Posts Tagged ‘Service’

IHS Pharmacists – Indian Health Service – Beyond TDYs

May 31st, 2011

If you have worked with the Indian Health Service at some point in time, whether as a pharmacist or student completing a rotation, chances are that you will work with the IHS at another point in your career in some capacity down the road.

For pharmacists who are waiting for their Commissioned Corps call to active duty right now, an option available to you is working temporary pharmacist assignments through a pharmacist staffing agency that offers Indian Health Service assignments. This gives you the opportunity to work in the IHS setting without losing out on experience and making money, while waiting for your bureaucratic paperwork to come through.

If you are recently retired from the Indian Health Service and wanting to do some relief work, travel assignments can be a great way for you to stay connected with the IHS, make money to supplement your retirement, and work when you want to.

If you are currently working for a relief agency and working in the IHS setting, but want to have more desirable work environments and locations to choose from, do research on how you can get the opportunity to do IHS assignments in desirable settings.

If you have worked for the Indian Health Service at some point in time, whether as a pharmacist or had exposure as a JRCOSTEP or during a rotation, doing contract pharmacist work in between jobs or as a career can be options to consider. One IHS-experienced pharmacist, for example, was most recently working for the Veteran’s Affairs as a full-time clinical pharmacist. In between transitioning from the VA to her next job, she explored different parts of the country such as Alaska and Arizona and covered for IHS/tribal pharmacies, before settling in a permanent position. It offered her the opportunity to bridge her recent job with her next career move, by allowing her time to think about what she wanted to do. She was able to use her clinical knowledge while serving Native American patients, and make money in the interim. Other pharmacists step into temp pharmacist work with the Indian Health Service as an interim plan, but then eventually continue contracting for the flexibility and rewarding practice opportunity it offers.

When selecting a relief agency to connect you with Indian Health Service travel assignments, see if the company specializes in Indian Health Service and in pharmacy. Some companies offer temporary pharmacist opportunities, but do not offer a variety of IHS assignments to choose from. This means that they may not have as good connections that will result in options to choose from.

Find out how they select the IHS sites they work with. Some agencies will send relief pharmacists to work at any site that has a need, whether or not the work environment is desirable.

Also, ask the temporary pharmacist staffing company whether they have minimum length assignment requirements. Some companies require minimum of 13-week assignments with no flexibility. Others are open to you completing variable length assignments, accomodating your schedule needs.

Find out what the staffing company does to address what’s important to you and meet those needs of yours before, during, and after the assignment. This is where many relief agencies differ. Some make it a point to make you a priority. Others are focused on getting you to take any assignment they have an opening in, and may not give you the level of service you deserve.

The pharmacists who find the most joy working Indian Health Service travel assignments are ones who are adaptable, have an interest in Native American culture, and appreciate working in an ambulatory care setting in close collaboration with providers.

If you are either recently retired from Indian Health Service, are in the process of waiting for Commissioned Corps call to active duty, or have experience or interest working in the IHS setting as a relief pharmacist, do some research to find out options available to you.

Online Health Service Degree Programs in Psychology Now Widely Available

May 16th, 2011

Major advances in health services degree programs have shown us that mental health is as vital to a person’s wellbeing as treating maladies of the body.

Advances in health service education now allow students the opportunity to become involved in helping people achieve mental health and happiness by obtaining a psychology degree through online education.

The main focus of psychology is the study of the human brain and human behavior. And a degree in psychology will teach you how to properly analyze and help your clients while working at a career level appropriate for the type of degree you’ve earned.

An online associate’s health service degree program often involves learning medical terminology, studying human behavior, and developing patient communication skills. This is a preparatory degree for further study to become a clinical psychologist. It won’t allow you to treat patients, but it opens up opportunities in the business and research sectors of health services.

An online bachelor’s degree offers a deeper study into human behavior and addresses specific topics such as social work and case management. Plus, you’ll learn strong communication skills including sales and marketing. A bachelor’s degree will also help you obtain jobs that require understanding of human nature.

An online master’s degree in psychology focuses on social work and counseling. With your master’s degree you may choose to work in health services or use your expertise in business.

Many online schools now offer PhD programs to become a licensed psychologist as well. These programs involve studies of methodology and theory and meet the mandated patient interaction hours.

Whether you choose to go into clinical work, lab research, or work in the business sector after graduation, the opportunities are endless. Labor statistics also show that people with a psychology degree have a greater chance of being successfully self-employed over any other degree.

From a patient’s perspective – how the National Health Service actually works in practice

May 2nd, 2011

If you aren’t from the UK, it might be hard to imagine how the system actually works. Do you just rock up at any doctor or hospital when you feel like it? What are the criteria? What’s it like being an NHS patient?

The “patient’s perspective” in question is mine – I was born and brought up in London, have parents, sisters, a brother, a partner and a 3 year old son who are all ordinarily resident in the UK and therefore NHS patients.

This article looks at how the National Health Service really works in the United Kingdom – specifically, in England. The NHS is split into four parts, for England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. The differences aren’t great, but there are some minor variations.

This hub follows on from two others, the first is called, The National Health Service in the UK: who pays, and who is covered, and details how the NHS was founded in 1948, who is covered by the system, and how much it all costs.

The second, What the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK covers, and what costs patients extra is about what patients pay for medical care, dentistry, and optician’s treatment, under the NHS.
The NAtional Health Service logo

* NHS Choices Homepage – Your health, your choices
The front page for the main National Health Service website

See all 9 photos
A baby about to have a developmental check on the NHS
Accessing the NHS system – the General Pracitioner

Everyone with a right to National Health Service coverage gets an NHS number. This is allocated to you at birth (if you are born in the UK) or when you take up permanent, lawful residence here, if that comes later.

This number follows you around from doctor to hospital, and keeps your records together. A person is also allocated a National Health Service Card, but these aren’t terribly important – I can’t remember when I last needed mine, but it can’t have been for a while as it’s still in my mother’s “important documents” file at my parents’ home.

The General Practitioner is the gateway to the NHS’ medical system. In order to access treatment (other than emergency treatment) you need to be registered with a GP’s surgery. There are a lot of them, and they generally cover a small geographic area. An individual patient in a densely-populated area might have the option of registering at several different surgeries.

A GP’s surgery is, usually, several doctors practising together. My GP’s clinic has 8 GPs based there.

Becoming a GP takes some time – after finishing medical education, a doctor works in a hospital for a number of years before doing GP training.
When I see an NHS GP, and making appointments

Most of the time, I’m perfectly healthy when I visit the GP. Sometimes it might be for booster injections for things such a tetanus or polio.

There are also regularly-scheduled screening programmes, such as smear tests (every 3 years), and breast mammograms for older women, for example. Every 3 months, in order to renew a (free) contraceptive prescription, I need to have my blood pressure and weight checked.

With routine appointments such as these, I usually book them a week or two ahead, as then I can choose exactly what time of day will suit me best, and book to see a particular GP if that matters (which it doesn’t, to me, but it matters a lot for some people). My GP’s surgery has appointments from 8.30am to 7.30pm on weekdays, and on Saturday mornings, for routine matters.

If I am unwell, with (say) an ear infection, or a nasty cough, I obviously don’t make an appointment weeks ahead. Instead, I telephone the surgery in the morning, from 8.30am, and a doctor then rings me back to see what is wrong, and if necessary to book an appointment for me that day. With these last-minute appointments, there is much less choice of exact time and which doctors are available.
A National Health Service (NHS) General Practitioner in Holborn, London WC1
Out of hours GP services

When the surgery is closed, there is a 24 hour, 7 day a week number to contact the on-call GP. Consultations can be made over the phone, and the GP might make an out-of-hours house call, or direct you to go to Accident and Emergency at the hospital (also known as Casualty), or might suggest you go the surgery the following day.

I’ve only had to ring the out-of-hours number once, when my darling then two-year-old son proved that childproof caps on medicine bottles are not childproof, and took a big swig of Calpol (paracetamol liquid for babies). I rang the GP, who looked up toxicity and doses, then rang me back and told me that the dose wasn’t something to worry about.
St. Thomas’ NHS hospital central London
King’s College Hospital, an NHS hosptial in south London
Referral to a hospital doctor or clinic

If the GP thinks it is necessary, he can either refer you to a specific specialist doctor at the hospital, or send you to a clinic at the hospital. You can’t go directly to a specialist hospital doctor on the National Health Service, the GP has to refer you.

Depending on what type of problem it is, you will either be told to go home and await an appointment letter, or given a letter there and then and sent off to the relevant clinic with it.

My son suffered from horrible reflux as a newborn baby, and when we took him to the GP when he was about 5 weeks old, the GP reckoned he was dehydrated. We were sent to a paediatric clinic at the nearest tertiary-level hospital, where Isaac was seen firstly by a junior doctor, then a consultant (the most senior level) and as a result of those examinations, he was admitted to the paediatric ward for 3 days to be put on a drip and given various ultrasound scans, blood tests, and other nasty procedures.

The children’s wards have small rooms attached, so that a parent or guardian can sleep in the hospital overnight and be near the child.

Once referred to a specialist, you might well get further appointments and tests, if necessary, made directly with the hospital. You don’t need to be referred each time. So Isaac saw a paediatrician regularly at the hospital until he was over the worst of the reflux, at which point he was discharged back to the GP’s care.

Any notes, tests, examinations and so forth are copied to the GP, so your medical file at the GP is a complete health history.
A newborn baby (my son) in a cot in an National Health Service hospital maternity and neo-natal ward
Newborn baby (12 hours old) with his proud grandmother in the same ward

* Choosing where to access care after the birth
National Health Service guide to care for mothers and newborn babies

Midwives, ante-natal care and maternity

How this is organised will depend on the Local Health Authority. In a lot of cases, community midwives (those who do routine pre and post pregnancy care) are based at a GP’s surgery. In other cases, they hold a separate clinic several days a week.

Pregnancy care is organised through the midwife. It consists of a long (2-3 hour) booking-in appointment early in pregnancy, where health histories of the woman, her partner, and her close family are taken, blood tests organised, height and weight checked, and a care plan devised.

After that, you see a midwife approximately 10 times through the pregnancy, more frequently later on, to check the baby’s movement, heart-beat and size, the mother’s general health, and to check the mother’s blood pressure, sugar and protein levels. At any time, the midwife can refer a woman to the ante-natal unit at the hospital, if she thinks that is necessary.

In addition, in a normal, healthy pregnancy, there are ultrasound scans at about 12 and 20 weeks, and an appointment with the doctor at the ante-natal clinic at about 30 weeks. If the mother has health or pregnancy problems, she will spend a lot more time with the midwife and the ante-natal clinic.

The National Health Service also runs ante-natal classes, and tours of the maternity and neo-natal wards, so that the mother can choose between natural childbirth (midwife-led care) and more medical childbirth (doctor-led care) and which hospital she wants to give birth in.

It’s also possible to have an NHS home birth, where two midwives come to the mother’s home when she is in labour.

My son and I were discharged from hospital when he was 3 days old. A community midwife visited us at home every day for a week, then every other day for another week.
Great Ormand Street Hospital for Sick Children, a National Health Service hospital in London WC1. This shows the main building.
Great Ormand Street Hospital ambulance entrance
Health visitors

Each child is assigned to a Health Visitor, or team of health visitors, from birth.

The first visit at least (and often subsequent ones, it depends on the way the clinic runs) are at the baby’s home, when he is a few days old.

health visitors run clinics, and a mother can attend with her baby or child as often as she wants.

health visitors measure and weigh children and babies, and give advice on breast feeding, bottle feeding, sleeping, tantrums, behaviour, all the rest of it, as and when the mother requests it.

The health visitors’ clinic is also where a baby and child has regular developmental checks with a paediatrician, checking all sorts of things from fine motor movement through hearing to speech, as appropriate at different ages.

Isaac was offered developmental checks at 6 weeks, 3, 6, 9, 12, and 18 months, and 2 and 3 years old. He has another upcoming at 4 years old.
Other health professionals

There are lots of other health professionals, often attached to GP’s surgeries, who deal with people in the community. They include Community Psychiatric Nurses, who offer support to the mentally ill, and District Nurses, who do home visits for things such as changing dressings.

Overview on Chinese Health Service Industry 2010

May 1st, 2011

www.cri-report.com – Chinese health and health management industries are now in the initial stage. Over the 30 years since the reform and opening up, the development of Chinese health and health management industries falls behind the rapid development of the national economy. Thus, the health and health management industries cannot adapt to the situation and requirements of the current development of Chinese economy and society. Though Chinese GDP increases rapidly and the governmental investment in the medical & health sector rises progressively, the problem of difficulty and high cost of getting medical services has not been solved yet.

As one of the sub industries of the health service industry, Chinese health articles industry has low development level. It now stays at the initial stage of development. “Except contraceptive medicines and devices, all other products and services have poor quality and incomplete variety.” said Vincent Ho, analyst of China Research and Intelligence. The industrial system from production to sales has not been formed yet. According to the recent research report “Research Report on Chinese Health Service Industry 2010-2011″, in 2009, the scale of Chinese health articles market was about CNY 36 billion, 15.4% increase over 2009.

Chart Scale of Chinese Health Articles Market, 2005-2009

Operations of other sectors such as hospitals, health insurance, fitness and entertainment, etc. are also analyzed in this report.

Due to the disparity in the market maturity level and policy restriction, the investment focus of Chinese market differs sharply from that of European and North American markets in the four major industrial clusters. The investment in Chinese health industry concentrates in the health service, especially in the circulation and consumption segments. In Chinese healthcare market, the heath management service industry focusing on individualized health service is in the initial period of formation, assuming great development space and investment opportunities.

Source:

Research Report on Chinese Health Service Industry 2010-2011

http://www.cri-report.com/reportdetail.asp?id=452

http://www.marketinfoguide.com/marketinfoguide/Html/?101634409.html

Pay service tax for Health services!!!

March 13th, 2011

Pay service tax for Health services!!!

Prepared By:

CA Pradeep Jain,

CA Preeti Parihar and

CA Rajani Thanvi

 

In the chain of imposition of duty on new services the levy on hospitals has also been added in the budget 2010-11. Although the rate of service tax is kept constant at 10% but in order to increase indirect tax revenues the Hon’ble Finance Minister has proposed a new levy for hospitals. In his budget speech he expressed that the hospitals having 25 or more beds with centralized air-conditioner system is proposed to be taxed under service tax system.

Earlier levy: – Before this proposal the services provided by hospitals, nursing home or multi-specialty clinic are taxable if the same is provided to-

 

A. an employee of any business entity, in relation to health check-up or preventive care, where the payment for such check-up or preventive care is made by such business entity directly to such hospital, nursing home or multi-specialty clinic; or

 

B.  to a person covered by health insurance scheme, for any health check-up or treatment, where the payment for such health check-up or treatment is made by the insurance company directly to such hospital, nursing home or multi-specialty clinic;

 

As there was levy only on the services for which value of service is received either from the insurance company or from the employer in case of treatment for an employee. In that situation a person, who is going to hospital to get benefits for his health, has not to pay a single penny for his health treatments for service tax.

New proposal :-But this is now proposed to be amended in this budget. For this purpose the clause no. zzzzo of sub section 105 of section 65 of Finance Act, 1994 is proposed to be replaced as follows:-

for sub-clause (zzzzo) the following sub-clause shall be substituted namely:-

“(zzzzo) to any person,-

(i) by a clinical establishment; or

(ii) by a doctor, not being an employee of a clinical establishment, who provides services from such premises for diagnosis, treatment or care for illness, disease, injury, deformity, abnormality or pregnancy in any system of medicine.”;

 

To explain the meaning of clinical establishment used in above sub clause sub section 25a of section 65 is also intended to be amended in following manner:-

(25a) “clinical establishment” mean

(i) a hospital, maternity home, nursing home, dispensary, clinic, sanatorium or an institution, by whatever name called, owned, established, administered or managed by any person or body of persons, whether incorporated or not, having in its establishment the facility of central air-conditioning either in whole or in part of its premises and having more than twenty-five beds for in-patient treatment at any time during the financial year, offering services for diagnosis, treatment or care for illness, disease, injury, deformity, abnormality or pregnancy in any system of medicine; or

(ii) an entity owned, established, administered or managed by any person or body of persons, whether incorporated or not, either as an independent entity or as a part of any clinical establishment referred to in sub-clause (v), which carries out diagnosis of diseases through pathological, bacteriological, genetic, radiological, chemical, biological investigations or other diagnostic or investigative services with the aid of laboratory or other medical equipment,

but does not include an establishment, owned or controlled by-

(a) the Government; or

 

(b) a local authority;

 

From the above definition all the hospitals will be covered under the tax regime. Although the government hospitals or the hospitals owned or controlled by a local authority has been kept away from this levy. But for all other hospitals it will be required to charge service tax on the bills of services provided by them.

Service Tax rate will be 5%

 

In the budget speech the hon’ble finance minister also expressed for the abatement of 50% in service tax rate. Hence the service tax will be chargeable on services provided by hospitals at the rate of 5%. In the TRU Letter viz. D.O.F. No. 334/3/2011-TRU dt. 28.02.2011 following para is included:-

6.4 Finance Minister has announced 50% exemption from the value of this service. The exemption notification will be issued when the new levy is enacted.

The Issues: -

1. The service tax is levied if there are more than 25 beds or centralized air conditioning provided during any part of the whole year. If a hospital expands his business in the month of March then he has to pay the service tax for the whole year. This will not be intention of the Government and it should be amended.
2. The doctors will also be registered and pay the service tax. They will charge from hospital. The hospital will take the cenvat credit. He will also charge service tax from the client. But he will pay the differential amount. In nutshell, the Government will get the same service tax. The doctor should be exempted. The hospital will be paying the same tax to Government. Hence, there is no need to do such exercise and covering so many people.
3. Further, tax paid by diagnostic centers is charged form clients and not from hospitals. Hence the credit of the same is not available to Hospitals.
4. There is lot of opposition on this levy and even the Revenue secretary has promised to review the same. It is likely that this levy will be rolled back.
5. The Government has exempted Government hospitals from this levy but they will be clubbed in future in the name of fair competition as is being done in commercial coaching and training centre. The universities giving degrees has also to pay tax if they are running coaching centers. They were exempted earlier. This is also done for unauthorized service station in name of fair competition in this budget.

 

From this letter it seems that the government initially intended to include the hospitals under tax net by levying lesser rate of service tax but in future it may be raised. So now one has to pay tax even for services taken for his/her health also.

 

************

 

Research Report on Chinese Health Service Industry, 2010-2011

February 12th, 2011

(CRI-Shanghai, http://www.shcri.com/reportdetail.asp?id=452 )Health service is not only a concept, but also a method, a complete and thorough service procedure. It intends to help patients and healthy groups better restore, maintain and promote their health, save expenditures and reduce the medical expenses effectively.   

In China, the health service covers health maintenance, nursing sub-health state, treatment of diseases, etc. When the standards of living of Chinese people were much lower, the health service mainly referred to the treatment of diseases. However, with the improvement in the standards of living, health maintenance, regulation in sub-health state and disease regulation occupy an increasingly large part in the health service, and their market demand enjoys continuous growth.

With the development of Chinese economy, the concept of health management is gradually recognized by the Chinese. Accordingly, the health service market is also enlarged. Various special or comprehensive health service chain institutions have emerged, such as those for eye test, dental examination, women physical examination, foot massage and hair nourishing. The health management advocates the transfer from passive health treatment to positive health management. The demand for health service is shifting from simple medical care to disease prevention, healthcare and health promotion. Thus, the health examination, consultation, maintenance and promotion, etc. are included in the health service industry.   

Chinese health service industry encompasses medical treatment, physical examination, health insurance and some other sub-industries. Presently, except medical treatment, all other sub-industries are in the start-up stage in China.

Before 2003, the physical examination in China was limited to the compulsory special physical examination for the purpose of obtaining employment and pursuing education, etc. The implementation units were nonprofit medical institutions designated by the government. After the outbreak of SARS, the population for physical examination in China acquires high-speed growth. People begin to pay more attention to their health. In 2009, the market scale of Chinese physical examination was about CNY 29 billion. The new-type physical examination is a series of healthy services. It not only enables consumers to understand their health conditions, but also integrates health examination, consultation and promotion. This has brought about many new concepts to the public health and medical industries.  

In 2009, there were over 1,500 commercial health insurance products in China. Meanwhile, the premium of Chinese commercial health insurance totaled CNY 57.40 billion. Among that, the premium was CNY 25.61 billion from the sickness insurance and CNY 28.98 billion from the medical insurance, rising by 11% YOY and 23.6% YOY separately.

In 2009, the population aged over 60 accounted for 12.5% in the total population in China and the proportion is still rising. When Chinese resident income is increasing, the environmental pollution is exacerbated and the population aging rate is also in continuous growth. Given this, Chinese people will pay growing attention to their health. Thus, there is a promising prospect for Chinese health service industry. 

Through this report, readers can acquire more information:
-Status quo of Chinese health service industry
-Market competition in Chinese health service industry
-Factors affecting the development of Chinese health service industry
-Prediction on development tendency of Chinese health service industry
-Investment opportunities in Chinese health service industry

Following persons are recommended to buy this report:
-Personnel in the health service industry
-Personnel in the medical industry
-Investors concerning Chinese health service industry
-Research institutes concerning Chinese health service industry
-Others concerning Chinese health service industry

Fund Raising for young people Sexual Health Service Charity

February 6th, 2011

Dear friends,

I am passionate about improving quality of care and access to sexual health services for young people.

I am particularly keen to promote a youth led service thus improving access to young people most affected by sexual health, and to deliver the services as preferred to vulnerable young people.

I believe in MyHealthnet and that is why I am raising money for their services delivered through a range activities via their drop in Health Bus.

MyHealthnet Youth Health Bus Appeal

The bus will enable volunteers to visits all local communities in need to deliver their services for the reasons below.

Sexually transmitted infection (STI), AIDS and HIV diagnosis, and  underage pregnancy in young people have continued to rise especially vulnerable young people considered at risk and difficult to reach group.  In order to address this problem, MyHealthnet provide sexual, reproductive and psychosexual health advice, education and counselling service and training to young people under 25 years old.  Most young people access us during outreach service, conference, seminars and by referrals.  Mode of contact varies between phone, text and email contact. 

When you sponsor our service, your donations will go towards a health bus, website development and services.  visit the websitesite at aaa

The use of a health bus will help to facilitate access to services and thus reduce the gaps in statutory services and bridge gaps between all services.

Our normal services already cover areas in Lambeth and Southwark and Lewisham the rest of South London to London SE boundaries as possible.  With the health bus, we are able to rotate between boroughs faster.  

You will be sponsoring specific sexual health need and locality based service and to support other youth organisations including substance misuse, immunisation and the statutory services.  With your sponsorship, the youth health bus will enable expansion of outreach service areas to reach more young people desperately needing sexual health promotion, advice and support. 

With your sponsorship, we will be able to cover more communities weekly and provide clinical services privately and confidentially and to carry much needed equipments. 

With your help we can work with many more young people in the following areas: 

•             STIs and HIV / AIDS – Ending Stigma and Discrimination and improve uptake.

•             Close the Gap between Sexual health and Mental health services

•             Sex Trafficking – provide advice on the social and community health impact

•             Homeless service – Providing services to young people in homeless units etc…

Your donation could also fund the Youth Health Bus so hard to reach group and other young people living with disability can access sexual health services effectively within the community thus reducing the transmission of sexually transmitted infection and HIV. 

Patient Information Leaflet

Work shop on ‘Delaying Age of First Sexual Intercourse. 

•             Communicating with parents; Promoting self esteem and promote safe sex etc. 

•             You can request for information on the proposed project. 

These topics are discussed at our year conference, where we educate and inform practitioners from various setting, service users, providers and commissioners on the impact of ignoring these issues at all levels.   Information about our services and previous conference is attached to aid you in your decision making about our organisation.

Please help us by encouraging donation from your staff direct from their pay packet of loose change or specified amount to be donated from their salaries every month to MyHealthnet.  Also by pledging to fund any of our events, overheads and capital investment for our off street outreach centre.

Your donation could also help develop our website and other areas of service.

Donation in any form, currency, awards etc., visit www.myhealthnet.org.uk

Fundraisers.

THANK YOU.

New York State Health Service Corps Scholarship

November 29th, 2010

New York State Health Service Corps Scholarship can be applied by the residents of New York or the students those who are enrolled in schools that are located in New York. The award money given through this scholarship program is ,000 and the study area is pharmacy. If you are a student interested to opt for a career related to pharmacy, you can find and apply for the scholarship program as early as possible. There is tough competition in the application process of any scholarship that you wish to apply.

 

The number of applicants is increasing year after year and so you need to take caution in each step you take at the time of applying for the scholarship program. The application process is the most important part of any scholarship program and there are lots of things in your hand that can decide whether or not you will win the award money. First, go through the requirements and eligibility criteria and match them with your qualifications and abilities. If they are satisfactory, go ahead and apply for that particular program. Recheck your filled out application form so that there is no silly mistake that makes your application get rejected.

 

The New York State Health Service Corps Scholarship is sponsored by Albany College of Pharmacy of Union University. The applicant must be enrolled with two years of the degree course and must be ready to get employed with the agency that is going to sponsor his education. If you agree to this condition, you can apply for the financial assistance available. Do not forget to find out the main intention of the sponsor. Here, it is obvious that they need good and reliable employees that are excellent and steadfast.

 

If you do not want to search for employment after the completion of your studies and want to be assured of service, this could be the best opportunity for you. You will not only receive the money to complete your education, your employment is also secured after the completion of your studies. Visit the official website and gather all information regarding New York State Health Service Corps Scholarship program and meet the expectations of the sponsor.

Ireland: a Modern Country With a Third World Health Service

November 7th, 2010

This is the story of ‘Rosie” who had to wait seven months, because of a dire Irish Health Service, to see a consultant for bowel cancer.

This brave ladies’ real name was Susie Long and she passed away in October 2007…she really never had a chance because she didn’t have Health Insurance. She left behind two teenage children.

Below is her letter to our national broadcaster RTE…Joe Duffy’s Liveline Program.

=========================================

Dear Joe,

Today I had my 12th session of chemo. I got to talking to the partner of a man who was also getting chemo. She told me that when her partner’s GP requested a colonoscopy for him he was put on the waiting list. She then phoned the hospital and told them he had private health insurance and he was seen three days later. He had bowel cancer that was advanced, but had not broken through the bowel wall and spread to other organs. She said the tumour was the size of a fist and what made him go to the doctor (apart from her nagging) was he started to lose weight rapidly. Thank goodness they got it in time and he’s going to recover.

I then came home, flicked on the tv and got into bed. The first ad on the tv was from the government telling people that bowel cancer can kill, but not if caught in time. If Bertie Ahern or Mary Harney or Michael McDowell were within reach I would have killed them. Literally. I’m not joking.

I don’t have private health insurance. It’s a long story, so I’ll start at the beginning.

I’ve suffered from digestive complaints for years. It started out with being unable to eat in the mornings or when my stomach felt tense. I’d feel too queasy. Then I got heartburn after just about everything I ate. I lived on Rennies. Then, in 2005, I got a lot of diahrea and after a few months it became constant and blood accompanied some of my bowel movements. I went to my GP clinic in the Summer of 2005. Probably about 2 months after the blood started appearing. I look back now and feel stupid for delaying for 2 months, but I wasn’t sure if the blood was caused by piles, which my late mother suffered from. I was 39 years old and had read in books and heard a doctor say on tv that bowel cancer doesn’t affect people under 50. Anyway, my normal GP was on holiday, but I saw his colleague, and she immediately sent a letter to the local hospital requesting a sonogram and a colonoscopy. Within weeks I was called for a sonogram and was diagnosed with a gallstones. That explained the queasiness and the heartburn. I expected to soon be called for the colonoscopy. I waited through the autumn, then through the start of winter. No word on the colonoscopy and no word on when my gall bladder would be removed.

In November I started to get serious lower abdominal pain after eating. I phoned the consultants secretary and asked if I was on the waiting list. She assured me I was and would be called soon. In December I started to rapidly lose weight. This definitely wasn’t like me! I love my food, Joe. I phoned the hospital again after Christmas. Again I was told that I was still on the list and would definitely be called soon. (I later found out that that consultant had retired and they had just hired a new one). Joe, from November to the end of February I was in agony. Apart from the pain and diahrea I was tired all the time. I’d literally got out of bed to go to work at 4.30 in the afternoon. Came home around 10.30pm, ate my dinner (I couldn’t eat before work because it’d make me too sick to do my job), tidied the kitchen and went to bed again. I was miserable.

Finally, on February 28, 2006, four days after I turned 40, I was called for a colonoscopy.

I woke up in the middle of the procedure and saw on a large screen, them probing a blob on my colon. They were taking a biopsy. But I didn’t have to wait for the results. I knew what I had. Soon after I met my wonderful consultant, Dr George Nassim. What a gem he is. Friendly, compassionate and funny on top of being a great surgeon. I felt like I was in good hands. I didn’t panic for more than a few hours after I was told that I had cancer. They can do loads of things to save cancer patients these days. I was young and strong. I’d been a vegetarian since I was 16. I ate mostly healthy foods, although eating at night was a serious no no when it came to my weight. I went for walks a few times a week. I felt I could beat this.

I was booked in for surgery to remove the tumour. I was given a stoma, which means I’ll have to poop in a bag for the rest of my life. I found that really difficult to handle. More difficult than the cancer sometimes. I was in St Lukes hospital for over 50 days last year. (I had to have a second surgery due to complications) Recovery was hard, but I did it. I shared a room with two lovely women who also had cancer. They have since died. In another ward I was in I was next to another woman who had cancer. She died too. The staff at St Lukes in Kilkenny are the most kind, hardworking people I’ve ever met. In March, in between surgeries, I was sent to the Mater in Dublin and had a porto-cath put in for putting the chemo through, and a PET Scan to see if the cancer had spread. If it hadn’t, I’d live. If it had spread to other organs, I’d die. It had spread to my lungs.

I felt bad enough to go to the doctor. She did what she was supposed to do. She told them I had diahrea and blood from my rectum. But what could they do? So do lots of people. Should I have skipped the list ahead of those other people with the same symptoms? I don’t think so. Should there be a list so long that it puts people at risk of dying? No. Definitely not.

I know in my heart and soul that when I started to feel really, really bad, especially in from December to February 2006, is when the cancer broke through the wall of my bowel. Of course I can’t prove it. But I know. Because it broke through the bowel I have been given 2 to 4 years from diagnosis to live. The chemo is to prolong life, not to save it. I have 3 years, tops, to go. Despite that, I’m going to try my best to make it for 5 more til my youngest turns 18. He needs me too much now. My husband has suffered right along side of me in his own way knowing that the woman he loves will be dead soon. My 18 year old daughter has been told and has gone quiet and doesn’t want to talk about it. But I know she’s scared. I haven’t told my 13 year old son yet. He’s too young to handle it. The South East Cancer Foundation in Waterford have been very helpful and will help us when the time is right to do and say the “right” things.

I don’t blame the wonderful people who work in St Lukes in Kilkenny. They work with what they are given. St. Lukes has the best A+E unit in the country. I had to use it three times in 2006 and twice with my son (nothing serious, thankfully). What did the government do? Threaten to shut it down. They also threatened to shut down the maternity unit AFTER spending millions to improve it!! That would mean Carlow women would have to travel to already overcrowded hospitals in Dublin and Kilkenny women would have to travel to Waterford, which is grand if you live in South Kilkenny. The rest could lump it and birth at the side of the road if necessary.

Twice I had to listen to two women die next to me in hospital because there’s no place for people nearing death and their loved ones to go to die and grieve in dignity.

My time in the Mater was dreadful. I was terrified I’d pick up MRSA because it was filthy. I was put on a ward with cardiac patients, mostly men, who because of their ill health were unable aim too well when they went to the toilet. Once when I used the toilet my pajama bottoms soaked up urine up to my ankles. Even though I was still sick and weak I still tried to hover over the toilet so I wouldn’t have to touch it. I wasn’t able to hover and hold up my pajama legs at the same time. I had just given my sister-in-law two sets of pj’s to take home and wash and had nothing to change into. I rinsed them out in the grimey sink and wore them damp until she returned the next day with clean ones.There was excrement stuck to the sides of the toilet for days at a time. Water flooded the shower room, soaked my clean pjs and towel that were on the floor outside the shower and ran out into the hall. After that happened the first time I learned to take a chair in to the shower room to put my stuff on. At least I knew THAT floor got water and soap put on it regularly. The man in the bed next to me, who had suffered a triple bi-pass was served up a greasy fry for tea when he had specifically ordered fish because it was healthier. On the third day he refused to eat it when they wouldn’t give him what he had ordered and went without eating on principle. I was vegetarian and so was served cheese on crackers and cheese sandwiches (fake cheese slices on white bread) for all but two meals. They brought one of the two nicer meals when I was fasting and not allowed to eat it. My suspicion is that the catering has been privatised, although I could be wrong. The staff, apart from one really nasty nurse, were lovely.

Should I blame anyone for my hard luck? I’ve thought about it over the last year and have tried to be reasonable about it. After all, I waited to get Christmas over with before I phoned the hospital for a second time asking to be seen. But today, when I heard that a very nice man who was in the same, if not worse condition, than me when he went to his GP is going to live because he had private health insurance and I’m going to die because I didn’t, I had to bite my tongue. I’m happy he’s going to live. He deserves to live. But so do I. Then I came home and watched that ad which told people to hurry up and get checked out for bowel cancer because it will save their lives, and I fucking lost it.

I’ve finally reached the angry stage, I guess. Who am I angry at? I’ll tell you, Joe. The health service has been in the hands of Fianna Fail and the PD’s for years and all they can think to do is put resources into privatisation. They don’t have the ability to change structures in the public sector that would put more resources toward patient care. But it’s not just the politicians. I’m also angry at every single voter who voted for Fianna Fail and the PDs because they thought they’d get a few more shillings in their pockets but were too greedy and stupid to realise that that money they saved in wage taxes would be made up with stealth taxes. We all knew before the last election what their health policies were and the majority of people ignored this and voted for them anyway. Maybe they thought this would never happen to them. Or maybe because so many have private health insurance they just didn’t care because they were alright, Jack.

I never dreamed I’d get cancer, let alone die from it. But I was wrong. My message to anyone with symptoms of bowel cancer is go to your GP immediately. If you, like me, don’t have health insurance, pester them until they hate you, go to your politicians and beg them to help, go to the media, get a solicitor to threaten to sue the government and the hospital if they don’t get you in soon for a colonoscopy. Otherwise, the people who love you might lose you and you’ll not get to do all the things you planned in life.

I’m writing to you because the way this country is run leads me to believe that contacting a radio show is the only way to try to change things like this. I hope that when Ms SUV and Mr Builder goes into the voting booth, they’ll think about me, my husband and especially my children. My husband is a decent man. He works full time in a good job and I worked part-time in a job I loved that helped people, but didn’t pay well. It depended on government money to help women and children in crisis, so of course couldn’t pay me well. We know what Bertie, Michael, Micheal and Mary’s priorities are.

Despite 1 1/2 incomes we couldn’t afford VHI or Bupa. But even if we could have we wouldn’t have gotten it because we believed (and still do) that all people should get good care despite their incomes. We thought jumping queues was wrong. We’re socialists…just like Bertie. Ha Ha. Now I feel like vomiting and it’s not the chemo!

From a Cancer Patient in Kilkenny.

Health service in France

October 31st, 2010

The French health service is one of the best; care is comprehensive and excellent, and waiting is practically unknown.

It is however, contributions based, which means that people do not automatically have health insurance entitling them to free healthcare, although of course doctors and clinics have to treat all emergency cases and since 2001, the system attempts to ensure that everyone has health insurance.

British people visiting France for short periods can transfer their British entitlement to emergency treatment via a European Health Insurance Card (which has replaced the old E111).
For EU citizens resident in France, rights to free healthcare for the first two years in France can be transferred from the UK (or any other EU country) via a form E106.  Those in receipt of a UK pension can also claim free health care using a form E121.
Otherwise, to get into the French system, you have to either live with/marry a French person (or a resident in France with healthcare) or be employed (or self-employed) in France.

The minimum requirement on the employment front is 60 hours a month for than three months  – which will automatically give you and your family the basic state cover (ie around 80% on average of your costs reimbursed) and if you want 100 per cent cover, you’ll have to do as 85 per cent of the French do and buy a private health insurance policy (une mutuelle) as a top-up.
Under certain circumstances (ie you become unemployed), French residents on very low incomes are entitled to free healthcare via a free health insurance scheme called the CMU – Couverture Maladie Universelle de base and a sister scheme called CMU-C (complémentaire) which is a mutuelle (ie top up insurance).
If none of the foregoing applies then currently, the only open route is via private healthy insurance, which can be expensive.  Legislation is currently changing however, so be sure to check for latest up-dates.  Before taking any action, phone CPAM (the Caisse Primaire d’Assurance de Maladie – the main French health insurance agency) on their English speaking helpline 08 08 20 90 42 12.  Be patient, lines are busy.

 

On the cards
The system is that you pay for consultations, treatments and prescriptions up front, and a proportion of your money is then reimbursed. When you pay, sometimes you are given a feuille de soins which you sign and send to your local sécu (ie CPAM). A proportion of the money is then reimbursed directly into your bank account. This usually only takes a few days. Reimbursements can be up to 100 per cent (ie for pregnancy and childbirth as well as a selection of serious chronic diseases), but are often less, which is where the mutuelle (top up insurance) comes in.
Increasingly nowadays, you present your carte vitale (which looks like a lime green credit card and includes a chip containing information on your health insurance status) and then only pay the non-reimbursable portion of the costs.  If you have a mutuelle, you then send the bill for the non-reimbursed costs to them.  If your mutuelle is the CMU-C, you pay nothing and the bills are sent directly to CPAM.
Medical practitioners are either conventionné or non-conventionné – ie they either charge the government-set prices for consultations, or they charge more. If they charge more, you will pay more, and the percentage reimbursed will still be calculated on the conventionné price.
Just as in the UK, you have to choose a general practitioner, but you can easily change if you like. There are plenty of doctors available; all of them are well trained and helpful, and many of them speak some English. If needed, French doctors will make home visits, even at night if required – especially for off-colour kids.  (Under 16s don’t need to have a designated GP; you can call any doctor any time to treat a child.)  Be warned though, that if the doctor thinks the visit was un-necessary, you could end up paying a hefty excess fee, which will not be reimbursed.
If you do not designate a GP your reimbursements will be seriously affected. Naturally if you are geographically too far from your GP to consult him/her, (ie on holiday, working away from home etc) then there is no financial penalty for consulting another GP.
For minor ailments, a trip to the pharmacist can be a good bet; they are highly trained (it takes six years at university to qualify) and they give good advice free. They can also dress small wounds, and in certain circumstances (ie theft of luggage on a Saturday night) will dispense emergency supplies of prescription-only medicines without a prescription.
In most towns, pharmacies run a service de garde – ie an emergency night service. Some pharmacists also run a tiers-payant service for regular customers, where you only pay your share of the price of prescription medicines, and the pharmacist collects the rest from CPAM on your behalf.
It might just be worth noting here another difference between the French healthcare system and that in the UK.  Bedside manner.  French hospital doctors and surgeons are generally charming and polite, but are less likely than British doctors to present you with choice in terms of treatment because they tend to take the line that they are the specialists and they know best how to treat you.  So although you may well be given choices such as where and when you would like your operation, you are unlikely to be given any say in whether or not to have that operation.  French nurses also tend to take the line that they are there to carry out the doctor’s orders rather than to administer TLC.  So if you decline treatments such as suppositories (which are widely used in France) you are likely to be met with blank incomprehension and possibly even some hostility.

FACT FILE
* CPAM – Google ‘CPAM’ to find the CPAM website for your department
* www.ameli.fr – overall CPAM site, useful for keeping track of reimbursements
* www.cmu.fr – information about claiming free health cover
* Emergency telephone numbers – 112 = (general);113 = SAMU (ie ambulance); 18 = pompiers (fire brigade and first aid); and 17 = police
* Forms E121 and E106 (along with further advice) are available from DWP Newcastle.  (http://www.dwp.gov.uk/localoffice/disability/offices/du_newcastle.asp

TIPS
* Get your European Health Insurance Card before leaving the UK as it will show that you are entitled to emergency healthcare in France. (It will not entitle you to have chronic ailments treated, ie cataracts removed.)
* If you’re planning on becoming resident, contact CPAM as soon as you arrive. Guard your Carte Vitale with your life – replacing it can be a hassle.
* If the price of regular top-up insurance makes you nervous, remember that your child’s school insurance (www.mae.fr) can cover him/her for all accidents for as little as €25 (£17.23) a year.
* It is illegal in France to refuse help in an emergency so if the worst happens forget insurance; just get to the nearest clinic. The paperwork can be sorted later.
* If you incur costs for emergency treatment whilst temporarily visiting France without a European Health Insurance Card, once you get back to the UK you can still claim the money back. Start reading here: www.dwp.gov.uk/international/sa29/introduction.asp