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In my experience, during a hospital admission, people without insurance are given less tests (kind of like "do they really need this test?) and are discharged quicker. But I really hope you aren't suggesting that in an ER they would actually treat someone with a less urgent issue before someone with a more serious issue, solely because the less urgent patient has insurance and the more urgent patient does not. Where do people get these ideas from??? :headache: Nurse: Doctor, the patient in room 2 has a large laceration that has been profusely bleeding for over an hour. I'm worried he might be losing too much blood. Aren't you going to stitch him up? Doctor: No, I have a hang nail in room 3 I've been attending to. And by the way, when I'm done removing her hang nail, she'd like a massage. Who you please give her one? Nurse: What about room 2? I think he's in mu-....oooh, he doesn't have insurance, does he? Doctor: No. And he's a drug addict too. Nurse: whew! ( nurse mockingly wipes brow) then no worries, doc. And I'll get right on that massage! (Doctor and nurse laugh, as patient in room 2 becomes unconscience due to blood loss...) I wouldn't want to go to that ER even if I did have insurance!!:fr: |
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