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Critical Condition

  NR

Roger Weisberg

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Plot Summary

Between 46 and 50 million Americans have no health insurance, and the numbers continue to grow. Last year alone approximately 2.2 million lost their coverage. In just the time it will take to watch this film, 377 more Americans will become uninsured. Most tragically, 22,000 Americans will die this year because they lack health insurance. A bracingly honest documentary, Critical Condition investigates America's worsening health care crisis by following a diverse group of uninsured individuals as they battle critical illnesses without adequate medical care. It is through their eyes and words that we are taken through the gaping holes in the health care system, where care is often delayed or denied. Ultimately, the unforgettable subjects of Critical Condition discover that being uninsured can cost them their jobs, health, homes, savings, and even lives. A few sobering statistics reinforce these disturbing personal stories -- the most compelling, perhaps, are those that illustrate the enormous cost in dollars and human suffering that we pay by denying sick patients access to routine primary care. Through intimate stories that illuminate the emotional, financial, and medical impact of battling illness without insurance, Critical Condition sends a subtle yet deeply foreboding message about the alarming state of the American health care system.

Customer Reviews

To Bobbo

I'm not sure how badly you failed math, but 27 million people in 1980 does not mean that the same 27 million people are the only ones without healthcare 30 years later. I haven't seen the movie (hence a neutral 3 star rating) but I had to comment that your review seems a bit ridiculous. For goodness sake, the plot summary states 46-50 million, in its first line!

Either way, I can't be unbiased on this, as I'm a Canadian with free healthcare, and one of the members of the Industrialized world looking at America as the only major power without basic healthcare and wondering why.

great movie, sad topic

as a physician, i found this movie realistic. it illustrates the consequences of healthcare-associated fiscal conservatism: medical services & products are commodities, & profit is appropriate and desirable. the problem is that suffering or early death from preventable & treatable diseases, or healthcare bankruptcy, is not infrequent under this system. it's a bummer & shouldn't be like this. also, i don't make lots of $.

Lies

Im not even going to rent this look at the trailer it says in 1980 27,000,000 were uninsured which means only 8% of americans were uninsured since about 80,000,000 people have been added to the population that means 6.5% are uninsured now days so don't get this!

Critical Condition
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Customer Ratings