Health care failing people left, right, and centre

I have some sad health care stories for my readers today. Amanda over at My Ramblings was diagnosed with cancer at the start of October. Treatment with lasers started a couple weeks later, and further testing revealed that the cancer had likely spread. Her biopsy to confirm that was scheduled for today, but yesterday the doctor’s office called and rescheduled… for November 24! Yes, that’s not a typo, she’s being made to wait one month before they even know how/if they will treat the cancer that will potentially kill her if it goes untreated too many weeks. How could they do that to someone?

Quite easily apparently. I was talking today with another friend, whose son had his hand mutilated in a farming accident in July. He got sent a letter this past week asking him to START physiotherapy in Yorkton. It’s only about three months after when he should have started, and it’s not like he needed that hand all these months!

A few days ago I got a call from my doctor’s office. It seems they filed a second lab report done back in August to confirm a July test with an abnormal liver enzyme number. I’d even phoned a week after the test and asked them if the doctor wanted to see me about it. They said everything must be fine because the report “was filed”. I took them at their word, when normally I ask for a copy of the lab report for my records. Now he’s set up an appointment regarding the test for … wait for it … November 21! The office sent me the report by fax on Tuesday, and on it in bold figures are numbers that are outside of the normal ranges, highlighted by an arrow. So please don’t send me beer.
I phoned Newstalk980.com at 9:50 AM about Amanda’s experience. John Gormley gets plenty of healthcare complaints emailed to him, so I wanted to be sure that I didn’t just email because that might not make it on the air and into peoples ears where sad facts like that need to sit. Our priorities in Saskatchewan aren’t in the right place. You just don’t tell someone with a treatable-if-caught-early disease to wait more than a month for treatment and further diagnosis. That is just so wrong, and flies in the face of good sense, human decency, and the point of medicare.

This isn’t an argument for killing Medicare. Just the opposite, it’s a eulogy for Medicare. Medicare, as good as it was, is dead. We have to raise it from the dead, or deliver a replacement plan, because telling people to wait months for health saving treatment until they are beyond hope or further disabled, is a despicable policy that must destroy the will of health care providers that truly care about people.