Tips for Dealing with the Healthcare System

As they approached their golden years, one problem Philip and Ruth Barash didn’t foresee was having to struggle through their country’s healthcare system.

“Philip’s health problems began in 1988 and steadily continued until his death in 2012,” says Ruth Fenner Barash, who shares the couple’s harrowing healthcare experiences in her book, For Better or Worse: Lurching from Crisis to Crisis in America’s Medical Morass. “We were in and out of doctors’ offices, hospitals, and emergency rooms a lot, and I was shocked by the lack of compassion we frequently encountered, as well as the number of healthcare professionals who simply are not good diagnosticians.”

Barash’s cautionary tale details a medical journey fraught with mismanagement and excess, useless interventions, and a sometimes complete disregard for pain.

“The art of intuitive, compassionate healthcare is dying as doctors rely more on technology and are guided through an arbitrary template established by insurance company policies,” she says.

To help patients and their loved ones deal with the healthcare system and avoid many of the difficulties she and her husband faced, Barash offers the following suggestions from their experience:

Barash warns that the U.S. healthcare system is not always the benevolent safety net many people believe it to be. It can also be abusive, incompetent, callous toward patients–and worse.

“Patients and their loved ones cannot blindly turn themselves over to this massive, technology-based system and trust that it will care-or take care of them,” says Barash. “We did experience some wonderful healthcare professionals…but they were not the rule.”

This story was adapted from material provided by News & Experts.

Ideas expressed are those of Ruth Fenner Barash and do not constitute an endorsement by Amplitude Media Group.

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