PolyPassport recently profiled a Texan woman and her family’s journey from the US to France in search of more affordable healthcare and saner politics. They had EU passports on the basis of ancestry.
It reinforces a lot of the stereotypes we have about healthcare in Europe, particularly on pricing and access overall. Cataract surgery cost her some 300 EUR (!) and her daughter receives free prosthetics every two years.
But her story does dispel the notion that anyone, anywhere can just walk into an EU hospital and get treated—including EU citizens. That’s consistent with my own experience. I’ve lived in a few EU countries and certainly paid less for often high-quality care than in the US. But I never found it to be straightforward or necessarily leagues better than equivalent systems, say, in Asia. Like the woman in the article, I also missed speaking to providers in my native language about ailments that can’t often be conveyed with an A2 level proficiency! :)
It got me thinking about the trade-offs we face when chasing healthcare (or anything really) abroad. It’s about balancing the good with the not-so-good and making the most of our choices wherever we go.
Food for thought and a point discussion.
You made that up. The OP said nothing about expecting others to orient their linguistic approach. They simply stated that they missed the ability to express themselves and be understood as well as if they were speaking their native language.
The expectation of expecting linguistic ease in a foreign country. If some one comes to the US and makes similar claims the howls of outrage on speaking English would be deafening.
I have seen a great deal of the linguistic entitlement of English speakers. My comments did not spring from a vacuum.
Hospitals in the US are literally required to provide translation services.
Yep even my tiny rural hometown has translation services. Technology is a hell of a thing!