Medical Assurance | Medical Assurance |
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| Written by Abdun Nur | |
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Version 2 – 5th March 2013 Medical Assurance The modern hospital system is in some aspects an abomination, dominated by the pharmaceutical corporations who patent chemical based medications, and use propaganda to mislead both patients and medical staff, commonly maintaining disease instead of curing them. (See: The Fraud of the Hospital System) A new approach needs to be undertaken, away from the present model of criminal incompetence and intentional neglect, vested interests and corporate frauds. A local community needs medical assurance for themselves and their families free of any corporation private or public, this is an important aspect of society, a place to seek aid in the event of misfortune, accident or need. I will use simple figures for the example. Let us say 1000 families wish to be a member of the medical assurance cooperative; each family pays a bond of 20 ounces of silver, that’s 20,000 ounces of silver. A medical centre can protect a large group and one centre could service several local communities. The bond is returnable, so for example if you move to a new location you can transfer your existing bond to a new assurance collective, or recover your bond in full. The assurance collective would ideally be administrated through the local repository. The 20,000 ounces of silver bond payment is used to fund in part a medical centre, and equipment. A suitable doctor is found who understands the fraud of the pharmaceutical corporations, the benefits of a truly natural diet, and supplementation of vitamins, and minerals, the energy system of the body, orgone, distilled water, oxygen therapy (MMS-hydrogen peroxide), etc., and works to cure people as opposed to maintaining their disease or managing the symptoms of disease. With the guidance of the doctor the medical centre is organised and staffed, functioning as a natural equity egalitarian cooperative. The members of the collective assurance pay an annual fee for the protection, with an initial first payment that is simply topped back up annually to the original first payment, let say all members and their families are of average health they each pay 10 ounces of silver, that’s 10,000 ounces, the medical cooperative uses that money to provide the care and protection the members require for that year, let’s say it costs 5000 ounces of silver a year, that means on the second year each member would have to pay 5 ounces of silver to maintain their cover. Additionally the medical cooperative would accept donations from those with an altruistic nature, this off sets the burden of any emergency treatment of those without assurance and could even reduce the cost per annum of assurance cover. If the medical cooperative failed in the view of the assured member not to provide the service to a standard they required, any member of the assurance collect can always freely recover their bond or transfer that bond to another assurance collective, this means for the medical cooperative to maintain its members and so funding, it is forced to provide a service to a standard high enough to retain its patients at a cost they deem fair. If a man or woman was already ill before they requested assurance, and this illness was not self-induced through smoking, alcohol, drug abuse or gluttony for example, it would have no bearing on their protection and would not affect their costs, but self-induced illness is self-perpetuating, and therefore an imposition upon the other collective members, unless that self-abuse is addressed and evidence to show a change of attitude towards their own body demonstrated, it would be unreasonable to expend resources on someone who cared nothing themselves for their own health. Equitably those with knowingly self-induced diseases or conditions can establish a separate bonded medical assurance collective, exclusively for those wilfully destroying their own health and wellbeing. This can be serviced within the same medical cooperative as many assurance bond collectives can be within the same medical cooperative, each individually accounted for. The doctors, nurses and technicians working within the medical cooperative are not employed by the cooperative but are the cooperative, and function as detailed within the essay ‘the cooperative business system’. |
| Rejab |
| 9 Sunday |
| 1434 HIJRAH |