The summit not looking at the whole of health care

Today I have been watching, on and off, the health care reform summit between the president and congressional leaders. It seems just the same old same old. It is clear the Republicans do not want any kind of reform that is going to cut into the profits of big insurance. I say, more and more of the majority party should sign onto reform through reconciliation.

I certainly think Obama has got huevos letting all the steam rise in full view of the public. At least the Republican leadership is being afforded the opportunity to help forge a workable deal with the majority to reform the system. It seems they are content to “just say no.”

While the politicians go through the motions of our health system at the macro view, I have seen it this week on the micro level. My experience has been both with socialized medicine — at the Department of Veterans Affairs — and in regular civil care at a local hospital-system owned minor care clinic for an on-the-job injury. One might think one type of care may be preferable to the other. One might be right. And, one might be wrong.

With the VA. I sometimes have long waits. That is for both for a scheduled appointment and for scheduling an appointment. My wait at the doc-in-the-box clinic was two hours plus an hour to see a care giver, have a lab sample taken and to get an X-ray. All of that took another hour.

Today, I tried to get in touch with two VA medical specialty clinics in Houston. It took me an hour of unanswered phones, voice mailboxes that were full and could not accept calls. This type of activity, trying to reach one specialist or lab or billing at the VA, is the norm and not the exception.

I will have had three medical visits — so-called “doctor’s visits” — this week by the end of tomorrow. I will not have seen a doctor in any of the visits. One visit will have been with a physician’s assistant, another by a licensed counselor and the other a nurse practitioner.

There is no doubt in my mind that these paraprofessionals do reasonably good jobs at what they are allowed to do. However, I believe that these care providers exceed the bounds of what laws intended them to perform.

I like my PA, the care and the knowledge that person has of my medical situation. I would just as soon keep that PA because I know if something comes up, my VA care giver will seek assistance from a medical doctor that is overseeing that care. The care that I received at the minor care clinic is a different story.

The nurse practitioner I saw clearly believed she was medically a legend in her own mind. The doctor was just a name on the stationary they use to write notes for work or school. I spent three hours at this clinic for a sprained ankle and strained back. The back problem was in my thoracic region — mid back between spine and underarm — and she ordered I wear a splint and use crutches. It only took 30 minutes of using crutches that both my foot had been blistered by the splint being too tight and the crutches aggravating my back strain.

I got into an argument with the NP before leaving because of the wording that was used on my back-to-work note. It clearly wasn’t what she had told me it would be and denied saying what she told me. Of course, when you talk to any medical professional or paraprofessional, their word is always accepted, not the patient’s.

I have been to doctors many times in my life, probably more than many people. I think now, here I am at 54 years old and I have what seems to be a lot wrong with me, yet here I am pretty much fully functioning, though not as physically able as I was. I chalk that up to having been to a doctor so many times — both through their health care and because of their health care.

The Obama side of the health care debate is that a number of Americans cannot afford that care. The Republican side is pretty much, we’ve got ours, period. The GOP says loudly and proudly that we have the best health care system in the world. The whole World Wide World! But sometimes, you have to just step back and ask yourself, do we?

Way gone are the days of the doctor making house calls. What? Doctors did that? They didn’t in my life time, at least they didn’t for most people in places I have lived during the past half-century. I have seen doctors, a good number, but increasingly I have seen non-doctors. This goes for even visits to specialists.

Perhaps you can chalk up a lot of the care by non-doctors to my dependence on the VA for health care. But it’s not just the VA.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t think that doctors are all that one should see when they “go to the doctor.”

Especially in smaller practices, competent PAs and nurse practitioners are certainly qualified to provide decent, limited, medical care. But the thought of doctors being the Wizard behind the curtain that you never see is both unwelcome and unhealthy. That is just one concern I have with our medical care but there are more.

Maybe we need to look at the whole of medicine in country and look at some of the gaps that make us question whether our care is truly the best in the world.

As technology flourishes, thus does stupidity

If you are one of the five or six people who regularly read this blog you may have noticed I didn’t write yesterday. That is unusual because I usually write something during the week.

The reason was partially because of an on-the-job injury I sustained the day before and the bureaucratic inertia that has prevented me, 46 hours later, from having seen a doctor.

The injuries aren’t serious: an ankle sprain that now mostly hurts when I am standing and a back strain. All of this was caused by the very dangerous combination of walking while performing mathematic calculations on my cell phone. In short, I hit a wall. Literally. My left hand hit the wall first, then my left knee and then my right foot. I fell backwards, trying to turn in order to accomplish a softer landing on my buttocks. But I ended up flat on the floor. Ain’t that the s**ts?

Hopefully all the paperwork can get filled out so I can get checked out by a doc-in-the-box later this afternoon. Oh well, it’s out of my hands.

I better publish this as soon as I can, so … Adidas amigos.  Perhaps a fast goodbye as in tennis shoes?

Attaboy, I gawrantee

Please excuse my crappy cell phone picture, but I took it just after airing my front tire plus having experienced the shock of finding a convenience store that charges 25 cents for their air and water machine.

The photo was taken earlier today at Crawdad’s Convenience Center on Highway 62 South in Mauriceville, Texas. The store — in Cajun Texas — is part of an area convenience store chain although I do not know if the other stores charge a solid quarter for air and water.

The only thing better would be free air and water like in the olden tymes. But considering most stores charge at least 75 cents and some more, I feel this Crawdad’s deserve an “Attaboy.” How you say dat attaboy in Cajun, chere? C’est tout.

The Austin plane crash was a criminal act! No, it was an act of domestic terror! No, it's two, two, two acts in one!

“Tastes great! Less filling! Tastes great! Less filling!”

I suppose it to be somewhat flippant to talk about the aftermath of yesterday’s suicide plane crash in Austin in terms of a beer commercial. But then, some of the discussion bouncing around as to whether the incident was solely a criminal act or an act of domestic terrorism is about as weighty as the 1980s Miller Lite commercials.

There is no doubt that some minds and hearts were filled with terror when 53-year-old Joe Stack of Austin flew his single-engine Piper aircraft into a multi-story North Austin building that housed almost 200 IRS employees. The crash and resulting fire injured more than a dozen and killed an IRS employee as well as Stack.

Much is to be examined and digested in the aftermath of this act which a man who apparently had years of rage bottled up, over the IRS, Catholic Church and other institutions he felt wronged him, came uncorked. But seemingly one of the least important matters, it seems to me, is whether this act should be labeled just a criminal act or a case of domestic terror. Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo told reporters yesterday at a press conference to pick one when it comes to a word describing the intended crash as criminal or domestic terror.

Today, Fox News, which in my mind is about the most pissy news organizations around, had an online story titled: Austin Plane Crash: Criminal Act or Domestic Terrorism? The answer is, to paraphrase another old TV commercial  tagline, this one from Certs breath mints: “It’s two, two, two acts in one.”

Yes when Stack went on his rampage and dived into the building along U.S. 183 near Loop 360 in Austin he certainly committed a crime, most likely several. That is not to mention intentionally setting fire to his own home before heading to Georgetown Municipal Airport to launch his airplane.

What Stack did Thursday morning likewise fits many definitions of what an act of terrorism is. As left-leaning blog “Crooks and Liars” writes: “Huh? Since when is attempting to blow up a federal building not an act of domestic terror?” However, I’m not certain the building or buildings in the office park where the crash happened were actually “federal” buildings rather than just commercial buildings leased by the government. But until I read the C & L  piece I had, quite the opposite, felt Fox was trying to hang the terror label on the incident in order that the right may use it to claim Obama and his minions are soft on terror and let this happen. But I see I had mistaken Fox’s motives. They are still pissy.

What does it matter though, I mean, really? The act was terrorism in the legal sense as Crooks and Liars points out in their link to the FBI’s terrorism definitions:

**Domestic terrorism investigations are conducted in accordance with “The Attorney General’s Guidelines on General Crimes, Racketeering Enterprise, and Domestic Security/Terrorism Investigations.” These guidelines set forth the predication threshold and limits for investigations of U.S. persons who reside in the United States, who are not acting on behalf of a foreign power, and who may be conducting criminal activities in support of terrorist objectives.

**International terrorism investigations are conducted in accordance with “The Attorney General Guidelines for FBI Foreign Intelligence Collection and Foreign Counterintelligence Investigations.” These guidelines set forth the predication level and limits for investigating U.S. persons or foreign nationals in the United States who are targeting national security interests on behalf of a foreign power.

The act was one which did nothing but hurt people. It didn’t solve any problems. You can call it a “suicide bombing” or as Fox News used to say, while dutifully kissing President Gee Dubya Bush’s ass, a “homicide bombing.” I can’t see any earthly reason why it matters if this be couched in a particular term because any term covering this cowardly, criminal, reprehensible, terroristic act seems just about apt.

It was all a big waste, was what it was.

Digesting the Austin plane crash incident

Coverage of the plane crash in Austin today has kept me pretty well riveted.

Of course, it’s in my state, I have friends in Austin, spent tons of time in Austin and love all things Austin pretty much except for its traffic and Ashe juniper, or mountain cedar, to which I am extremely allergic. Also, since the act by the pilot allegedly seems intentionally aimed at the Internal Revenue Service definitely sends some chills up my spine. I’ll tell you why, but first a brief an account of what I’ve heard about this so far,

A man from North Austin allegedly set his house on fire this morning before taking off in a small plane from the Georgetown, Texas, Municipal Airport and crashing the plane in a Northwest Austin building housing a number of IRS employees. From what I have heard on TV, the pilot reportedly died — certainly not unexpected given the state of the building(s) damaged by the plane and from the fire that resulted — two others were injured and one is missing.

The pilot of the plane, Joseph Stack, left a rambling statement and apparent suicide note on his Web site railing against the IRS. The Austin American-Statesman, which has some excellent coverage, displays Stack’s rant on one of the newspaper blogs. The post ominously raises the specter of a violent act and is signed by “Joe Stack (1956-2010):

“I saw it written once that the definition of insanity is repeating the same process over and over and expecting the outcome to suddenly be different. I am finally ready to stop this insanity. Well, Mr. Big Brother IRS man, let’s try something different; take my pound of flesh and sleep well.”

Since this has just happened there is little known else about this man who, hopefully, has only managed to kill himself despite causing a spectacular crash with resulting damage. The Los Angeles Times reported Stack was an Austin software engineer who experienced a number of business and tax problems in Los Angeles in the 1980s and 90s. The FAA registration for Stack’s plane, a single-engine Piper, showed his address as an apartment in Lincoln, Calif., a suburb of Sacramento. This registration was dated 1998. News reports indicated that Stack’s wife and daughter were trapped inside the house when it was torched but they were saved by firefighters.

This is not the first time an Austin IRS facility has been targeted for attack. Undercover ATF agents arrested a Tyler, Texas, car salesman, in 1995 for plotting to blow up the IRS building in Austin. Charles Ray Polk was sentenced to 249 months in federal prison for a number of charges including attempted use of weapons of mass destruction. A summation of the events leading up to his arrest are noted here in a decision on an appeal before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

As I noted earlier, the events in Austin today are chilling. While we don’t know the details that went into planning this act — whether it was a wider domestic terror act — or just “Another Lone Nut” as was the name of a HBO special by comedian and actor Richard Belzer, it is definitely scary. Scary, I say, because someone can apparently just hop in the ol’ family plane, fire her up and crash her into any populated building. He could have crashed into one of the high rises downtown, the UT Tower or the beautiful Texas State Capitol.

It is likewise scary that people whose minds are filled with hate or are terribly disturbed think so little of their fellow human beings that they either don’t care or intend to kill others as well as those who are in their way. It is especially disturbing to those who work for the government, some even part-time, who see less and less  cooperation by the public in making our federal system work.  There are a lot of government haters out there these days. Hopefully, more of them won’t snap.

I have to say a word about coverage today. I’ve been checking out, of course, the Austin-area news outlet Web sites and watching CNN. I must say CNN’s anchoring has been mostly weak, especially watching Tony Harris and Rick Sanchez. Even when Wolf Blitzer’s “Situation Room” comes on it won’t be the best, but will be better than other shows today. Thankfully, CNN still has resources to pull of good breaking news coverage.