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Environment & Energy

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hatrack

(64,827 posts)
Mon Jan 28, 2013, 08:16 PM Jan 2013

Uninsured Energy Workers Burying ND Hospitals In Debt: McKenzie CO Hospital Debt Up 2,000% In 4 Yrs [View all]

WATFORD CITY, N.D. — The patients come with burns from hot water, with hands and fingers crushed by steel tongs, with injuries from chains that have whipsawed them off their feet. Ambulances carry mangled, bloodied bodies from accidents on roads packed with trucks and heavy-footed drivers.

The furious pace of oil exploration that has made North Dakota one of the healthiest economies in the country has had the opposite effect on the region’s health care providers. Swamped by uninsured laborers flocking to dangerous jobs, medical facilities in the area are sinking under skyrocketing debt, a flood of gruesome injuries and bloated business costs from the inflated economy.

The problems have been acute at McKenzie County Hospital here. Largely because of unpaid bills, the hospital’s debt has climbed more than 2,000 percent over the past four years to $1.2 million, according to Daniel Kelly, the hospital’s chief executive. Just three years ago, Mr. Kelly added, the hospital averaged 100 emergency room visits per month; last year, that average shot up to 400.

Over all, ambulance calls in the region increased by about 59 percent from 2006 to 2011, according to Thomas R. Nehring, the director of emergency medical services for the North Dakota Health Department. The number of traumatic injuries reported in the oil patch increased 200 percent from 2007 through the first half of last year, he said.

EDIT

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/28/us/boom-in-north-dakota-weighs-heavily-on-health-care.html?_r=0

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and guess what! Obamacare will do nothing to fix this or stop it Demeter Jan 2013 #1
The ACA is irrelevant to this. These are workplace injuries and they are covered by Workers' Comp. kestrel91316 Jan 2013 #3
What?? Did they outlaw Worker's Comp in North Dakota?? kestrel91316 Jan 2013 #2
And if that employer is run from Canada? 2naSalit Jan 2013 #4
Oh, come on. If you get hurt on the job, you go to the doctor and say you got hurt on the job, kestrel91316 Jan 2013 #6
I suspect that 2naSalit Jan 2013 #8
If you have an employer. progressoid Jan 2013 #24
It's usually state law. JDPriestly Jan 2013 #10
Doesn't mean there's actual oversight or enforcement 2naSalit Jan 2013 #11
If you know someone who is going to work in those conditions in South Dakota, JDPriestly Jan 2013 #17
And much like the gold rush over a century ago 2naSalit Jan 2013 #23
I think the courts have recently ruled on what makes a worker "contracted".......... mrmpa Jan 2013 #19
As we all know . . . OldRedneck Jan 2013 #5
The little guys, not so much. But huge companies doing billions of dollars of kestrel91316 Jan 2013 #7
Workman's comp is not medical insurance. Grins Jan 2013 #12
ORomneyGrichCare will have a positive effect CranialRectaLoopback Jan 2013 #14
"Yeah, we built this all on our own, without any help from anyone..." kxs Jan 2013 #9
That's some harsh sarcasm right there. Well done! Systematic Chaos Jan 2013 #13
OSHA should be involved adieu Jan 2013 #15
Indeed! /nt Festivito Jan 2013 #20
thanks for the welcome... kxs Jan 2013 #16
Welcome to DU. Festivito Jan 2013 #21
I think I get it now... kxs Jan 2013 #22
Hey and they get to have a ravaged and polluted landscape too! glinda Jan 2013 #18
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