This should be on the front page of every newspaper in America-in large, bold letters. This was a letter to the editor August 29th in a Jackson, MS newspaper.
Dear sirs:
During my last night's shift in the ER, I had the pleasure of evaluating a patient with a shiny new gold tooth, multiple, elaborate tattoos, a very expensive brand of tennis shoes and a new cellular telephone equipped with her favorite R&B tune for a ringtone.
Glancing over the chart, one could not help noticing her payer status:
Medicaid.
She smoke more than one costly pack of cigarettes every day, and, somehow, still has money left over to buy beer.
And our Congress expects me to pay for this woman's health care.
Our nation's health care crisis is not a shortage of quality hospitals, doctors or nurses.
It is a crisis of culture.
A culture in which it is perfectly acceptable to spend money on vices while refusing to take care of one's self or, heaven forbid, purchase health insurance.
A culture that thinks, "I can do whatever I want to because someone else will always take care of me."
Life is really not that hard. Most os us reap what we sow. Don't you agree?
Dr. Starner Jones, MD
Jackson, MS