Forum Discussion
CKNSLS
Jul 30, 2013Explorer
qtla9111 wrote:CKNSLS wrote:MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
CKNSLS, I pay and PAID cash for both Medi-Care and Seguro Social, so I guess it is up to me and not up to you for my choice as far as which one to use. I spent ten days in Hospital in Mexico a year and a half ago so my choice is not crystal clear or predictable. In Mexico I have to wait for the services of an MRI, but guess what AMIGO, as far as my EXPENSIVE medications are concerned I am off the MediCare system. Even though I pay taxes for services I do not receive (but YOU do) I do not complain or make snide remarks.
When an UNINSURED GRINGO staggers into a Mexican hospital clutching his chest, everything else comes to a screeching halt. That person is connected to an electrocardiogram so fast it would make your head swim. The trauma doctor arrives. There are places in Montana, Nevada, Wyoming, West Texas, and even California that puts a person in a WORSE risk than in many rural areas in Mexico. The rural areas in Mexico have clinicas perifericos, that are staffed a hell of a lot more competently than the pseudo veterinarian-grade care a person can expect at a rural facility in the USA. Remember, the medical FAILURES in the USA practice rural medicine. In Mexico first class doctors are required under law to do time in the most out of the way clinics imaginable.
I am FORCED to go north ONCE for several days or travel hundreds of miles several times down here to seek top notch care.
FROM CBS NEWS-
The health-care system in Mexico is a patchwork of evolving and sometimes confusing services for 105 million people in a country still suffering from diseases of the developing world, such as tuberculosis and malaria. Meanwhile, first world maladies have also been emerging — the World Health Organization lists diabetes as the leading cause of death in Mexico, followed by heart and liver disease.
FULL STORY-
http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/story/2009/05/04/f-health-mexico-health-system.html
According to the story, if you pay based on the amount of money you make (wages) for healthcare, then your care is commensurate with what you pay in. It contradicts the level of care you say is available in clinics.
Again Señor Troll, you are way off.
Tuberculosis in the U.S. 4 per 100K, Mexico 2 per 100K
Malaria in the U.S. (1 highest, 192 lowest) U.S. 117 Mexico 179
Maybe you're not a troll, but watch national news, or as the rest of the world calls U.S. national news, "the local rag".
Your off on your TB rates Senior-
http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/tbpc-latb/itir-eng.php#tphp
Also, death rates from Malaria in Mexico and the U.S. are the same.
http://www.worldlifeexpectancy.com/cause-of-death/malaria/by-country/
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