(C) Daily Kos
This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .
Oz said uninsured Americans don't have 'right to health,' a hell of a thing for a doctor to say [1]
['Daily Kos Staff', 'Backgroundurl Avatar_Large', 'Nickname', 'Joined', 'Created_At', 'Story Count', 'N_Stories', 'Comment Count', 'N_Comments', 'Popular Tags']
Date: 2022-09-08
Instead of having a “right to health,” Oz said, people in the U.S. “have a right to access, to get that health,” suggesting that he believes there are real limits to the health care that people—in this case, the uninsured—deserve.
That access he envisions sounds more like punishment, “a way of crawling back out of the abyss, of darkness, of fear over not having the health they need, and give them an opportunity.” Again, embracing the conservative idea that people who are sick deserve to be and have to crawl their way out of bad health. He didn’t absolve the governors and other policy-makers from responsibility entirely.
Oz suggested that governors could use local hospitals, which would pay for it, to give the uninsured “15-minute physicals” and that it could be done “in a festival-like setting” where they get “screening.” What happens after that screening if a serious medical condition is diagnosed, Oz doesn’t say.
By the way, those “festival-like” health care screenings have been the sole purpose of Remote Area Medical (RAM) free pop-clinics for decades. The nonprofit, founded by Stan Brock in 1985 to provide health care are in developing countries, has been working in the U.S. since 1992, providing care in underserved areas from Los Angeles to Appalachia. They show the reality of Oz’s “festival-like” vision—dozens, sometimes hundreds, of people showing up in the middle of the night to get in line for the chance to be seen by a health care provider the next day. That had already been a reality for more than a decade when Oz gave that speech.
Oz, by the way, had been an early booster of the ACA, and had argued for the most maligned element of the plan, the individual mandate to hold insurance. Now that he’s a Trumpy Republican running for the Senate, he “does not support a big government takeover of the health insurance industry” and “would not have voted for Obamacare.” At least that’s what a campaign spokesperson told CNN in March, before the primary.
He’s always been messed up on whether people really deserve care, though, that CNN story shows. In 2007, he told CNN, “There have been times when I have been tempted to break my Hippocratic oath, to put my patient first, because although I could save their life, they didn’t have the ability to reimburse whoever had to pay for it.” It’s convoluted, but apparently he meant that he had been tempted in his practice to not provide life-saving care to someone who couldn’t pay for it, because “what happens then is that the system goes bankrupt. You can’t afford those services anymore.”
That Hippocratic oath seems to be a slippery thing for Oz, what with his conviction that people don’t have a right to health. The guy is a charlatan, a snake-oil salesman who has a questionable place in practicing medicine and none whatsoever in deciding health care policy in the Senate.
RELATED STORIES
[END]
---
[1] Url:
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/9/8/2121544/-Oz-said-uninsured-Americans-don-t-have-right-to-health-a-hell-of-a-thing-for-a-doctor-to-say
Published and (C) by Daily Kos
Content appears here under this condition or license: Site content may be used for any purpose without permission unless otherwise specified.
via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/dailykos/