John Muney MD
Affordable health care plans and health services serving Manhattan, Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, & Staten Island. Plans start as low as $89 per month and are all inclusive with no copay. Group and family discounts.
View all articles by John Muney MD
Based on reasonable estimates from health research organizations, each year,
millions of Americans lose their health care when they lose their jobs. Many of
them regain coverage when they take another job. The U.S. Census Bureau reported
that in 2007, 235.4 million Americans did have health insurance. This figure
leaves only about 15 percent of U.S. residents without healthcare. Not many have
been able to set aside money in a dedicated medical savings account to cover
healthcare expenses. Those who are left to cover the costs on their own
frequently turn to
community health
services and other health facilities to help fill the gap.
The Uphill
Battle
The average cost of a doctor's visit always depends on the part of
the country where the health facility is located and the type of doctor needed
to treat a condition. For example, a trip to see a general practitioner costs
anywhere from $95 to $265. If the condition is serious enough to warrant a
specialist, the cost rises slightly: $115 to $325. Rheumatologists seem to come
in on the lower end of the scale at $91 to $137. Health care providers also tend
to publish cash prices but charge a different (higher) amount when billing a
patient's insurance company.
Some of the 15 percent of the nation's
uninsured are uninsured by choice. Health statistics indicate that many of these
people are under 34 years old and make over $50,000 annually. Some of them have
salaries in the $75,000 range. So affordability is not the issue all the
time.
Viable Options
A good number of those who do not have
insurance and can be counted among the poor have used hospital emergency rooms
for health treatment because they simply have nowhere else to turn. The
emergency room has not only been a place for the uninsured, though. People who
have Medicaid coverage are often turned away by doctor's who do not accept this
kind of insurance. It is also full of people whose regular doctors have offices
that are closed.
Uninsured Americans who happen to belong to some type of
professional organization, community organization or a local Chamber of Commerce
could possibly get insured if they have membership in one of those
organizations. It is group insurance at a discount rate and will unlikely be
discontinued for the duration of the organization.
Community
Programs
Those who can take advantage of community health services tend
to find local nonprofit health care centers that have centralized healthcare for
almost any kind of ailment. These centers either base payments on income or
charge on fixed low fee to anyone who walks in the door. Patients who cannot pay
anything are not often turned away. It is the ideal type of scenario because
doctors who work in these facilities tend to be dedicated to patient care rather
than the prestige of the job. The payment system brings together patients and
capitalizes on those who have any income at all to pay. So, it achieves its goal
of ensure all patients have access to care.
Sometimes, an uninsured
person who is in need of care may seek more than one of these alternative
healthcare paths to help heal themselves. Community health services have done
much to take up the slack in the national healthcare system. Rather than leave
patients hopeless, it gives them options.
Dr. Muney is a doctor on a mission to provide top quality
community health services to the
people battling with the rising cost of healthcare. He maintains 5 medical
centers in New York that provide top quality care along with all inclusive
affordable health care
plans every family can enjoy.
John Muney MD
Affordable health care plans and health services serving Manhattan, Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, & Staten Island. Plans start as low as $89 per month and are all inclusive with no copay. Group and family discounts.
View all articles by John Muney MD