Giving thanks for our healthcare system — which needs reform

Six nights of hospital care provides a firsthand look at the marvels of our healthcare system, and how much more efficient and accessible it should be.

It's a day late, but I'll tell you what I'm thankful for.

I'm thankful that I'm no longer in the hospital.

Thankful that our healthcare system, which I've criticized pretty heavily, is a marvel of medical technology and expertise.

Thankful that steps are finally being taken to make that system more efficient and accessible to everyone.


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But there's clearly much work to be done. I'll get back to that.

First, let me explain why you haven't seen my column for a week or so. There will be some who will say I grabbed my cat after he slipped out of the house, and the darn thing bit my hand, causing a painful infection that penetrated deep into my tendons and ligaments.

That strikes me as kind of lame. So I'll say that I broke up a knife fight.

No matter the cause, I found myself last week in a bed at UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica with an intravenous drip of antibiotics hooked up to my arm. The fact that I have Type 1 diabetes was a complicating factor.

Surgery was eventually required. And then I had to recover from that.

All in all, it was a lot of fuss for a cat bite — er, knife fight. It was also the first time I've been hospitalized since I had my tonsils out as a kid, providing me with a close-up look at our healthcare system in action.

Actually, that's a misnomer, one that's muddied the debate in this country over healthcare reform. We have two systems — a medical system and an insurance system. They're intertwined, and any decision affecting one inevitably affects the other.

The reality is that our medical system is extraordinary, and extraordinarily expensive. Our insurance system, meanwhile, is a model of inefficiency and misplaced priorities (profits over patients). Reform on both fronts is necessary.

But I'll be the first to say how lucky we are to have a medical system with the resources and know-how to handle nearly any problem.

And can we pause for a minute to sing the praises of nurses? They're the front line of our medical system, the foot soldiers who deliver the bulk of the care that makes us well. They work epic hours and are the ones who can make or break a patient's hospital experience.

My nurses at UCLA Medical Center were uniformly great. To cite just one example, Gerri Thompson consistently went the extra mile to ensure that I was as well as could be, while at the same time teaching a nursing student how to do the job.

Thompson has about 20 years of experience as a nurse and works a lot harder than I do for a lot less money. And I work for a newspaper, which isn't exactly what you'd call a major profit center these days.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median annual wage for a registered nurse was $64,690 in 2010. That's one reason we're projected to face a severe shortage of nurses in coming years just as the baby boomers increasingly swamp the medical care system.

Which raises another point. I've now seen firsthand how our hospitals are called upon to double as nursing homes for seniors. In some cases, an ailing senior may spend well over a month in a hospital bed, placing exceptional demands on attending nurses and physicians.

While I'm at it, let me say a word or two about personal responsibility. Conservatives are fond of saying that high insurance deductibles are a great way to make people better consumers of healthcare.

If more of your own money is on the line, the thinking goes, you'll make more practical decisions about how much medical treatment you need. This is an asinine argument.

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