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Circle T if the statement is true, and circle F if the statement is false



1. There are special national health services both in Great Britain and the US. T F

2. Unlike Britain, most people in the US have medical insurance. T F

3. GPs in Great Britain make an appointment with a specialist doctor if a patient needs to see one. T F

4. Americans do not call GPs out to visit them. T F

5. People in Great Britain pay for the NHS only by taxes. T F

6. Being on the GP's list means you can visit him any time you need to. T F

7. Under the NHS, people have to pay the whole cost of the drugs the doctor prescribes. T F

8. You don't have to pay for an ambulance in Great Britain. T F

In Britain, there is a National Health Service (the NHS), which is paid for by taxes and national insurance, and in general people do not have to pay for their medical treatment. Every person is registered with a doctor in their local area, known as a general practitioner or GP. This means that their name is on the GP's list, and they may make an appointment to see the doctor or may call the doctor out to visit them if they are sick. People do sometimes have to pay part of the cost of drugs that the doctor prescribes. GPs are trained in general medicine but are not specialists in any particular subject. If a patient needs to see a specialist doctor, they must first go to their GP and then the GP will make an appointment for the patient to see a specialist at a hospital or clinic.

Although everyone in Britain can have free treatment under the NHS, it is also possible to have treatment done privately, for which one has to pay. Some people have private health insurance to help them pay for private treat­ment. Under the NHS, people who need to go to the hospital (e.g. for an operation) may have to wait a long time on a waiting list for their treatment. If you pay for the treatment, they will probably get it more quickly.

Anyone who is very sick can call an ambulance and get taken to the hospital (in free urgent medical treatment). Ambulances are a free service in Britain.

American hospitals are in general well-equipped and efficient, and doc­tors earn incomes far above the general average. For anyone who is sick, the cost of treatment is very high. There is a strong prejudice against "socialized medicine" (particularly among doctors), and there are only two federal health programs. Medicare provides nearly free treatment for the elderly, Medicaid for the poor— though, with an extremely complex system of admissible charges in rough Medicare, elderly people do not recover the full cost of some types of expensive treatment. Even so, the cost of Medicare to federal funds rose to seventy billion dollars in 1985 or more than two thousand dollars for each of the thirty million participants. Medicaid, for the poor, varies from one state in another because the states are heavily involved in it and some contribute more generously than others.

Working people and their families are normally insured through private plans against the cost of treatment and against possible loss of earnings if they are sick. The plans are often operated by deductions from one's salary. They too are enormously expensive, and the cost is rising. No single insurance system is absolutely comprehensive; some people have more than one policy and yet remain liable to bear some costs themselves. Among ordinary people anx­iety about the possibility of illness is accentuated by fears about its cost. These fears are reflected in some resentment against the medical profession, and the resentment is not alleviated by doctors' reluctance to visit patients in their home. When people are sick, they usually go first to an internist. Unlike in Britain, however, people sometimes go straight to a specialist, without seeing the general practitioner first. Children are usually taken to a pediatrician. In Britain, if a patient needs to see a specialist, their general doctor will usually give them the name of one. Doctors do not go to people's homes when they are sick. People always make appointments to see the doctor in the doctor’s office. In emergencies, people call an ambulance. Hospitals must treat emergency patients, even if the patient does not have medical insurance. The government would then help pay for some of the cost of the medical care.





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