Monday, January 28, 2013

The Waiting Room


On Saturday night I went to Cinematheque to check out the documentary, The Waiting Room. I had no idea what to expect from the film but within the first five minutes I was completely enthralled. The people in the film were all regular doctors, patients and staff at the Highland Hospital in Oakland, California.

The film took place over about 24 hours and was a snapshot of a day in a hospital waiting room in America. The people were so real and they all struggled with different things. Their stories were what made The Waiting Room a relatable film. I felt so bad for the patients that spent hours sitting in pain in the waiting room waiting to get admitted to the emergency room.

So many of the people didn’t have health insurance, so they couldn’t afford to go to a regular doctor or buy the medicine that they needed. Cynthia Y. Johnson is a Certified Nurse Assistant and she was the first person the patients would talk to before seeing a doctor. She was the backbone for the film, after switching between patients and doctors the focus would come back to Cynthia. She added several moments of comedic relief, and her bright spirit and booming laughter made the film a little lighter.

There were many people featured in the film but the story was focused on a few main patients. There was a young girl with strep throat whose father, Demia Bruce, had recently lost his job. He said he had a two-year-old child pass away a few years ago and being in the hospital with his daughter made him very nervous. 

There was Davelo Lujuan a man who had been laying carpet for years and because of that he now has horrible back pain. He had gotten his wages cut in half and now he has his daughter and her baby living with him. Even though he was in too much pain to keep laying carpet, he had no choice because he needed to keep supporting his family.

Eric Morgan’s story was the one I found the saddest. He is just a young man in his twenties who has a testicular tumor and no money to pay for surgery. The hospital he went to before wouldn’t treat him because he was not a member of the private practice. Although he needs surgery immediately, by the end of the film he still could not get an operation on his tumor.

The doctors in the film were so kind. They all were doing everything they could to try to treat every person who came through the door. Dr. Douglas White was really compassionate. He wouldn’t let a patient leave unless they had a home to go to, and he also tried his best to find his patients regular doctors to see so they wouldn’t have to wait in the E.R every time they got sick.

Since the film was just a snapshot in time and only focused on one hospital, I can’t say if it accurately depicts the American health care system. Based on the amount of people that came into that one E.R in one day, I assume that many other hospitals face the same daily struggle to treat all of the patients.

According to their website, Health Canada’s goal is:
for Canada to be among the countries with the healthiest people in the world.
To achieve this goal, Health Canada:
   Relies on high-quality scientific research as the basis for our work.
   Conducts ongoing consultations with Canadians to determine how to best meet their long-term health care needs.
   Communicates information about disease prevention to protect Canadians from avoidable risks.
Encourages Canadians to take an active role in their health, such as increasing their level of physical activity and eating well.

On the contrary, in an article from The Globe and Mail, Jeffrey Simpson says “a host of studies shows the Canadian health-care system middle-of-the-pack at best, except for cost (private and public), where it ranks near the top. The studies use different methodologies and weigh factors differently. No single one is determinant, but most point in the same direction: The myth about Canadian medicare is just that, a myth.”

For me, I believe that everyone has had a different experience with Canada’s health care system. I have had the same doctor since I was born and I have nothing to complain about. He always leaves a few appointment times open everyday for emergencies, so if I get sick I don’t have to wait 3 weeks to see a doctor or have to go to a walk-in clinic. I have heard stories about people having to go to the states to get surgery because they won’t do it in Canada, or people who have gotten misdiagnosed in Canada but get properly diagnosed somewhere else. I know our system isn’t perfect and some people find it unsatisfactory, but I haven’t personally had a bad experience with our health care system.

The film was moving and educational and I recommend you all go see it!



1 comment:

  1. I found the worst part about the male with the tumor was that the facility was going to operate but cancelled the morning of because they found out he didn't have the coverage. The operation went from "urgent" to "well, you can go somewhere else" way too easily.

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