Guide to finding healthcare information
The Internet is a wealthy source of information and if you’re
looking for healthcare information, the Internet can be a
resourceful vehicle for you to find reliable and trustworthy
guides and advice on healthcare products and supplies. It all
depends on how you find the information and who is dispensing
the healthcare information.
If used properly, the Internet allows us to find healthcare
information quickly and easily. Many website owners provide free
healthcare information on a wide range of topics like diseases,
health conditions, therapies, medical products and symptoms of
diseases, etc. Lists of healthcare providers and healthcare
institutions can also be found online, if you go to the right
website.
Some people contend that the healthcare information provided by
website owners is not reliable. This is true, to a certain
extent. The healthcare information found online can NEVER be
relied upon fully and the healthcare information printed out
from websites cannot replace professional advice that your
doctor or healthcare practitioner can give you. But the
healthcare information found online can be used as a basis for
your visits to your doctor. For instance, browsing through the
healthcare information online prior to your visit to the doctor,
you’re better prepared with information and questions that you
might want to ask your doctor during the visit.
It’s either very difficult to verify, or almost impossible to
verify the source of the healthcare information or advice
available online. This is where reliability is in question. But
most professional healthcare advice websites will give you the
source of the advice, and with this, you can easily verify the
source of the healthcare information.
One thing is for sure, consumers have to be extra careful about
buying pharmaceutical products or medicines online. In fact, the
act is dangerous enough for certain governments to consider
making buying medication and healthcare supplies online illegal,
unless you’ve got the ‘green light’ from your doctor and can
prove that your doctor’s permission or prescription allows it.
Even then, there’s a huge question mark hanging over our heads.
The fastest way to finding healthcare information online is
through a search engine, of course. But the problem is that
there’s no guarantee that the information you can find through
the website is reliable or professional enough. You can ask your
doctor or pharmacist for URLs of websites that they often visit.
As medical practitioners, they won’t recommend healthcare
websites if they don’t trust the information that is in the
healthcare portal.
If your doctor is not Internet savvy and has no healthcare
portal to recommend, you should ask around among your friends,
relatives or colleagues to see if they can recommend a good
healthcare portal.
Once you’re there, a good healthcare portal should have a list
of their panel doctors listed. This way, you’ll know that
whatever healthcare information that they disperse in the
website is approved by a professional healthcare provider.
Dakota Caudilla, journalist, and website builder Dakota Caudilla
lives in Texas. He is the owner and co-editor of
http://www.wise-healthcare.com on which you will find a longer,
more detailed version of this article.
Watch the video
Drug companies need research money and doctors have to cover their rears from lawsuits. Also many of us lead lifestyles that are unhealthy. By taking charge of our lives and taking better care of ourselves, we can lead longer, healthier lives and spend less on healthcare. A few simple things you can do include: Get 8 hours of sleep a night Eat healthier Stop smoking Cut down or eliminate alcohol consumption and Exercise Stay Smart Stay Healthy See more vidoes at: www.youtube.com
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1) No. Insurance may be offered through occupation, or you can get a private provider.
2)Depends on how badly I needed it.
3)78. 75 for men, 81 for women. From wiki
4)It has pros and cons. I'd like to see some reform.
5)I'd like to see more employers offer insurance, and private insurance be more affordable. I'd also like to see caps on the cost of healthcare.
6)Somewhat. If it stopped at universal healthcare, I would be okay with that. I'm afraid it may open a door allowing more socialist ideals to enter.
If you are business saavy you may consider being on the administrative side of healthcare. Physicians are required to bill with special codes called CPT-4 codes that describe services that they provide to patients. There are also codes to describe every diagnosis.
In order for the physicians to obtain payment for services these codes must be submitted in a timely fashion to insurance companies and they must be within the scope of usual practices.
Insurance companies also deny payment to the physicians more often than not and they need people to fight for their money.
Administrators allow physicians to concentrate of helping patients without the nagging concern of redtape and paperwork.
There are also budgeting, managerial and operational issues in healthcare offices or other settings that are handled by these professionals.
You may consider obtaining a masters in heatlh administration. Please refer to http://www.ache.org.
First, I doubt that healthcare will become universal.
Second, I see no reason why you as a X-ray technician should lose pay…ompare it to salaries in France & other places where they have universal health care.
I am from Canada where medical coverage is free for everyone,regardless of whether you work or not.
Don't get sick!
Since the drug companies became privatized, there have been far, far less cures than when it was government controlled. Drug companies only want symptom relievers, since they will be reused over and over, whereas cures are not needed once the problem is gone. No money in cures. Drug companies are more interested in Marketing. Obscene amounts go into marketing. At least thousands if not millions are spent on just pens, clocks, notepads, lunches, clipboards, and a ton of little practically useless stuff they give away for the sole purpose of having the name all around the dr. You should go in a dr's office and just look at the amount of stuff with a drug name on it. That is only a small fraction. The government should really take back the pharmaceutical industry, that would definitely lower regular health insurance prices.
If universal health care is brought in, it doesn't mean you can't get regular health insurance. Considering how very little the health insurances pay out ($0.67 on a $10 charge) I highly doubt that the doctors income would be impacted negatively.
I think universal health care would be a great thing. And this is coming from someone who would probably have to find a new job. You don't see the people who come in who don't have to money to get seen. People who are already sick, dying, and still getting harassed about payments. There are already tons of people who die because they just didn't have the money for a doctor. What is a couple of days wait to that?
6 months is quite far fetched. I was in the military, and the same type of system ran. Health care was FREE and there were no massive wait times.
The only valid complaint that I have heard is that you would not always be able to see the same doctor. Not exactly a big deal.
It could very well be that some doctors could choose to take more regular health insurance patients, and then you could have one of those for your regular doctor.
As atrocious as regular health insurance is, most doctors take most of them. Why? To boost the number of patients. Universal health care could work the same way.
Universal health care will certainly not stop the advancement of medicine. With a little less fear involved, it may even enhance it. Besides, that sounds an awful lot like you want to believe the US is the only place in the world who has helped medicine. Nope.
Would you give up your career to keep universal health care from coming?
That's how strongly I support it.
I am English and now live in California. Like most people I thought that there was a huge tax burden in Britain, but after coming here I now think that's not the case.We pay two forms of tax from our wages:Income tax and National insurance. Your income tax is tax like everywhere else, national insurance pays for your pension and healthcare. I have lived in England all my life up till now and I will fiercely defend our healthcare system, the NHS (national health service). In thanks largely to the effort of our heroic doctors and nurses (and all other staff) the NHS survives….the healthcare is nothing like as bad as people make out, and there are no long waiting lists anymore (now if you're waiting more than six months for routine surgery they'll send you abroad to have it done, paid for of course). No-one pays anything for medical care and the one reason it's under stress (As a healthcare proffesional I know this from experience) is the fact that something built as a national health service is used as a world health service. People come to the UK from all over Europe to take advantage of the NHS and from all over the world. I would like to see treatment restricted to citizens/people who have paid at least 5 years national insurance contributions but at the same time I would never ever want to see anyone, citizen or not, turned away or denied medical care because of money. I'm fortunate enough to be able to afford health insurance in the US but the amount hospitals/doctors charge is disgusting and I don't really understand why people are so opposed to universal health care, can you really put a price on life?
By the way income tax is 20% of anything you earn over about 5 and a half thouse pounds ($11k) and national insurance is 11% of anything you earn over 84pounds a week ($160) And people have the option of private healthcare in england too if they want to pay for it
An option to consider is traveling overseas for your dental work. I am originally from Los Angeles, but have been living in Monterrey, Mexico for about 2 years now. I have had regular dental visits and am VERY impressed with the quality of the facilities and the doctors. The best part is that dental work is about 50% less expensive here than it is in the U.S! Monterrey, Mexico is just two hours south of Texas, so it is very easy to get to wherever you are. And, you can always combine your visit with a vacation! If this is something that interests you, check out http://www.travelforcare.com a Medical Travel facilitator that will help you with all the details.
Hospitals carry liability insurance for their nurses. It is unlikely that a nurse will get sued unless she/he does something very deliberate and intentional to harm a patient.