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[personal profile] den
I can hear again. About 2 weeks ago a lump of earwax deep in my right ear -- beyond cotton bud range -- pressed against the ear drum, dried and stuck hard. The doctor could not syringe it out without damaging my ear drum, so he gave me a script for various drops for infection, inflammation and to soften the wax. Every few days I went back to see if the lump would come out, but no-go.

I had to rely on my left ear for most of my hearing. Many years ago I had something explode off to my left, damaging my hearing on that side. I never realized how bad the damage was until I had to rely on my left ear for everything. It must have about 75% of the hearing my right ear usually has. So for the last two weeks I've heard the world as though I were wearing high density foam earplugs.

Today he syringed my ear and the lump came out. I could hear again! The 2 weeks of rest made everything seem louder than usual.

The five doctor visits were covered by Medicare, and the drops were all listed under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme**. Total cost = AU$30.00 I don't understand why people are afraid of socialized medicine.


**The Government was under great pressure from US drug companies to stop the PBS before the Aus/USA free trade agreement was signed

Date: 14 Nov 2008 03:09 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] weyrdbird.livejournal.com
I empathize about the impacted. I have learned to clean my ears before being immersed in anything as a result.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 03:32 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] targaff.livejournal.com
Mostly they're scared because they're ignorant, and too self-centred to see past "me me me".

Date: 14 Nov 2008 03:35 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bunyip.livejournal.com
I miss the health care system from Down Under... the US system is bogged down and tainted by the profit before patient ethos of the Health Insurance companies and drug companies.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 03:50 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hallan.livejournal.com
People are concerned about socialized medicine because of what they see happening with it in Canada. -LONG- waits, poor quality.

Hallan

Date: 14 Nov 2008 04:01 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] starcat-jewel.livejournal.com
People are afraid of it because of the aggressive PR campaign run by American insurance and pharmaceutical companies, the sole purpose of which is to convince us that under a single-payer plan (1) we won't be able to see our regular doctors, (2) we'll have to wait months or years for treatment of anything that isn't a life-threatening condition, and (3) we'll end up paying more for medical care, in some way that's never clearly defined. IOW, they're taking everything that people already despise about HMO plans and saying that a single-payer plan would be like that. And they keep saying it, loudly and repeatedly, using the Big Lie technique to convince people that "where there's smoke there must be fire".

Not to mention that "socialism" is a thoroughly demonized word in America; didn't you hear about the McCampaign's last desperate attempt to bring Obama down by repeatedly (and inaccurately) calling him a "socialist"? This is why I greatly prefer the term "single-payer plan" -- it dodges that bullet and is more accurately descriptive as well.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 04:59 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] torakiyoshi.livejournal.com
Because in some countries, socialized medicine means incompetent doctors and inadequate pharmaceuticals.

-=TK

Date: 14 Nov 2008 10:07 (UTC)
ext_74: Baron Samadai in cat form (Default)
From: [identity profile] siliconshaman.livejournal.com
Because to many Americans Socialist = Communist = bad. All that cold war crap still warps people's brains.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 12:26 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hafoc.livejournal.com
We're afraid of it because Our Betters have run huge propaganda campaigns to make us afraid of it.

Hades, I don't like the idea of socialized anything myself, but when we in the You Ninety States (thanks for that term, by the way) pay more per capita for health care than where it IS socialized, and more and more of us aren't even covered at all, it's kind of hard to argue that it wouldn't be an improvement.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 16:12 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ccdesan.livejournal.com
Yarg... I'll bet it felt good to get that out of there.

Date: 14 Nov 2008 22:48 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quen-elf.livejournal.com
Ugh. Glad you got it sorted.

I sometimes have problems with earwax too. I've only had to get it syringed once (that was when *both* ears were blocked, must have been about eight years ago now). Obviously, like you, the total cost for this was approximately zero.

Other times, I've used warm olive-oil drops and lying-for-a-long-time-in-the-bath which has cleared things up after a few days or weeks.

My hearing is about the same in both ears, but the thing that gets me is the loss of stereo sound which helps you to discriminate voices. If I temporarily lose hearing in one ear, I'd naively assumed it would just be the same but half as loud; it's not. Well, in quiet places like my home, it is; but in the supermarket for instance, all the background noise sounds MUCH louder and the checkout assistant's voice MUCH quieter. (Not that you usually need to talk to them, but you get the idea.)

The feeling when you finally get it back is so good, isn't it? :)

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