Any opinions on this?

lurkercowboy

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Woman's death highlights health insurance crisis

12:33 PM CST on Wednesday, December 14, 2005
By JANET ST. JAMES / WFAA-TV



WFAA.
Tirhas Habtegiris was 27 when she died. A family has gathered to mourn a woman gone too soon.

Tirhas Habtegiris was an East African immigrant and only 27 when she died Monday afternoon.

She'd been on a respirator at Baylor Regional Medical Center at Plano for 25 days.

"They handed me this letter on December 1st. and they said, we're going to give you 10 days so on the 11th day, we're going to pull it out," said her brother Daniel Salvi.

Salvi was stunned to get this hand-delivered notice invoking a complicated and rarely used Texas law where a doctor is "not obligated to continue" medical treatment "medically inappropriate" when care is not beneficial.

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Even though her body was being ravaged by cancer, this family says Tirhas still responded and was conscious. She was waiting one person.

"She wanted to get her mom over here or to get to her mom so she could die in her mom's arms," says her cousin Meri Tesfay.

Ten days was not enough time, they say, to get a mother from Africa to America.

The family and hospital desperately tried to get Tirhas moved to a nursing home but they say no one would take her.

"A fund issue is what I understand. Because she is not insured and that was the major reason the way I understood it," Salvi said.

A statement from Baylor Plano disputes that and says the hospital did its best to comply with the family's wishes in every way.

Still, on the 11th day, Tirhas Habtegiris was taken off the respirator and died.

Her family feels caught in America's health insurance crisis.

"And it's kind of a shock to me too to experience this in this country. It's the richest country in the world. Very sad," Salvi said.

Experts say there are very few charity beds for ventilator dependent patients in this state. President George W. Bush has said he wants to expand healthcare for legal immigrants in this country.


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Online at: http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/wfaa/latestnews/stories/wfaa051214_lj_african.bb0e76d.html
 

jksmith269

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Not to sound cruel but whould she even of had 10 days in Africa?

On the other hand I don't really see this as a insurance issue it's the state law if the treatment she where receiving was helping her other than just keeping her alive then she could have stayed on the machine but the fact is nothing they could do would have helped her. What about other patients who have a chance to live should they be made to wait for her mother to arrive before they receive the treetment that may save their lives. I'm sorry if it where my family I'd prob feel the same way as her family but at the same time if it where me and I knew there was no hope for me i would want the treetment to go to someone who it may save.
 
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