To start this off I’m going to talk about the interviews we
did at a market near Termini station. We
were given the task of interviewing ten people each, in Italian, about their
healthcare system. We all went into it nervous
because we were unsure of how people would react to the questions, whether or
not they would even understand what we were trying to do. Once we got there the first woman that Katie
D., Henna, Emily and I went up to was really nice and gladly took the
survey. This put us at ease, until
people were getting finished really quickly and we only had about four surveys
each. We didn’t let it get us down and
we trudged on! We found the university
nearby and a lot of the students were sympathetic to our efforts and filled
them out. We were done in no time and
ready to leave. Our final interviews
were really nice and they left us on a high note. The survey results were kind of surprising. There were a lot of people who didn’t really
care for the universal healthcare and then there were people who loved it and
said that they got excellent care. So,
it’s a little hard to judge what the actual feeling of country is.
While the feeling on universal healthcare is somewhat
unknown in Italy, or at least it’s unknown to me based upon my research thus
far, America is still in a struggling battle on the same front. But is universal healthcare the cure-all? Is that going to prevent disease, illness and
dying? Or are there other ways that
people believe cure their loved ones?
Johnathon S. Ross, from Universal Healthcare says “An improved
and expanded Medicare for all is the proven cure and the only way to restore
America’s health.” But that isn’t everyone’s
belief, is it? When I was 9 years old my
grandpa lost his battle with cancer. I
wasn’t very old but I do know one thing that my family did was pray. We prayed for his health, we prayed that God
would have mercy on him and save his life, and we prayed that we could keep
him. While the prayers didn’t cure him, neither
did the medicine. The cancer was just
too strong but it is the belief in my family that the prayers helped him hold
on for just a little bit longer, so that we were all prepared and able to say
goodbye to him. In another example, my
best friend in seventh grade was in a life-threatening car accident. She was induced into a coma and was that way
for about a month. When the swelling in
her brain went down a little they inserted a shunt. It was to drain the fluid from her brain so
that it didn’t swell anymore. She wasn’t
even supposed to live. My whole school
rallied together and prayed for her; for the entire time she was in the coma
that she would be okay. That girl who wasn’t
supposed to make it is now a sophomore in college and continues to play
volleyball, a game that she loved even before the accident, and she’s playing
at college level. When the doctors are
all telling you that your best friend is going to die because there isn’t anything
else they can do, and she makes a full, miraculous recovery, what do you call
that? I call it a miracle. So, I do believe that pray works and national
healthcare, might not be the cure-all that everyone is looking for. Maybe it can help, but it might not be the
whole answer.
Ciao Katie,
ReplyDeleteWonderful blog, as always!