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Showing posts with label Bartering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bartering. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Barter sometimes allow patients to pay for health care they otherwise could not afford

By Consumer Reports
Published: September 30

Here is an excerpt:

Avitzur, who is medical adviser to Consumer Reports, recommended pool therapy, and the patient responded to it like the proverbial fish to water, shedding all his excess weight and experiencing periods of pain relief for the first time in years. But his insurance benefits for physical therapy ran out, and he couldn’t afford to continue. Avitzur suggested that he offer to help out as a therapy assistant in exchange for free use of the pool, and the pool manager accepted the deal.

Resorting to the age-old art of bartering has helped at least some of the nearly 49 million Americans who are uninsured and the millions more whose health benefits are so skimpy they often can’t afford care.

The entire story is here.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Bartering For Health Care: Yardwork For Treatment

By Eric Molinsky
NPR

Deb Barth is raking leaves for Lesley Jones. But Barth isn't earning money for her yardwork, at least not in physical currency. She's earning "time dollars" — for every two hours she spends doing odd jobs, she'll earn a free visit with her doctor.

As a struggling artist, Barth's income qualifies her for the program at True North, a nonprofit health care clinic in Falmouth, Maine. She's one of 33 patients who pay with time dollars there.

"I do things like deep cleaning, organizing," Barth says. "I also offer caregiver support for people who may be caring for an older parent."

So how does her doctor cash in these time credits? By getting free services from any of the other hundreds of people who belong to The Portland Hour Exchange Program.

Tom Dahlborg, the executive director of True North, used to work in Medicaid, where he thought the patients weren't getting enough from their health care.

"People would come in for care and they would be like, 'OK, give me what you can, that's fine,' and they really weren't engaged in it," Dahlborg says. "It was almost like a guilt, like, 'Oh, it's free care, so I don't really deserve that much anyways.' "

But he says patients at True North who pay with time dollars are fully engaged.
"We'll hear from a landscaper [who] will say, 'I mowed five lawns in the last month so I could bring my children in to see your pediatric nurse practitioner. This darn well better be a good visit,' " Dahlborg says.

They certainly get a lengthy visit. Patients are allowed to spend up to an hour or more with their doctors.

The entire story can be read here.