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Steve Jobs' Preferential Treatment Highlights 'Health Gap'

By Ed Leefeldt | Jun 25, 2009

Yes, the rich are different from us. They have better health insurance. And, no matter what program President Obama gets through Congress, that “health gap” is likely to remain.

The media circus that followed Apple CEO Steve Jobs’s recent liver transplant highlights this. Those with buying power go to the head of the line when it comes to the basic human desire for survival.

While details remain murky, it’s clear the Cupertino, California CEO went organ-shopping. He found what he needed 2,000 miles from home at the Methodist University Hospital in Memphis and jumped ahead of 1,600 people who are also in need of a new liver.

“Jobs beat very long odds to get a transplant,” says MSNBC.com writer Arthur Caplan, who noted that the creator of the IPod was hardly the best candidate, since his body was already compromised by cancer.

Brings back memories of Mickey Mantle. The Yankee slugger drank his liver (and himself) into a state of dysfunction. Even though doctors had also found cancer in his system, and the average wait time was four months, miraculously a transplant opportunity appeared in one day. Three months later Mantle was dead and that vital organ, which might have saved someone else’s life, was buried with him.

Meanwhile the health care battle rages and Obama is beginning to backpedal on universal insurance. “The public plan, I think, is an important tool to discipline insurance companies,” he told a White House press conference. That’s a strong hint that he’d vote for a plan without a universal option if health insurers would rein in spending.

Universal care critics point out the “health gap” still exists in countries that have universal care. In Canada and the United Kingdom those who can afford it buy private insurance to avoid long waits, minimal care, and, for older patients needing reconstructive surgery, outright turndowns. While U.S. patients cross the border for cheaper medicine, Canadians cross the border for better doctoring.

Health insurance will be a tough sell unless Obama can show that every American will get at least a modicum of quality care in any plan offered. And Steve Jobs is the perfect poster child for the health gap between the CEO … and the Average Joe.

Ed Leefeldt is an award-winning investigative and business journalist who has worked for Reuters, Bloomberg and Dow Jones, and is the author of The Woman Who Rode the Wind, a novel about early flight.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • When Anonymous Sources Disappear Entirely

    Seeking Alpha - 155 days 15 hours 56 minutes ago

    Felix Salmon submits: John Gruber notes the weird lack of sourcing in the WSJ’s article about Steve Jobs’s liver transplant: There are several highly unusual aspects to the Journal’s story. First is that they offer no source for the information — not even an “according to sources

  • News of Jobs’ transplant was well timed

    Muckety - 153 days 21 hours 18 minutes ago

    News isn’t generally a guessing game, but The Wall Street Journal’s unattributed weekend story of Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ “secret liver transplant” birthed a frenzy of media speculation about where he got it, how he got it, and why it was needed when the only confirmed disclosure about his health  it came from Jobs himself in 2004...

  • Apple's Steve Jobs has new liver, 'excellent prognosis,' doctor says

    Computer World - 154 days 8 hours 48 minutes ago

    Methodist University Hospital in Memphis confirmed late Tuesday that Apple CEO Steve Jobs recently underwent a liver transplant

  • Jobs has new liver, 'excellent prognosis,' doctor says

    Computerworld - 154 days 7 hours 48 minutes ago

    Methodist University Hospital in Memphis confirmed late Tuesday that Apple CEO Steve Jobs recently underwent a liver transplant. News of the transplant was first reported on Saturday by The Wall Street Journal but the hospital's statement is the first confirmation of the operation. "Mr. Jobs is now recovering well and has an excellent...

  • Steve Jobs has 'excellent prognosis' after transplant

    Sydney Morning Herald - 154 days 7 hours 59 minutes ago

    Unspecified Apple chief executive Steve Jobs has an excellent prognosis following a liver transplant, the Memphis, Tennessee, hospital that performed the surgery said. Jobs, 54, received the transplant because he was "the sickest patient on the waiting list at the time a donor organ became available," the Methodist University Hospital Transplant...

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