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It is currently Thu Sep 09, 2010 10:36 pm


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Wed Jan 09, 2008 10:37 pm 
I would like to thank those in charge of contract health. You have done a great job in demoralizing fellow tribal members. I love the way we have to beg welfare just to be declined in the hopes that IHS will pay our bills. I thought begging the government outside of their forts for rotten meat was over, but i guessed wrong. It is a shame we are not all related to someone in contract health, then we would all get bumped up to get treatment for such life threatening things such as Alcholcol treatment. it is amazing how a purchase order can be given and then months later collection agency's are trying to garnish you for bills that were suppose to be paid by IHS. We were told recently that in order to get help for an ELDERLY family member we would have to beg the government(dshs) for a denial. after 6 months of playing the game we finally got the denial only to be told that IHS would not pay for the problem we have. Maybe if we just get a euthenizing machine to take care of our elders then the contract health could find more time to figure out how to do nothing. Maybe if we had council trying to help members rather than argueing about such important things as where do we travel this week, maybe we could get some help for our people. But then again, when do you think well get 14 council members to agree on anything. Maybe we should hire 25 more council members and then we can all sit around and look important. If any one reads this could tell me 1 thing that the council has done for the tribe???? just 1 thing. And dont tell me wells dam cause the only one that helped was the council's travel budget.


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 8:13 am 
Concerned Tribal Member (Guest) wrote:
I would like to thank those in charge of contract health. You have done a great job in demoralizing fellow tribal members. I love the way we have to beg welfare just to be declined in the hopes that IHS will pay our bills. I thought begging the government outside of their forts for rotten meat was over, but i guessed wrong. It is a shame we are not all related to someone in contract health, then we would all get bumped up to get treatment for such life threatening things such as Alcholcol treatment. it is amazing how a purchase order can be given and then months later collection agency's are trying to garnish you for bills that were suppose to be paid by IHS. We were told recently that in order to get help for an ELDERLY family member we would have to beg the government(dshs) for a denial. after 6 months of playing the game we finally got the denial only to be told that IHS would not pay for the problem we have. Maybe if we just get a euthenizing machine to take care of our elders then the contract health could find more time to figure out how to do nothing. Maybe if we had council trying to help members rather than argueing about such important things as where do we travel this week, maybe we could get some help for our people. But then again, when do you think well get 14 council members to agree on anything. Maybe we should hire 25 more council members and then we can all sit around and look important. If any one reads this could tell me 1 thing that the council has done for the tribe???? just 1 thing. And dont tell me wells dam cause the only one that helped was the council's travel budget.
What the frick is this crack pot rambling on about? Begging the IHS and talking about forts??? I smell a white eyes playing NDN. And wasn't this "concerned" outed a while back on this blog for being a crazy white woman? I thought she got run off.


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 9:06 pm 
It's a known fact around most rezzes that contract health dollars are often depleted before the fiscal year is up. The physical health of the nation is determined by the budget the tribe sets aside for the health of the members. While contract health is funded by IHS dollars it does not preclude tribes from stepping up to the plate and supplementing those budgets. Telling people their health care needs is not a priority is hurtful. Medical care is a treaty right owed and due in full by the federal government. The federal government dishonors us by establishing rigid policies in their IHS demanding that we apply for welfare first before they will honor their treaty. We kept up our end of the treaty - they still have the land. What will it take to get them to uphold their end of the bargain? What will it take to get our leaders to fight for our medical rights? And lastly what will it take for our own indians who work in IHS to help tribal members find solutions stop defending those ridiculous policies as gospel?


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 1:21 am 
Why can't CHS at least be respectful. If they would take time to make some phone calls for us. Help us fill out all that paper when they know we are having a hard time. Be respectful and quit looking at us like we should know all the beaurcatic language. excuse my spelling


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Thu Mar 27, 2008 12:11 am 
Who from the Healing Lodge of 7 Nations is on the board? Aren't there 2 from each tribe? What are their names? You've got some damage control clean-up. John Stucke Staff writer March 26, 2008 (Dan Pelle / The Spokesman-Review) LiAnne Watley gets a reassuring touch from her attorney, Brian Sheldon, as she talks about the critical health of her husband. Fred Watley is in Sacred Heart Medical Center and is in need of a liver transplant. Fred Watley is missing his chance for a liver transplant. A new organ may have helped the 59-year-old substance abuse counselor steer more teens away from drugs and booze; may have helped him raise his 10-year-old son into a young man; may have helped him grow old with LiAnne, his wife of 11 years. None of that is likely. Just as Watley?s liver ailments turned critical and his name near the top of the waiting list, his employer was finishing negotiations with a new health insurance carrier that included a coverage catch: a six-month exclusion for organ transplants that began Jan. 1. Watley and his family learned about the exclusion weeks after the new coverage began. They were devastated. ?We didn?t know until it was too late,? said LiAnne Watley. [size=14]The changes were agreed to by The Healing Lodges of the Seven Nations, a collaboration of Pacific Northwest tribes to treat teen substance abuse and mental health problems.[/size] Watley has been waiting for several years for a new liver as cirrhosis and hepatitis C ravaged his own. Last autumn, his condition worsened. His health has been in a free-fall for the past several weeks. His physician, Dr. Mark E. Didier, wrote to Watley?s new insurer, Group Health Cooperative, urging it to make an exception and allow surgeons at the University of Washington Medical Center to perform a liver transplant. ?His hepatologist, Dr. Philip Delich, does not believe that Mr. Watley will survive until the planned July transplantation date. I must echo his concerns,? Didier wrote last week. Watley suffered a crippling stroke Tuesday morning. His kidneys are shutting down as his body succumbs. Watley won?t live much longer, Dr. Radica Alicic, of Sacred Heart Medical Center, told LiAnne Watley in an Intensive Care Unit hallway. ?I?m so sorry,? she told her. Liver transplants cost between $350,000 and $500,000. The high expense leads some insurers to often use temporary exclusions to ensure they are not saddled with cases that should have been handled by a previous carriers. The expense also makes hospitals and doctors reluctant, if not unable, to write off the surgeries as charity care. The UW Medical Center?s Liver Transplant Selection Committee notified Watley that his transplant status had been put on hold as of Feb. 21, after the insurance issues were vetted. The committee informed him of other options, including with other transplant centers. Standard mechanism? Group Health, denied Watley coverage of the transplant, citing the exclusion period, in a letter dated Feb. 19, 2008. ?The wait period is a standard mechanism so that a health carrier isn?t hit with information that might have been known previously,? Mike Foley, a Group Health spokesman, said later. [size=14]Executives at The Healing Lodges didn?t return a phone message seeking comment Tuesday evening.[/size] Brian Sheldon, an attorney hired by the Watleys to navigate Group Health?s internal appeals process and perhaps press a lawsuit, said people should be aware of the consequences when their employers switch coverage plans. ?This happens more often that you might imagine,? Sheldon said. ?It?s wrong. We believe people are entitled to a continuity of coverage.? State regulators acknowledged that wait periods are common. ?They?re not discriminatory, because the rules apply to everyone,? said Bill Ripple, spokesman for Washington Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler. ?Unfortunately that doesn?t help this gentleman.? Making a difference Watley had helped hundreds of teens beat drug and alcohol addiction while working for 11 years as a counselor with The Healing Lodge. The treatment centers receive federal funds through Indian Health Services and state dollars from the Department of Alcohol and Substance Abuse. Watley loves his work and the differences he can make in people?s lives, LiAnne Watley said. Her husband struggled with drugs and alcohol in the past, she said. ?The past is what it was,? she said, weeping. ?We were all about looking forward. ?And he loves his son more than anything in this world. That was his joy.?


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Sat Mar 29, 2008 8:25 pm 
what happened to the guy?


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 Post subject: IHS
PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2008 7:11 pm 
Well to let you all know what has happened to fred watley. On April 2,2008 he did recieve a new liver so far so good have had some set backs but the outlook is great here. He is back to working full time. Him and his son are bonding more now then ever. He is like a young kid again riding his bike with his son, swimming with him and even rollar skating again. They are so much son and dad again. It makes me cry that our son has his dad back again. I would like to thank all for the support that have been given to us back then. There will be a interview soon. But we wanted to wait to make sure that the liver is going ok and no signs of rejection. He still has to go to seattle a couple of more times here in the next few months. After that we are sure we are out of the woods with the transplant. The City of SPokane will know he is home and doing great. Even though he is doing well here but there are always set back. Thank you Lianne Watley


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