.

Examiner Columnist Meghan Cox Gurdon is a former foreign correspondent and a regular contributor to the books pages of the Wall Street Journal. Her Examiner column appears on Thursday.




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Reader Comments

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Nick Beddoes

Aug 13, 2009

If the UK's National Health Service has done well by scientist Stephen Hawking, confined to a wheelchair for 40 years and recent recipient of the US Medal of Freedom, a similar US plan should be OK. Meghan Cox Gordon writes about health care rationing, but isn't that what our present system has, rationed care for the 47 million uninsured, the people who have lost insurance when they lost their jobs, those who can't afford insurance, and those who can't get decent insurance because of a "pre-existing condition"?

 

Stuart

Aug 13, 2009

And that was care given in Great Briton's capital city!

 

ben

Aug 13, 2009

Read what Hawking said. I guess you missed the part where he said he got lots of money from private foundations to get things like a 24 hour nurse.

At least I know my insurer's motive- profit. I have no idea what the motives of the politicians making decisions about my healthcare would be. Power? Money? Could change day to day depending on who is lobbying them.

 

Aug 13, 2009

This a fascinating story. Clearly shows the total heartlessness of the NHS.
But do tell us more. How did you end up in the cab? Didn't your GP tell you about the "paper products". Did they dump you on the pavement after 6 hours to make your own way home? Lucky you had cab fare. Not much fun on the bus or the tube with a half day old. I bet the follow up post-natal care was pretty bad and rationed too. Probably done in a equally grungy room. Did you finally clue in and bring your own paper products? Oh the horror.
Please tell us more.

 

londres

Aug 13, 2009

I lived in London for a number of years and after several collisions with the NHS. Half the time I could no get a doctor because the ones in my assigned area were not taking new patients. I could not get a physical because the NHS does not pay for those. I had a hard time getting prescriptions. So, I decided to pay for my own care - it was easier and much less stressful. Some of the filthiest toilet facilities I have seen anywhere in the world were in British hospitals. I would not wish that system on my worst enemy.

 

Lanier Y Chapman

Aug 13, 2009

Why didn't Ms Gurdon go to a private hospital? But, I agree with Nick Beddoes. Private insurers also cut off services to patients. All this whining is really coming from people who are too poor to afford the health care they think they deserve.

 

Stew

Aug 13, 2009

As a US national and not a British taxpayer, you are not entitled to free NHS care. You should have gone to a private hospital, so you have no case for an argument.

 

Gracie

Aug 13, 2009

I"m perplexed: Nick and Lanier take issue with what the author reported happening to her. Why didn't she go to a private hospital? Because NHS is what she was signed up for? Why didn't she take the tube instead of a cab and boy was she lucky to get a cab?
How about addressing what actually happened, rather than blame her for experiencing it?

There is no such thing as "free" health care - someone else has paid for it.

 

Lanier Y Chapman

Aug 13, 2009

She can't afford private, and now she complains about the state health care? That's just whining! I'm tired of these poor people and their gripes.

 

Lisa

Aug 13, 2009

I am so sick of people talking about 47 million uninsured...10 - 12 million are illegals and another 10 million are so are people with access to insurance who choose not to pay for it because they are young and healthy. Why do we only have the choice between a radically different system or nothing at all? We need to reform the political districting systems so that Congressional power is traded from one wing's fringe to the others.

 

Lisa

Aug 13, 2009

Obviously I meant so that Congressional power is NOT traded from one radical fringe to the other...

 

james

Aug 13, 2009

Ah yes Gracie, you hit the nail on the head! Nothing is FREE!
The people disparaging Megan are probably just your typical Englanders (you know, where Great Britain used to be): Bad teeth and uptight.
I don't blame them though, their shipped sailed long ago. It must be hard to know that you were once the envy of the world.

 

Cincinnati RIck

Aug 13, 2009

Stew Aug 13, 2009
As a US national and not a British taxpayer, you are not entitled to free NHS care. You should have gone to a private hospital, so you have no case for an argument.
-------
Well then...so you must agree that Obama is way off base for covering illegal aliens? I trust you will also support removing this ridiculous requirement for hospitals to treat all comers.

 

Ray J

Aug 13, 2009

Thank God I'm an American

 

USA Mike

Aug 13, 2009

Stop robotically repeating the 43 million uninsured number. Read the CBO breakdown and you'll know that when illegal aliens and people who have jobs and can afford but choose not go buy insurance and you'll know that the 'chronically uninsured' is just between 8 and 9 million. I think I coudl insure that manny people for a trillion dollars without radically changing what is in most ways the best healthcare system in the world.

 

Chuck

Aug 13, 2009

1. No, it's 10-15 million citizens that fall through the net; not 47. If you are going to use inflated numbers at least use factcheck inflated numbers.

2. 'Rationing'is not being priced out of the market. Please use definitions correctly. Rationing is government (not market)imposed limitations. While there are reasons to not like the former, there are more reasons to not like the later. If you can't see the difference you are obviously a socialist.

 

JOE THE PROFESSOR

Aug 13, 2009

American Insurance companies used to push women out of the hospital within hours of delivery. I'm not sure if they still do so.
In any case, viewed from the length of life and infant mortality rates, Great Britain's health is better than that of the U.S.

 

J122177@yahoo.com

Aug 13, 2009

Obamamath

4 7= 47

 

John D

Aug 13, 2009

She said she lived in London. So she or her husband possibly both likely worked there and paid taxes. Taking taxes and not providing promised benefits is theft.

 

John

Aug 13, 2009

Hey Joe Professor - One, in the US it was never less than 24 hours. Currently, it's typically 48 hours. Two, longevity and infant mortality rates are NOT the best metrics to determine health care effectiveness. Obesity in America causes longevity issues - no reflection on health care. Also, check effectiveness of cardiac and cancer cure rates. Three, more people travel from UK to US for medical treatment than vice versa (and the US has lots more people). Enough said.

 

Realpolitik

Aug 13, 2009

There are no 47 million US uninsured. It is a myth. The radical left needs a Big Lie to leverage their crisis-action.

2nd, the issue of US Obama-care review boards is that they must cut cost, and they will be immune to liability for their actions. Orwellian.

Last, if the Left was serious about solving the uninsured, they would have a clearly defined WRITTEN plan to cover catastrophic health claims. But since none of their plans are written, they can Big Lie and Big Deny.

They gambled and lost. Ordinary Americans are a lot smarter than they thought.

 

Bryan

Aug 13, 2009

I'm convinced under the UK health system or Obamacare I would have two less children. My wife had severe hyperemises and hyperthyrod problems which caused her weight to plummet from 96 pounds to 77 pounds. The only medicine that helped was Zofran for Nausea (which is commonly used by Cancer Patients) - she spent 2 weeks in the Hospital and 4 months bedridden hooked up to a feeeding tube. This is the same medicine has been denied to cancer patients in the UK due to the cost. I'm sure Obamacare would also ration and refuse this medicine thus forcing an abortion to save my wife's life. But of course that is what they want in the end. To choose who lives and who dies whether it is children or the elderly. The Life of a child and personal freedom is far more precious than money. Silent no More!

 

ER RN

Aug 14, 2009

While I can understand Gourdon's surprise at her treatment in a British hospital, I can assure her that many, many people in the US that receive equal, if not worse, treatment. First of all, you can't characterize the quality of care of a country's healthcare by the demeanor of a single nurse. Trust me, there are plenty of exasperated, overworked, and de-sensitized healthcare workers in our hospitals today.
Second of all, as an ER nurse, I can testify that many people are falling through the cracks, not getting any form of primary healthcare, being made to wait for six or more hours just to see a doctor, not getting the follow-up care they need, and yes, even having to wait for 24 hrs to get a hospital bed.
but hey, at least they can partake in fruit juice, warm blankets, and flat screen TV while they wait. Heaven forbid we, as US citizens, give up comfort in the face of a failing system.

 

Scott M

Aug 14, 2009

Nick- sorry, but there are not anywhere close to 47 million uninsured, try more like 9.487 million. If want to pay for illegals, knoeck yourself out and send money to Honduras on your own time.
I guess Nick also thinks that 47 million have lost their jobs- wow that is lot more than"Iwill creat 3 million new jobs" that Chairman Obama promised us, but I am blaming Bush.
When you have a monoply, such as single payor, explain to me where the incentive to provide superior products, service and attitude are? There is no incentive, there is justification for your poor attitude 'cause you are the only game in town, where you gonna go?


 

David P

Aug 14, 2009

As a "Brit", I would ask the author: did she have any complications at all? was there actually any need at all for her to stay in hospital?

With a full term baby, and with the mother in good health, having her stay in hospital for a few days is frankly a bit of a waste of time, and more importantly money.

Had she encountered any difficulty, or if the baby had been premature, the need for her to stay in hospital would have been higher and she would have been bumped up the list.

Many are confusing thriftyness with stinginess; if she didn't need to be in hospital what is the point of her being there?

 

JimBeam

Aug 14, 2009

She didn't need an epidural and didn't need to stay any longer than she did. Shocking for many Americans, but a routine delivery is not something that most women NEED to go to a hospital for.

The author got adequate medical care. What she is used to is exorbitant health care that (insured) Americans get. Of course, that's why it costs so much. American taxpayers alone spend as much on health care as Brits spend on NHS, but also spend just as much on private care.

That's why health care is so expensive in the United States.

 

TBone

Aug 14, 2009

So ER Nurse, where are you an ER nurse?
If you were an OR nurse, I would say that stands for Other Reality. The people that you describe in the ER are likely receiving truly free care in that the ER has to see them and they don't have to pay, where as in a Socialized System, the system is subsidized by the taxpayer, which in actuality, is largely the same.

 

WilsonNY

Aug 14, 2009

As a mother of 4, I can say that epidurals and hospitals are not required to give birth. Baby Wilson #1 was born in a hospital and I repeatedly declined drugs and epidurals. Baby 2 was born at home with insurance paying for the midwife. Babies 3 & 4 were born at home but not paid for by insurance because it was too much of a liability and insurance did not want to be involved. Same insurance company, new policy to reflect increasingly litigious climate. Reform is needed, but HR3200 is a far cry from improvement.

 

Gracie

Aug 14, 2009

All of you brave souls who think the author got "adequate" care: why not suggest all women give birth in the fields like they used to? Or go home in a cart, like they used to. Or lose their teeth like they used to before prenatal supplements replenished the calcium the baby uses during pregnancy.

Gosh, weren't the Middle Ages fun? Let's do it again.

 

WilsonNY

Aug 14, 2009

Wow, its a good thing I still have all my teeth and a roof over my head!
In the Middle Ages, where did they go to give birth that they needed a cart to go home? Oh, wait that would be the fields! LOL! Lucky ladies did not have to walk.

 

Velterr

Aug 14, 2009

My English mother in law recently died from a condition that in the US would have been easily managed and she would have had a full active life...her children still in the UK were told by the hospital staff that her quality of like would have been poor so when she got a secondary minor illness it wasn't treated at all and they just let her die from it.

 

johnroggen@yahoo.com

Aug 14, 2009

Is someone seriously proposing that UK health care is superb because of the quality of care affording Steven Hawking?

Don't you realize that under socialism "equality" is a myth? The politically powerful, like Hawking, will always be offerred superb care. It's the middle class mope that will suffer with DMV quality health care.

No wonder Left wing elitests are all for socialism; they know quite well that their power will insulate them from the results.

 

Lucy

Aug 14, 2009

But Mr. Beddoes, what care is being denied to the uninsured in the US? Being uninsured myself, there is still almost no care that I would be denied if I needed it; it would just take me longer to pay for it. But my doctor and I make decisions based on my health needs, not on my "worth". And part of healing involves compassion, which the UK horror stories depict as being the health-care resource in the shortest supply.

 

Lanier Y Chapman

Aug 14, 2009

Velterr: There is private health care in the UK, if one can afford it. Why didn't your mother in law's family come up wtih the money?
Gracie: It's not about "standards" of care. It's how to pay for them. No such thing as a free lunch, remember? If one can't afford anything better than giving birth in the fields, that's life.

 

Mitch v

Aug 15, 2009

Have to remember, much of the NHS isnt what it used to be and much of it is being sold off closed down and sabotaged by the government, hell they dont even hire and maintain cleaning staff anymore, thats being sold off to the lowest bidder.

 

John

Aug 15, 2009

'...the scandalously high death rates for ailments that are, within our borders, swiftly cured." So how can life expectancy in the US be lower than that of Canada or Australia? It cost me 10X as much to be treated for bee sting anaphylaxis in the US as it did for a Japanese student to be treated identically in Australia (the real world cost of treatment, neither subsidised not at profit). The problem is not quality, the problem is cost. Living in the US... making a $ choice between either filling your car tank up with gas or getting the lump in your breast checked... that will turn you into a statistic as well.

 


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