So the death of Michael Jackson has been deemed a homicide and, if this was a movie, all the telltale signs point to the doctor, who seems to have been feeding the poor boy enough drugs to make Elvis look positively abstemious. Although doctors are popularly represented as selfless angels of mercy, but I’ve never been totally convinced. Too many of the doctors that I’ve encountered in the USA (and a few Brits for that matter) have seemed judgmental and lamentably out of touch with the culture in which they operate. And worse. Count all the worthless plastic surgeons, while the fictional Dr Benway is in the lifeboat with the women and children. Or remember the real-life Dr Brody sitting in the cruel neon of a 24-hour pharmacy, writing scripts for methamphetamine. And, on a more general level, consider all the physicians in comfortable and lucrative cahoots with the pharm corps and HMOs, and how they buttress a system that has killed at least one of my nearest and dearest and may break a few more before it’s reformed
On Truthdig Chris Hedges elaborates on a related theme…
“Capitalists, as my friend Father Michael Doyle says, should never be allowed near a health care system. They hold sick children hostage as they force parents to bankrupt themselves in the desperate scramble to pay for medical care. The sick do not have a choice. Medical care is not a consumable good. We can choose to buy a used car or a new car, shop at a boutique or a thrift store, but there is no choice between illness and health. And any debate about health care must acknowledge that the for-profit health care industry is the problem and must be destroyed. This is an industry that hires doctors and analysts to deny care to patients in order to increase profits. It is an industry that causes half of all bankruptcies. And the 20,000 Americans who died last year because they did not receive adequate care condemn these corporations as complicit in murder.
The current health care debate in Congress has nothing to do with death panels or public options or socialized medicine. The real debate, the only one that counts, is how much money our blood-sucking insurance, pharmaceutical and for-profit health services are going to be able to siphon off from new health care legislation. The proposed plans rattling around Congress all ensure that the profits for these corporations will increase and the misery for ordinary Americans will be compounded. The corporate state, enabled by both Democrats and Republicans, is yet again cannibalizing the Treasury. It is yet again pushing Americans, especially the poor and the working class, into levels of despair and rage that will continue to fuel the violent, proto-fascist movements leaping up around the edges of American society. And the traditional watchdogs—those in public office, the press and citizens groups—are as useless as the perfumed fops of another era who busied their days with court intrigue at Versailles. Canada never looked so good.” (Click here for the whole rant)
The secret word is Malpractice
On Truthdig Chris Hedges elaborates on a related theme…
“Capitalists, as my friend Father Michael Doyle says, should never be allowed near a health care system. They hold sick children hostage as they force parents to bankrupt themselves in the desperate scramble to pay for medical care. The sick do not have a choice. Medical care is not a consumable good. We can choose to buy a used car or a new car, shop at a boutique or a thrift store, but there is no choice between illness and health. And any debate about health care must acknowledge that the for-profit health care industry is the problem and must be destroyed. This is an industry that hires doctors and analysts to deny care to patients in order to increase profits. It is an industry that causes half of all bankruptcies. And the 20,000 Americans who died last year because they did not receive adequate care condemn these corporations as complicit in murder.
The current health care debate in Congress has nothing to do with death panels or public options or socialized medicine. The real debate, the only one that counts, is how much money our blood-sucking insurance, pharmaceutical and for-profit health services are going to be able to siphon off from new health care legislation. The proposed plans rattling around Congress all ensure that the profits for these corporations will increase and the misery for ordinary Americans will be compounded. The corporate state, enabled by both Democrats and Republicans, is yet again cannibalizing the Treasury. It is yet again pushing Americans, especially the poor and the working class, into levels of despair and rage that will continue to fuel the violent, proto-fascist movements leaping up around the edges of American society. And the traditional watchdogs—those in public office, the press and citizens groups—are as useless as the perfumed fops of another era who busied their days with court intrigue at Versailles. Canada never looked so good.” (Click here for the whole rant)
The secret word is Malpractice
I think I must have been three or four years old when I was mauled by a puppy... the thing all but ripped my ear off, a bit of flesh by the lobe was what the rest was dangling from. My folks took me into the closest medical clinic & they said that all they could do was cut it off. Thankfully my folks weren't willing to settle for that & they ran me back to the car & took me to a different hospital. Today, other than a slight & hardly noticeable bump near to where my ear & head meet, you can't tell anything happened. That's because a plastic surgeon happened to be on staff in the middle of nowhere, a.k.a. wichita, kansas...
ReplyDeleteNot to act like there aren't a number of worthless people in the specific field, though, without cosmetic surgery, I'd have been scarred for life. I think that some of the superficial exploits of the profession have given it a trivial appearance, just look at Jackson... but Jackson didn't need it, he didn't have a disfiguring wound a doctor was trying to prevent from being disfiguring. I have to say that there are likely far more doctors doing good in the field than those bringing triviality to the profession. Its just that more people are willing to read about botched botox & leaking implants than a child having reconstructive facial surgery & being able to live out a normal life. Controversy sells, happy endings don't when it comes to reporting on real life... sure, happy endings are abound in novels & films & video games, but they're incredibly rare in the news, unless its a story about an animal.
The US government is also a capitalist entity, and not just in the sense that there are people on the take, or in the pockets of lobbyists or corporations or whatever.
ReplyDeleteI sometimes think of the government as Godzilla--trampling over everything in sight, but who you'd really like to have around when Ghidrah shows up. Problem is, there are a lot of idiots who keep electing Ghidrah.
I work in the healthcare industry, and have done almost all my adult life, first in the NHS and now in a for-profit company in the US. I am one hundred percent behind healthcare reform, having seen universal healthcare work (in the UK) and private healthcare fail spectacularly, bringing lives down with it, in the US.
ReplyDeleteI work with doctors all day long and they are without exception good men and women who want to help sick people get healthy. I think a better target of ire in the current US system is the insurance companies, who have never contributed anything to health and whose only aim is to keep their shareholder happy by buying as little and as cheap healthcare as they can manage to get away with.
I was at lunch reading the paper the day after Michael Jackson died, and one of the doctors told me how a physician *should* act if he becomes the personal physician of a drug addict. It appears Jackson's doctor did none of those things and it all went predictably wrong. I suspect rich substance abusers – Elvis and Jacko included – get much worse health care than ordinary people as there is no one around to say no to them.
By the way, the plastic surgeon who did the reconstruction after my cancer surgery is not "worthless". He allowed me to live a normal life. If he makes his money from rich willing women and uses it to take on the poorly-paid HMO reconstruction cases like mine, then I'm hardly going to argue with that.
I may have been kinda hard on the doctors. I'm aware that maybe even a majority of them are hardworking, caring individuals, and that insurance companies are the primary villains of the piece, but I am very disconcerted that so few have expressed any public support for reform of a clearly dysfunctional system while still happy to profit from it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the article and link.I'm one of those going broke paying premiums and deductibles.If it wasn't for my wifes medical need, I'd have told the insurance company to piss up a rope. Just an entire industry rife with criminals.I hope they all die slow horrible deaths and burn in hell. That's what they deserve.
ReplyDeleteAnd maybe the worthless turds in Washington should have to deal with these bloodsuckers just like the rest of us.
There has to be some way to defeat these goons, I just don't know what it is yet.
Thanks again for the good read and a very interesting blog.
Speaking of Brody,I met the infamous Dr. Petro once,in Piccadilly underground,just after he got out after doing 18 months for some drug related offence or other.It was a Sunday afternoon,and hed lost his licence to practice and he was out for an afternoon stroll.Another one who used to sit in the back of a taxi in Piccadilly writing scripts on cigarette packets,then ranting and raving in Boots the chemist there,arguing with the pharmacist that it was a legal document when the pharmacist deemed it not to be.Hed swap a script for 3 grain of English H for 2 bottles of whisky to people that he knew if he saw you were in trouble and sick.Crazy days.
ReplyDeleteFucking doctors even have to get their beaks wet on medical marijuana. A hundred bucks for a cannibis card from a croaker who was calling it a gateway drug five years ago.
ReplyDeleteMust have been a big puppy Faux.
ReplyDelete"Just look at Jackson..."
I did. A beautiful curly-haired bouncing kid with so much talent.
"Just look at Jackson..."
I did. He was black.
Maybe none of us, who aren't, can understand what that meant 40 years ago. Still...just stop and think about Mick's latest post on why they really hate Obama.
After Jackson died I had an old song running in my head for days: Donny Hathaway's version of a Nina Simone song "To be young gifted and black" Something to help heal the hatred. Looked around a bit on the obits and the threads searching for the debate on what had induced him what had reduced him to the awful pale parody he became. The wanting to be white.
Nothing.
So then I cried.
"Jackson didn't need it" ?
He didn't but the tragedy is he thought he did.
.