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I believe that's correct as regards ERs, but if individual doctors take or refuse patients--which is done all the time--that doesn't mean that those who are not accepted by them have no recourse. The poorest people I know are able to see doctors, thanks to one government assistance program or another.
I can't speak as an expert, but when it comes to the very poor, hospitals normally "eat" the cost of those people's care. Of course, if someone comes into the ER and needs longer-term care, they will be hospitalized and not put out on the street.
What would concern me isn't so much the "very poor" or the "poorest" but the people who have enough to have something to lose. The very poorest probably live in rented accommodation and hence wouldn't have a home to lose due to a forced sale. The people who are rich enough to not qualify for the government assistance yet poor enough to struggle with paying a large hospital bill are the ones I would be most concerned about.
If someone does need hospital treatment and is effectively told "you'll be here for three months, and when you are released you won't have a home to go to because you'll have to sell it to pay our bill" that doesn't seem like a particularly useful system.
I can't help thinking some form of hybrid system, whereby things that are medically necessary are funded centrally while anything elective is funded privately, would make some sense. The trouble is a system too focused on the individual does little more than say "sucks to be you" to those who have health issues they can't control while a system too centrally managed ends up with huge levels of waste and endless waiting lists because everybody wants every trivial ailment fixed.