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- HEALTH, Page 61The Case for Mutticare
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- If you think the cost of medical care for humans is getting
- out of hand . . .
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- Decent health care costs big bucks. But treating four-legged,
- furry or feathered invalids doesn't come cheap either. Consider
- this Christmas fable -- a true story -- about Flash, an
- eight-year-old golden retriever currently living in Washington.
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- Two weeks ago, the dog suddenly collapsed and pitched down
- the stairs. His distraught owners, afraid to move their beloved
- pet themselves, called an animal ambulance (cost: $25). Minutes
- later the comatose canine had been placed on a stretcher and
- rushed off to the emergency room. There a veterinarian ordered
- up a battery of diagnostic tests and treatments, many of which
- would have been unobtainable for humans only a few years ago.
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- Flash's problem seemed to be self-inflicted -- a bleeding
- stomach wound caused by his habit of chewing up and swallowing
- every splintery stick he could get his teeth on. But first the
- vet had to rule out rat poison and cancer with a blood test
- ($45) and a liver scan ($140). Then there was the emergency
- work-up ($45), followed by a catheter ($30), urinalysis ($22),
- a steroid injection and lab work to check organ function ($71);
- anesthesia ($345); an IV attached to a leg ($110); a biopsy
- ($45); upper and lower gastrointestinal endoscopy for
- fiber-optic images of his stomach, small intestine and colon
- ($75); antibiotics and Tagamet for the ulcer ($25); plus five
- days of hospitalization ($200).
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- The final reckoning, which listed 29 items, came to
- $1,036.40. Plus $30 for a shampoo to wash away that nasty kennel
- odor. Flash will be sleeping on his favorite rug underneath the
- Christmas tree this week. Santa may bring him a nice rubber toy
- to chew on instead of those lethal sticks. And how about a pet
- health-insurance plan for his impoverished owners?
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