President Obama's VIP healthcarePublished: 2009-09-02 22:19:19Author: Mike Dorning | Los Angeles Times | August 5, 2009Reporting from Washington - When President Obama says he has the best healthcare in the world, he isn't kidding.
The
White House medical unit, with a staff of four doctors plus nurses and
physicians' assistants, is steps from his office. Treatment is free for
Obama and his family (as well as for the vice president and his family).
During
the president's travels, a doctor and nurse ride in a limousine in his
motorcade. An emergency medical technician comes too, with an ambulance.
Air
Force One is stocked with equipment for an on-board operating room. On
overseas trips, two medical teams usually travel with the president,
one on the plane and one pre-positioned on the ground so the president
will always have a rested doctor and nurse at the ready.
The
first family receives VIP treatment at military hospitals. And Obama
has virtually instant access to medical specialists that few, if any,
Americans could duplicate.
"If the president comes to us this
morning with a mole on his cheek, a dermatologist will be seeing him
today," said Dr. Rob Darling, a retired Navy captain who was a White
House physician for President Clinton.
During the Clinton
administration, a White House doctor and nurse typically traveled with
the first lady when she went overseas separately from the president,
but she did not have a medical team embedded in her everyday entourage,
Darling said.
A White House spokesman declined to describe the arrangements for Michelle Obama.
The
personal physicians and access to military hospitals come on top of a
choice of 10 family health insurance options that Obama receives along
with all other federal employees.
White House spokesman Reid
Cherlin declined to say which health insurance plan the Obama family
has. But under the federal Blue Cross Blue Shield plan -- the most
popular among government employees -- a doctor visit costs $20 and
generic drugs are $10.
The federal government contributes an
average of $764 per month toward premiums for federal workers with
family coverage, and employees contribute an average of $357 per month,
said Helen Darling, president of the National Business Group on Health
(and no relation to the former White House doctor).
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