• A 'staggering' number of people couldn't get care during the pandemic,

    From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 9 20:16:35 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel

    https://archive.ph/Y9xUT


    A 'staggering' number of people couldn't get care during the pandemic,
    poll finds

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    Updated August 8, 2022·11:59 AM ET
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    Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson was diagnosed with uterine fibroids in 2006 and underwent surgery to remove a non-cancerous mass. When she started
    experiencing symptoms again in 2020, she was unable to get an
    appointment with a gynecologist. Her experience was not uncommon,
    according to a new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
    the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
    Nicole Buchanan for NPR
    When the pandemic started, Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson knew she had a small
    growth inside her uterus. She was first diagnosed with uterine fibroids
    back in 2006 and had been able to have the non-cancerous mass removed
    through outpatient laser surgery. Over the years, she'd also been able
    to manage her symptoms with medication and changes in her lifestyle.
    But when those symptoms – a bloated belly, irregular periods, nausea – returned in 2020, Kimbrough-Hilson was unable to get an appointment with
    a specialist.
    "March 27th came and everything got shut down," says Kimbrough-Hilson,
    47, of Stone Mountain, Georgia. "I wasn't at the tier of care that
    needed [immediate attention], because of all the precautions that had to
    be taken."
    But even after the lockdown in spring of 2020 was lifted,
    Kimbrough-Hilson, a mother of five who works in the health insurance
    industry, was unable to see a gynecologist.
    She left message after message with providers. But her calls went
    unreturned, or providers were booked for months at end. "I couldn't get
    the appointments," she says. "I couldn't follow up."
    These days, her belly is swollen, and she says she often feels fatigued
    and nauseous: "It makes me want to throw up a lot."
    She also struggled to get appointments for other members of her family.
    Her 14-year-old daughter underwent brain surgery before the pandemic,
    but then couldn't get follow-up appointments until recently.
    Kimbrough-Hilson's family's experience isn't uncommon, according to a
    new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H.
    Chan School of Public Health.
    Among households that had a serious illness in the past year, one in
    five respondents said they had trouble accessing care during the pandemic. That's a "staggering" number of people unable to access care, says Mary Findling, the assistant director of the Harvard Opinion Research
    Program. "From a health and a good care standpoint, that's just too high." Other recent studies have found significant delays in cancer screenings,
    and disruptions in routine diabetes, pediatric and mental health care.
    While it's still early to know the long-term impacts on people's health, researchers and physicians are concerned, especially as the disruptions continue with the country's health care system struggling to bounce back
    from the pandemic.
    The new poll also found that disruptions in care hit some racial and
    ethnic groups harder. Among households where anyone had been seriously
    ill in the past year, 35% of American Indian and Alaska Native
    households and 24% of Black households had trouble accessing care for
    serious illness, compared with only 18% of White households.
    Among Black respondents who had seen a provider in the past year, 15%
    said they were disrespected, turned away, unfairly treated, or received
    poor treatment because of their race and ethnicity, compared with only
    3% of White respondents who said the same.
    "What's really sad is the racial gaps in health care between Black and
    White Americans has remained," says Findling. "And looking across a
    broad range of measures, it's better to be a White patient than a Black
    patient in America today. And when you just stop and think about that,
    that's horrible."
    Health insurance wasn't a barrier to access
    The vast majority of people – across racial and ethnic groups – who experienced delays in care reported having health insurance.
    "One thing it tells us is that just the provision of more health care
    insurance is not going to plug some of these gaps and holes that we're
    seeing in terms of individuals getting more care," says Loren
    Saulsberry, a health policy researcher at the University of Chicago, who
    worked closely with Findling on the poll.
    "There are broader issues at play here," says Findling, like the
    historic workforce shortages among health systems. "The pandemic
    continues and it's wreaking havoc on everyone."
    Saulsberry, who studies health disparities in vulnerable populations,
    says that the pandemic has exacerbated those disparities because of a
    range of barriers, including a person's zip code.
    For example, the state of Georgia, where Kimbrough-Hilson lives, has had
    one of the lowest numbers of OB-GYNs in the country for years. Now,
    she's having a harder time getting an appointment with one than ever before. "I've been able to get my teeth done, my eyes checked," she says. "But I
    can't get to women's health."
    She has a referral from her primary care provider, she says, but it's
    for a practice "30 to 40 miles away."
    Health systems too overwhelmed for routine care
    While the pandemic exacerbated disparities in care, it also overwhelmed
    the health care system, causing delays and disruptions across the board,
    says Cassie Sauer, CEO of the Washington State Hospital Association.
    And it's also taken a huge financial toll, says Dr. Arif Kamal, chief
    patient officer at the American Cancer Society. "Some of that is related
    to actually taking care of patients who are very complex, who have very
    serious illnesses due to COVID-19," he says. "But also during that time
    there was also loss of revenue because other activities had to be
    stopped, for example, elective surgeries."
    As a result, preventive services and early detection activities – not
    the "highest margin activities" for health systems – have taken a back
    seat, he adds.
    "Over the last two years we estimate about 6 million women, for example,
    have missed routine cancer screening," says Kamal. That includes missed mammograms for breast cancer detection, and Pap smears to check for
    cervical cancer.
    Kamal is concerned that in a year or two, providers will start to detect cancers at later stages because of missed screenings, which makes them
    harder to treat or cure.
    In the meantime, health systems are continuing to feel the repercussions
    of the pandemic, causing continuing delays in what was once routine care.
    Sauer has experienced this at work and in her personal life.
    "In my own family, we have struggled to get access to health care for my
    kids and my parents," says Sauer.
    Her 80-year-old father, who has Parkinson's disease, had a fall over the
    winter holidays and was hospitalized. "I was with him, caring for him in
    the hospital. My mom had COVID at the time, so she wasn't able to be
    there," she says. "And I couldn't figure out how to get him out of the hospital."
    He needed to go to a skilled nursing facility, but she couldn't get him
    into one. "I found two nursing homes that seemed like good fits," says
    Sauer. "And they both shut down because they had COVID outbreaks the
    same day."
    This is still one of the biggest problems that the state's hospitals are
    facing right now, she adds. "We can't get people out of the hospitals
    right now. There's no back door, but the front door is wide open to the emergency room."
    There are patients who spend as many as 90 days in a hospital, she says,
    when the average hospital stay is three days. "So they've taken the
    space of 30 patients who needed care."
    This is why, more than two years into the pandemic, she says, people are
    still unable to schedule regular procedures, everything from knee and
    heart valve replacements, to cancer treatments.
    These procedures may be considered "elective," but postponing them can
    have major repercussions on a patient's health and quality of life, she
    adds.
    "You have a chance of falling, you are probably going to gain weight,"
    says Sauer. "You're going to lose flexibility. You know, all those
    things contribute to a potential decline, cardiac issues, respiratory
    issues." Which can in turn also increase someone' risk of serious
    illness from COVID.
    "I think that the toll of this delayed care is tremendous," she says.

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Tue Aug 9 23:27:10 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.ph/Y9xUT


    A 'staggering' number of people couldn't get care during the pandemic,
    poll finds

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    Updated August 8, 2022·11:59 AM ET
    Heard on Morning Edition
    RHITU CHATTERJEE
    Twitter

    LISTEN· 4:14
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    Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson was diagnosed with uterine fibroids in 2006 and >underwent surgery to remove a non-cancerous mass. When she started >experiencing symptoms again in 2020, she was unable to get an
    appointment with a gynecologist. Her experience was not uncommon,
    according to a new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
    the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
    Nicole Buchanan for NPR
    When the pandemic started, Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson knew she had a small >growth inside her uterus. She was first diagnosed with uterine fibroids
    back in 2006 and had been able to have the non-cancerous mass removed
    through outpatient laser surgery. Over the years, she'd also been able
    to manage her symptoms with medication and changes in her lifestyle.
    But when those symptoms – a bloated belly, irregular periods, nausea – >returned in 2020, Kimbrough-Hilson was unable to get an appointment with
    a specialist.
    "March 27th came and everything got shut down," says Kimbrough-Hilson,
    47, of Stone Mountain, Georgia. "I wasn't at the tier of care that
    needed [immediate attention], because of all the precautions that had to
    be taken."
    But even after the lockdown in spring of 2020 was lifted,
    Kimbrough-Hilson, a mother of five who works in the health insurance >industry, was unable to see a gynecologist.
    She left message after message with providers. But her calls went
    unreturned, or providers were booked for months at end. "I couldn't get
    the appointments," she says. "I couldn't follow up."
    These days, her belly is swollen, and she says she often feels fatigued
    and nauseous: "It makes me want to throw up a lot."
    She also struggled to get appointments for other members of her family.
    Her 14-year-old daughter underwent brain surgery before the pandemic,
    but then couldn't get follow-up appointments until recently. >Kimbrough-Hilson's family's experience isn't uncommon, according to a
    new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H.
    Chan School of Public Health.
    Among households that had a serious illness in the past year, one in
    five respondents said they had trouble accessing care during the pandemic. >That's a "staggering" number of people unable to access care, says Mary >Findling, the assistant director of the Harvard Opinion Research
    Program. "From a health and a good care standpoint, that's just too high." >Other recent studies have found significant delays in cancer screenings,
    and disruptions in routine diabetes, pediatric and mental health care.
    While it's still early to know the long-term impacts on people's health, >researchers and physicians are concerned, especially as the disruptions >continue with the country's health care system struggling to bounce back
    from the pandemic.
    The new poll also found that disruptions in care hit some racial and
    ethnic groups harder. Among households where anyone had been seriously
    ill in the past year, 35% of American Indian and Alaska Native
    households and 24% of Black households had trouble accessing care for
    serious illness, compared with only 18% of White households.
    Among Black respondents who had seen a provider in the past year, 15%
    said they were disrespected, turned away, unfairly treated, or received
    poor treatment because of their race and ethnicity, compared with only
    3% of White respondents who said the same.
    "What's really sad is the racial gaps in health care between Black and
    White Americans has remained," says Findling. "And looking across a
    broad range of measures, it's better to be a White patient than a Black >patient in America today. And when you just stop and think about that,
    that's horrible."
    Health insurance wasn't a barrier to access
    The vast majority of people – across racial and ethnic groups – who >experienced delays in care reported having health insurance.
    "One thing it tells us is that just the provision of more health care >insurance is not going to plug some of these gaps and holes that we're
    seeing in terms of individuals getting more care," says Loren
    Saulsberry, a health policy researcher at the University of Chicago, who >worked closely with Findling on the poll.
    "There are broader issues at play here," says Findling, like the
    historic workforce shortages among health systems. "The pandemic
    continues and it's wreaking havoc on everyone."
    Saulsberry, who studies health disparities in vulnerable populations,
    says that the pandemic has exacerbated those disparities because of a
    range of barriers, including a person's zip code.
    For example, the state of Georgia, where Kimbrough-Hilson lives, has had
    one of the lowest numbers of OB-GYNs in the country for years. Now,
    she's having a harder time getting an appointment with one than ever before. >"I've been able to get my teeth done, my eyes checked," she says. "But I >can't get to women's health."
    She has a referral from her primary care provider, she says, but it's
    for a practice "30 to 40 miles away."
    Health systems too overwhelmed for routine care
    While the pandemic exacerbated disparities in care, it also overwhelmed
    the health care system, causing delays and disruptions across the board,
    says Cassie Sauer, CEO of the Washington State Hospital Association.
    And it's also taken a huge financial toll, says Dr. Arif Kamal, chief
    patient officer at the American Cancer Society. "Some of that is related
    to actually taking care of patients who are very complex, who have very >serious illnesses due to COVID-19," he says. "But also during that time
    there was also loss of revenue because other activities had to be
    stopped, for example, elective surgeries."
    As a result, preventive services and early detection activities – not
    the "highest margin activities" for health systems – have taken a back
    seat, he adds.
    "Over the last two years we estimate about 6 million women, for example,
    have missed routine cancer screening," says Kamal. That includes missed >mammograms for breast cancer detection, and Pap smears to check for
    cervical cancer.
    Kamal is concerned that in a year or two, providers will start to detect >cancers at later stages because of missed screenings, which makes them
    harder to treat or cure.
    In the meantime, health systems are continuing to feel the repercussions
    of the pandemic, causing continuing delays in what was once routine care. >Sauer has experienced this at work and in her personal life.
    "In my own family, we have struggled to get access to health care for my
    kids and my parents," says Sauer.
    Her 80-year-old father, who has Parkinson's disease, had a fall over the >winter holidays and was hospitalized. "I was with him, caring for him in
    the hospital. My mom had COVID at the time, so she wasn't able to be
    there," she says. "And I couldn't figure out how to get him out of the >hospital."
    He needed to go to a skilled nursing facility, but she couldn't get him
    into one. "I found two nursing homes that seemed like good fits," says
    Sauer. "And they both shut down because they had COVID outbreaks the
    same day."
    This is still one of the biggest problems that the state's hospitals are >facing right now, she adds. "We can't get people out of the hospitals
    right now. There's no back door, but the front door is wide open to the >emergency room."
    There are patients who spend as many as 90 days in a hospital, she says,
    when the average hospital stay is three days. "So they've taken the
    space of 30 patients who needed care."
    This is why, more than two years into the pandemic, she says, people are >still unable to schedule regular procedures, everything from knee and
    heart valve replacements, to cancer treatments.
    These procedures may be considered "elective," but postponing them can
    have major repercussions on a patient's health and quality of life, she
    adds.
    "You have a chance of falling, you are probably going to gain weight,"
    says Sauer. "You're going to lose flexibility. You know, all those
    things contribute to a potential decline, cardiac issues, respiratory >issues." Which can in turn also increase someone' risk of serious
    illness from COVID.
    "I think that the toll of this delayed care is tremendous," she says.

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?









    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to HeartDoc Andrew on Wed Aug 10 07:48:06 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    HeartDoc Andrew wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.ph/Y9xUT


    A 'staggering' number of people couldn't get care during the pandemic,
    poll finds

    Facebook

    Twitter

    Flipboard

    Email
    Updated August 8, 2022·11:59 AM ET
    Heard on Morning Edition
    RHITU CHATTERJEE
    Twitter

    LISTEN· 4:14
    4-Minute Listen

    Add toPLAYLIST
    Download

    Embed
    Transcript

    Enlarge this image
    Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson was diagnosed with uterine fibroids in 2006 and
    underwent surgery to remove a non-cancerous mass. When she started
    experiencing symptoms again in 2020, she was unable to get an
    appointment with a gynecologist. Her experience was not uncommon,
    according to a new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
    the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
    Nicole Buchanan for NPR
    When the pandemic started, Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson knew she had a small
    growth inside her uterus. She was first diagnosed with uterine fibroids
    back in 2006 and had been able to have the non-cancerous mass removed
    through outpatient laser surgery. Over the years, she'd also been able
    to manage her symptoms with medication and changes in her lifestyle.
    But when those symptoms – a bloated belly, irregular periods, nausea – >> returned in 2020, Kimbrough-Hilson was unable to get an appointment with
    a specialist.
    "March 27th came and everything got shut down," says Kimbrough-Hilson,
    47, of Stone Mountain, Georgia. "I wasn't at the tier of care that
    needed [immediate attention], because of all the precautions that had to
    be taken."
    But even after the lockdown in spring of 2020 was lifted,
    Kimbrough-Hilson, a mother of five who works in the health insurance
    industry, was unable to see a gynecologist.
    She left message after message with providers. But her calls went
    unreturned, or providers were booked for months at end. "I couldn't get
    the appointments," she says. "I couldn't follow up."
    These days, her belly is swollen, and she says she often feels fatigued
    and nauseous: "It makes me want to throw up a lot."
    She also struggled to get appointments for other members of her family.
    Her 14-year-old daughter underwent brain surgery before the pandemic,
    but then couldn't get follow-up appointments until recently.
    Kimbrough-Hilson's family's experience isn't uncommon, according to a
    new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H.
    Chan School of Public Health.
    Among households that had a serious illness in the past year, one in
    five respondents said they had trouble accessing care during the pandemic. >> That's a "staggering" number of people unable to access care, says Mary
    Findling, the assistant director of the Harvard Opinion Research
    Program. "From a health and a good care standpoint, that's just too high." >> Other recent studies have found significant delays in cancer screenings,
    and disruptions in routine diabetes, pediatric and mental health care.
    While it's still early to know the long-term impacts on people's health,
    researchers and physicians are concerned, especially as the disruptions
    continue with the country's health care system struggling to bounce back >>from the pandemic.
    The new poll also found that disruptions in care hit some racial and
    ethnic groups harder. Among households where anyone had been seriously
    ill in the past year, 35% of American Indian and Alaska Native
    households and 24% of Black households had trouble accessing care for
    serious illness, compared with only 18% of White households.
    Among Black respondents who had seen a provider in the past year, 15%
    said they were disrespected, turned away, unfairly treated, or received
    poor treatment because of their race and ethnicity, compared with only
    3% of White respondents who said the same.
    "What's really sad is the racial gaps in health care between Black and
    White Americans has remained," says Findling. "And looking across a
    broad range of measures, it's better to be a White patient than a Black
    patient in America today. And when you just stop and think about that,
    that's horrible."
    Health insurance wasn't a barrier to access
    The vast majority of people – across racial and ethnic groups – who
    experienced delays in care reported having health insurance.
    "One thing it tells us is that just the provision of more health care
    insurance is not going to plug some of these gaps and holes that we're
    seeing in terms of individuals getting more care," says Loren
    Saulsberry, a health policy researcher at the University of Chicago, who
    worked closely with Findling on the poll.
    "There are broader issues at play here," says Findling, like the
    historic workforce shortages among health systems. "The pandemic
    continues and it's wreaking havoc on everyone."
    Saulsberry, who studies health disparities in vulnerable populations,
    says that the pandemic has exacerbated those disparities because of a
    range of barriers, including a person's zip code.
    For example, the state of Georgia, where Kimbrough-Hilson lives, has had
    one of the lowest numbers of OB-GYNs in the country for years. Now,
    she's having a harder time getting an appointment with one than ever before. >> "I've been able to get my teeth done, my eyes checked," she says. "But I
    can't get to women's health."
    She has a referral from her primary care provider, she says, but it's
    for a practice "30 to 40 miles away."
    Health systems too overwhelmed for routine care
    While the pandemic exacerbated disparities in care, it also overwhelmed
    the health care system, causing delays and disruptions across the board,
    says Cassie Sauer, CEO of the Washington State Hospital Association.
    And it's also taken a huge financial toll, says Dr. Arif Kamal, chief
    patient officer at the American Cancer Society. "Some of that is related
    to actually taking care of patients who are very complex, who have very
    serious illnesses due to COVID-19," he says. "But also during that time
    there was also loss of revenue because other activities had to be
    stopped, for example, elective surgeries."
    As a result, preventive services and early detection activities – not
    the "highest margin activities" for health systems – have taken a back
    seat, he adds.
    "Over the last two years we estimate about 6 million women, for example,
    have missed routine cancer screening," says Kamal. That includes missed
    mammograms for breast cancer detection, and Pap smears to check for
    cervical cancer.
    Kamal is concerned that in a year or two, providers will start to detect
    cancers at later stages because of missed screenings, which makes them
    harder to treat or cure.
    In the meantime, health systems are continuing to feel the repercussions
    of the pandemic, causing continuing delays in what was once routine care.
    Sauer has experienced this at work and in her personal life.
    "In my own family, we have struggled to get access to health care for my
    kids and my parents," says Sauer.
    Her 80-year-old father, who has Parkinson's disease, had a fall over the
    winter holidays and was hospitalized. "I was with him, caring for him in
    the hospital. My mom had COVID at the time, so she wasn't able to be
    there," she says. "And I couldn't figure out how to get him out of the
    hospital."
    He needed to go to a skilled nursing facility, but she couldn't get him
    into one. "I found two nursing homes that seemed like good fits," says
    Sauer. "And they both shut down because they had COVID outbreaks the
    same day."
    This is still one of the biggest problems that the state's hospitals are
    facing right now, she adds. "We can't get people out of the hospitals
    right now. There's no back door, but the front door is wide open to the
    emergency room."
    There are patients who spend as many as 90 days in a hospital, she says,
    when the average hospital stay is three days. "So they've taken the
    space of 30 patients who needed care."
    This is why, more than two years into the pandemic, she says, people are
    still unable to schedule regular procedures, everything from knee and
    heart valve replacements, to cancer treatments.
    These procedures may be considered "elective," but postponing them can
    have major repercussions on a patient's health and quality of life, she
    adds.
    "You have a chance of falling, you are probably going to gain weight,"
    says Sauer. "You're going to lose flexibility. You know, all those
    things contribute to a potential decline, cardiac issues, respiratory
    issues." Which can in turn also increase someone' risk of serious
    illness from COVID.
    "I think that the toll of this delayed care is tremendous," she says.

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?

    I am wonderfully hungry!


    Michael

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Wed Aug 10 11:56:19 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Michael Ejercito wrote:
    HeartDoc Andrew, in the Holy Spirit, boldly wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.ph/Y9xUT


    A 'staggering' number of people couldn't get care during the pandemic,
    poll finds

    Facebook

    Twitter

    Flipboard

    Email
    Updated August 8, 2022·11:59 AM ET
    Heard on Morning Edition
    RHITU CHATTERJEE
    Twitter

    LISTEN· 4:14
    4-Minute Listen

    Add toPLAYLIST
    Download

    Embed
    Transcript

    Enlarge this image
    Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson was diagnosed with uterine fibroids in 2006 and
    underwent surgery to remove a non-cancerous mass. When she started
    experiencing symptoms again in 2020, she was unable to get an
    appointment with a gynecologist. Her experience was not uncommon,
    according to a new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
    the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
    Nicole Buchanan for NPR
    When the pandemic started, Tomeka Kimbrough-Hilson knew she had a small
    growth inside her uterus. She was first diagnosed with uterine fibroids
    back in 2006 and had been able to have the non-cancerous mass removed
    through outpatient laser surgery. Over the years, she'd also been able
    to manage her symptoms with medication and changes in her lifestyle.
    But when those symptoms – a bloated belly, irregular periods, nausea –
    returned in 2020, Kimbrough-Hilson was unable to get an appointment with >>> a specialist.
    "March 27th came and everything got shut down," says Kimbrough-Hilson,
    47, of Stone Mountain, Georgia. "I wasn't at the tier of care that
    needed [immediate attention], because of all the precautions that had to >>> be taken."
    But even after the lockdown in spring of 2020 was lifted,
    Kimbrough-Hilson, a mother of five who works in the health insurance
    industry, was unable to see a gynecologist.
    She left message after message with providers. But her calls went
    unreturned, or providers were booked for months at end. "I couldn't get
    the appointments," she says. "I couldn't follow up."
    These days, her belly is swollen, and she says she often feels fatigued
    and nauseous: "It makes me want to throw up a lot."
    She also struggled to get appointments for other members of her family.
    Her 14-year-old daughter underwent brain surgery before the pandemic,
    but then couldn't get follow-up appointments until recently.
    Kimbrough-Hilson's family's experience isn't uncommon, according to a
    new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. >>> Chan School of Public Health.
    Among households that had a serious illness in the past year, one in
    five respondents said they had trouble accessing care during the pandemic. >>> That's a "staggering" number of people unable to access care, says Mary
    Findling, the assistant director of the Harvard Opinion Research
    Program. "From a health and a good care standpoint, that's just too high." >>> Other recent studies have found significant delays in cancer screenings, >>> and disruptions in routine diabetes, pediatric and mental health care.
    While it's still early to know the long-term impacts on people's health, >>> researchers and physicians are concerned, especially as the disruptions
    continue with the country's health care system struggling to bounce back >>>from the pandemic.
    The new poll also found that disruptions in care hit some racial and
    ethnic groups harder. Among households where anyone had been seriously
    ill in the past year, 35% of American Indian and Alaska Native
    households and 24% of Black households had trouble accessing care for
    serious illness, compared with only 18% of White households.
    Among Black respondents who had seen a provider in the past year, 15%
    said they were disrespected, turned away, unfairly treated, or received
    poor treatment because of their race and ethnicity, compared with only
    3% of White respondents who said the same.
    "What's really sad is the racial gaps in health care between Black and
    White Americans has remained," says Findling. "And looking across a
    broad range of measures, it's better to be a White patient than a Black
    patient in America today. And when you just stop and think about that,
    that's horrible."
    Health insurance wasn't a barrier to access
    The vast majority of people – across racial and ethnic groups – who
    experienced delays in care reported having health insurance.
    "One thing it tells us is that just the provision of more health care
    insurance is not going to plug some of these gaps and holes that we're
    seeing in terms of individuals getting more care," says Loren
    Saulsberry, a health policy researcher at the University of Chicago, who >>> worked closely with Findling on the poll.
    "There are broader issues at play here," says Findling, like the
    historic workforce shortages among health systems. "The pandemic
    continues and it's wreaking havoc on everyone."
    Saulsberry, who studies health disparities in vulnerable populations,
    says that the pandemic has exacerbated those disparities because of a
    range of barriers, including a person's zip code.
    For example, the state of Georgia, where Kimbrough-Hilson lives, has had >>> one of the lowest numbers of OB-GYNs in the country for years. Now,
    she's having a harder time getting an appointment with one than ever before.
    "I've been able to get my teeth done, my eyes checked," she says. "But I >>> can't get to women's health."
    She has a referral from her primary care provider, she says, but it's
    for a practice "30 to 40 miles away."
    Health systems too overwhelmed for routine care
    While the pandemic exacerbated disparities in care, it also overwhelmed
    the health care system, causing delays and disruptions across the board, >>> says Cassie Sauer, CEO of the Washington State Hospital Association.
    And it's also taken a huge financial toll, says Dr. Arif Kamal, chief
    patient officer at the American Cancer Society. "Some of that is related >>> to actually taking care of patients who are very complex, who have very
    serious illnesses due to COVID-19," he says. "But also during that time
    there was also loss of revenue because other activities had to be
    stopped, for example, elective surgeries."
    As a result, preventive services and early detection activities – not
    the "highest margin activities" for health systems – have taken a back
    seat, he adds.
    "Over the last two years we estimate about 6 million women, for example, >>> have missed routine cancer screening," says Kamal. That includes missed
    mammograms for breast cancer detection, and Pap smears to check for
    cervical cancer.
    Kamal is concerned that in a year or two, providers will start to detect >>> cancers at later stages because of missed screenings, which makes them
    harder to treat or cure.
    In the meantime, health systems are continuing to feel the repercussions >>> of the pandemic, causing continuing delays in what was once routine care. >>> Sauer has experienced this at work and in her personal life.
    "In my own family, we have struggled to get access to health care for my >>> kids and my parents," says Sauer.
    Her 80-year-old father, who has Parkinson's disease, had a fall over the >>> winter holidays and was hospitalized. "I was with him, caring for him in >>> the hospital. My mom had COVID at the time, so she wasn't able to be
    there," she says. "And I couldn't figure out how to get him out of the
    hospital."
    He needed to go to a skilled nursing facility, but she couldn't get him
    into one. "I found two nursing homes that seemed like good fits," says
    Sauer. "And they both shut down because they had COVID outbreaks the
    same day."
    This is still one of the biggest problems that the state's hospitals are >>> facing right now, she adds. "We can't get people out of the hospitals
    right now. There's no back door, but the front door is wide open to the
    emergency room."
    There are patients who spend as many as 90 days in a hospital, she says, >>> when the average hospital stay is three days. "So they've taken the
    space of 30 patients who needed care."
    This is why, more than two years into the pandemic, she says, people are >>> still unable to schedule regular procedures, everything from knee and
    heart valve replacements, to cancer treatments.
    These procedures may be considered "elective," but postponing them can
    have major repercussions on a patient's health and quality of life, she
    adds.
    "You have a chance of falling, you are probably going to gain weight,"
    says Sauer. "You're going to lose flexibility. You know, all those
    things contribute to a potential decline, cardiac issues, respiratory
    issues." Which can in turn also increase someone' risk of serious
    illness from COVID.
    "I think that the toll of this delayed care is tremendous," she says.

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID
    vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?

    I am wonderfully hungry!

    While wonderfully hungry in the Holy Spirit, Who causes (Deuteronomy
    8:3) us to hunger, I note that you, Michael, are rapture ready (Luke
    17:37 means no COVID just as circling eagles don't have COVID) and
    pray (2 Chronicles 7:14) that our Everlasting (Isaiah 9:6) Father in
    Heaven continues to give us "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy Spirit
    (Galatians 5:22-23) so that we'd have much more of His Help to always
    say/write that we're "wonderfully hungry" in **all** ways including
    especially caring to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John 15:12
    as shown by http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest ) with all glory ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD (aka HaShem, Elohim, Abba, DEO), in
    the name (John 16:23) of LORD Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Amen.

    Laus DEO !

    Suggested further reading: https://groups.google.com/g/sci.med.cardiology/c/5EWtT4CwCOg/m/QjNF57xRBAAJ

    Shorter link:
    http://bit.ly/StatCOVID-19Test

    Be hungrier, which really is wonderfully healthier especially for
    diabetics and other heart disease patients:

    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrew touts hunger (Luke 6:21a) with all glory
    ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD, Who causes us to hunger
    (Deuteronomy 8:3) when He blesses us right now (Luke 6:21a) thereby
    removing the http://tinyurl.com/HeartVAT from around the heart

    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)