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A System From Hell: My Personal Health Care Nightmare
It was a crisp and brilliant autumn day last October when the medical and financial crises with which my family had successfully, if barely, coped for seven years became a catastrophe.
My husband had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2002, a year after our daughter was paralyzed in a horse-riding accident. His balance had deteriorated until he fell two or three times at home last summer. In the face of his diminishing physical condition, a single fall could result in disastrous injury. We scheduled an appointment with his neurologist in Washington.We pulled up to the main entrance of the hospital after the two-hour drive from our home near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. My husband opened his door, grabbed the roof of the car and began to pull himself out as I walked around to help him. I was too late. In an instant--time slowed enough for me to see the danger but raced ahead too fast for me to reach him--he lost his grip and fell to the concrete, shattering his hip, breaking his femur and causing internal bleeding that kept him in the hospital for months.
My husband is a retired college professor, and what the teaching profession lacks in salary it often makes up for with generous benefits. His health insurance would cover most of the emergency costs related to the fall--the surgeries, the hospitalization, the drugs. But in the astronomical sums the cost of medical care often entails, "most" is not a reassuring word. Months later, as his discharge from the hospital drew near, I sat in my living room looking at the bills piling up on the table. The co-pays, uncovered care and other costs had already reached $8,000, and we had virtually nothing left.
Seven years of caring for my husband and our daughter, who had no insurance at the time of her accident, had all but exhausted our savings. As my husband's condition deteriorated, I was caught in a trap. We needed my income, but the kind of political consulting work that was my forte was incompatible with the demands of caring for him. It was simply not possible for me to be available for him 24/7 and simultaneously to work overtime, traveling for days or weeks on the campaign trail, to bring in the income that would keep us afloat.
The fraying financial thread by which we were already hanging was now certain to snap. When I heard the awful sound of my husband's body hitting the concrete outside the hospital, I knew the modicum of independence to which he had clung for so long was gone. He was discharged into an assisted-living facility, where most of the cost was excluded from both his private long-term-care insurance and Medicare. At $9,000 a month, the bills accumulated quickly.
Recently, we decided to bring him home, although the doctors would have preferred that he stay at a facility with full-time supervision. But this was a mathematical decision, not a medical one: we do not have the money it costs to keep him there. I had already stopped working, to care for him; our savings are nearly depleted; and his pension is not nearly large enough to pay the bills.
Today he needs nearly round-the-clock professional help at home--less than the cost of the assisted-living facility but still far more than we have. I have spent recent weeks looking for a job that can add at least enough to my husband's pension and our Social Security benefits to cover the cost of his care. It is a dilemma familiar to so many women--finding work that can pay for care but also leave time for providing it.
The time is drawing near when, job or no job, the expenses will simply be more than we have. I am coming full circle, back to where so many women's lives begin and end--and where my career as an activist began: jobless, unsure how to pay the next month's bills, caring for a family that depends on me for survival--and utterly and deeply determined that something about our country must fundamentally change.
That was in 1969. My first husband had abruptly left my three young girls and me, stranding us without financial support. Our family was in crisis, and when I found out a few weeks later that I was pregnant too, I knew it was impossible to give a new baby--whose father had already deserted it--what it deserved while also giving my daughters what they needed. So in 1969 I made the difficult decision to have an abortion. Because state law radically restricted access to the procedure, that decision had humiliating consequences. I was forced to obtain permission both from the man who had abandoned my daughters and me and from an all-male hospital review board. The board's interrogation in a hospital conference room covered subjects like whether I was capable of dressing my children in the mornings and whether I had been satisfying my husband sexually.
That experience sparked a lifetime of activism that eventually took me to the front ranks of the prochoice movement, where I forged deep and lasting friendships with some of the most powerful political figures of the past thirty years.
Not many Republicans were among them. But there ought to have been more--because in a distant era fast receding in time, theirs was the party of moderation and individual rights, and also because, ironically enough, I have led precisely the life Republicans claim to value. I started as a single welfare mother, then worked my way through college en route to a successful career. My second husband and I have sustained a traditional and loving marriage for thirty-five years. He purchased quality health insurance, including long-term-care insurance, so he would not be a financial burden to others. He enjoyed a long and steady career at an institution that would pay healthcare costs and a modest pension for life. Between his salary and mine, we achieved a reasonable degree of economic comfort--never wealthy but independent, self-sufficient, responsible.
Then came our daughter's accident.
We got the call in 2001. She was pursuing her lifelong love of horses as a trainer in upstate New York. One day in May her horse got spooked, reared up and fell over backward on top of her, crushing three of her vertebrae and paralyzing her for life.
The weeks and months that followed included multiple surgeries, a long hospitalization and extensive rehab. The bills were exorbitant, to say nothing of the fact that our daughter probably would never again be able to support herself through full-time work.
When the bills came in, it never occurred to me that walking away from them was an option. I cashed in the IRA on which we were depending for retirement and paid them myself.
My husband's diagnosis followed just as our daughter was beginning to stabilize. Eventually I had to leave work to care for him, and our financial independence deteriorated on a parallel track with his health. The story is familiar: the medical crisis that becomes a financial one. Still, we were able to hold things together, moving from one crisis to the next but finding a way to get by.
That ended in October. We quickly learned that not even the most frugal planning is enough to cope with surging healthcare costs. The long-term-care insurance barely covers a fraction of his long-term care. I will care for him at home, but a time will come when even our home might be at risk: if he needs nursing home care, Medicaid will pay for it only after we have liquidated most of our assets. Consequently, a blessing--my husband could live like this for years to come--is also likely to bankrupt us.
I do not tell this story because it is unique. On the contrary, the point is precisely that countless people across the country are living it. And millions more are a crisis away from joining them--one lost job, a diagnosis, an accident. Most people do not have the luxury of being able to call, as I do, on powerful friends for help. Not even these friends, of course, can change the predicament my husband and I face. Nor will the situation change for anyone until political leaders get serious about comprehensive healthcare reform.
By "comprehensive," I mean that piecemeal approaches will not work--not economically, not morally. The healthcare crisis is not a series of isolated problems. The problem is not just the uninsured. It is not only the underinsured. It is not the young or the old. My husband had excellent health coverage; our daughter had none. He faces chronic illness in the twilight of life; she suffered a terrible injury just as her adult life was beginning. Between them, they span the complete spectrum of healthcare economics in America, but when crisis struck, they found themselves in the same place.
Our story also illustrates the unique challenges women face in the healthcare system, as in the economy at large. Women are paid less and given benefits less frequently--yet they are the ones on whom the responsibility of caretaking disproportionately falls. In addition, women disproportionately, but hardly exclusively, understand the perverse economic choices the healthcare system imposes. In my case, I had to quit working to care for my husband, only to arrive at a point at which he needs care I can afford only if I can find a job. The bills, meanwhile, are often inexplicable, sometimes contain mistakes and are always impossible to resolve without encountering a thicket of red tape.
Even on the other side of that thicket, the insurance companies cannot answer the most vexing question my husband and I--and so many others--ask: if "health insurance" does not pay for healthcare when people need it, then what exactly do those words mean? And all this says nothing about the fact that my husband had the foresight to purchase long-term-care coverage. The problem is that it nominally covers long-term care but does not cover its actual cost.
I am often told there is a shocking quality to our story--it prompts a realization that if this could happen to someone like me, it could happen to anyone. But of course there is little that ought to surprise us; political connections are bound to be of little avail in the face of a problem politics has refused to address.
If there is an upside to the country's healthcare crisis, it is that the problem is hurtling toward a point at which it absolutely cannot be ignored without immediate and disastrous consequences. If there is an upside for me, it is this: returning to those difficult days of poverty and fear in 1969 also means returning to a place where anger inspires activism. I was a young woman then, of course, with a lifetime of battles ahead. I am not so young now. But I have enough years left to have one more fight in me. Healthcare is it.
- Posted in

60 Comments so far
Show AllThank you, Ms. Michelman, for a lifetime of courageous work in the face of a system that is against you.
Of course, while women have gotten the short end of the stick, it filters throughout society, hitting our children even harder.
This system is against us, and some would even call it evil. It no longer exists to serve us (if it ever did), rather to serve itself at any cost, by means of any pain it must dish out.
If the current spate of greed by the banskters isn't the issue that seals our fate, then the inequality of health care and insurance in the U.S. certainly will be. Ms. Michelman's nod to the lack of political will seems correct, but I see it in a different way: It isn't that politicians in the U.S. don't have the will to fix the health care crisis, it's that they only have the will to accept large sums of money from the health insurers in order to lard their war-chests so that they can remain in power. The longer they stay in power, the more money they need. It is a positive feedback loop, a catch-22, with the rest of us getting the burning end of the stick.
I have been an advocate for term limits for ALL elected officials, both federal and local. ALL! No one is immune to the siren call of power, and as long as this game of lifetime enrichment continues, things will continue to get worse for us.
How long can we hold out with the quaint (and wrong) notions of "fairness" and "democratically elected" politicians? I guess we'll have to wait and see.
Term limits are NOT a solution to public apathy and ignorance. Until things get bad enough for the average person to get involved in government, nothing will change. Besides, which congress-critter do you think would vote for term limits anyway?
Don't hold your breath waiting for term limits to arrive and solve all our problems - the ONLY solution is to nominate and vote for people who don't want to be elected in the first place. Voting for a politician is stupid - if they want the job, then they have a personal agenda, and you can bet it has nothing to do with better government. These are scam artists - nothing more. You have to DRAFT good civil service employees - whether in congress or the White House - just like when this country started up. Voting for the best salesman gets you people like Obama.
I agree that term limits seem a bad idea. In what other field of endeavor is experience a detriment?
I heard that the homeless live in constant fear of getting hurt since they cannot pay for health care. We should all be so careful. To think that 100 years ago, so many more people died. Now we complain about the bills from not dying. So we must acknowledge that we have it pretty good, even in the face of horrors.
Then we can move on to fixing the system. First, we need more doctors, nurses, and so on. We can look to women for this. How many female doctors work only part time? How many cut back for a family? Compare this to the statistics on men. When women take on the full burden of providing the health care that our educational system trained them to provide, then we'll be taking a huge step forward in making care affordable.
Next, we must establish what care qualifies as rights and what care is just a privilege. Somebody's gotta pay the bills, and our society just cannot afford the ultimate level of care for every single person, sad as it is.
I would offer that, as long as health care is a for profit endeavor, the numbers of available health care personnel will be governed by the bottom line and by no other factor.
I must say that I am a bit puzzled by your seeming criticism of women's roles as birth givers and , while we see a movement towards equality in the sexes in regard to child rearing, we have along way to go yet. I would note that the corporate culture must be addressed to promote such change.
Once you get past the autobiographical nature of this piece, you realize Michelman hasn't said anything. Where are the words "single payer," or the realization that Obama and the Democrats are just as much enemies as are the Republicans of anything the insurance and pharmaceutical companies don't want?
Robert Parry has a new piece on CD today. The next time he criticizes the Democrats will be the first time. Michelman was a mucky-muck at NARAL. The next time the liberal left (which includes, but isn't limited to, NARAL) criticizes the Democrats will be the first time.
Obama has put people to sleep. Heart-tugging, tear-jerking pieces won't win anything until people stop thinking any Democrat somehow equals "change."
--
Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
May I suggest that you reread this stunningly horrific portrayal of a health care crisis that is repeated many times in our country. You seem to want to criticize because the narrative doesnt spell out the road to change, perhaps that is not the purpose of it.
Over fifty percent of all bankruptcies in this nation are health care related , and the more of these tales we circulate the more we enlist people in the cause of affordable and moral care.
I saw no allegiance to democrat or republican contained within it either, only a story of one family and their plight. If this piece, which you describe accurately as "heart tugging and tear jerking" doesnt enlist you in the cause of health care reform then I do not know what will. Maybe that is its only purpose, to open dialogue?
Yes, because Kate Michelman is the only person on Earth with a sad story. Even Republicans are for "health care reform." Enlistment in that cause, in and of itself, means nothing.
It would be like someone writing a sad piece about the horrors of war. Even Republicans are against war -- they'd be perfectly happy if other countries would just gleefully follow our instructions with no need for violence. It's not enough to be against war; you have to analyze the edifice that produces war.
It's not enough to have a sad story and be for "health care reform." You have to look at the institutional structures that leave 50 million people unable to get adequate care. And those institutional structures are as much a product of Democratic policies (which Michelman's NARAL and other liberal groups have supported for decades) as they are Republican policies.
If I were really a prick, I'd say Michelman is reaping what she's helped sow. But I'm not a prick, so I won't.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
yes the word "reform" is widely abused in America. It is often used in place of slash and cut as in benifits for the poor or social security.
"comprehensive" is another weasel word that looks a little suspicious here.
I strongly disagree. From what you have written it is clear - you are indeed a prick.
What part of what I have written is untrue? In 1993, Michelman had been president of NARAL for eight years, while then-President Clinton was doing his health care thing. Health care is undoubtedly a feminist issue -- even for a group like NARAL ostensibly devoted strictly to the issue of abortion (since abortion is obviously, in part, a health-care delivery issue).
In 1992, even Consumers Union (publisher of the well-known "Consumer Reports") came out in favor of single payer. What was NARAL's position on the issue? Candidate Clinton promised "health care reform." I assume we all know what happened.
I don't know what NARAL's official position was, or what, if any, pressure they applied to then-President Clinton to steer him towards single payer. (I do know that Hillary famously said "Tell me something interesting" to a physician who, while meeting with her, argued on behalf of single payer.)
I'll bet dollars to donuts NARAL applied little if any pressure to Clinton regarding the issue. But we could even go deeper. A few years ago, Hillary made public comments backing away from a staunchly pro-choice position -- comments that, if they had come from a pro-choice Republican, would have earned excoriation from feminist groups.
But the feminist response to Hillary was silence and tacit support. Why? Because she's a Democrat.
So for Michelman to now be bemoaning her sorry lot -- when there are people economically far worse off than she has ever been who have never actually been in any sort of position to influence Federal policy, as then-NARAL President Michelman was -- is a bit hollow.
It's kind of like Al Gore now pretending to be a champion of the environment. Listening to Gore now, you'd never know the guy was once Vice President of the United States and actually in a position to DO something about the environment. Quite the opposite. As VP, Gore was quite the friend of the coal industry and other polluters.
If I were a total, complete, absolute son of a bitch, I'd say to Michelman that what goes around comes around. But I'm not, so I won't.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
You seem to harbor much anger. Aside from the counter productive nature of such emotionalism it cannot be healthy for you.
An ad hominem attack. Very nice. Al Dershowitz would approve.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
An attack? I posted concern for your health As William Blake noted once, you appear to be locked up within the cavern of your fears and hatreds. Your posts are more diatribe than illumination.
Patton's post was no such thing. It was a personal attack upon the author.
Nah, E.P., prick isn't the word -- you haven't got one of those -- a**hole is more like it.
N.M.
And remember when citing the statistic that more than half of all bankruptcies are health care-related, to remind people that 3/4 of those individuals had "health insurance." So again, the question becomes: what good is health insurance? Still, I continue to encounter Americans brainwashed by the propoganda, who insist that you should not be able to walk away from your bills no matter what (even healthcare-related debt is unforgivable to them) and we don't want the systems that other countries have. It is beyond my intellectual capacity to understand how to reason with such individuals.
Excellent point, and one it behooves us to remember.
Mr Patton manifests the selective vision of so many registered GOP in Cincinnati (supporters of Jean Schmidt and John Boehner). They can read Robert Parry's column about our nation's use of torture (today's column) and not see any criticism of Clinton or Obama. Nor could they see any wrongdoing by Reagan, Bush (I and II), Cheney, Rumsfeld, or their flock of neocon chickenhawks. Patton and Co. can see only the humanity of democrats and absolute perfection in every right winger.
Just for record, Mr. Patton, there are at least two articles on CD today that are critical of Democrats. Have you seen anything since 1974 in your favorite rag, the Cincinnati Enquirer, that criticized the GOP?? (In 1974, long after every other paper in the country was calling for removal of Nixon, the Enquirer finally concluded that he had to go. For those that don't know, the then publisher was the head of CREEP)
"Just for record, Mr. Patton, there are at least two articles on CD today that are critical of Democrats."
Which would be relevant if I were discussing CD and not Michelman.
And, for the record, I am a pareconist, not a Republican. I am criticizing Michelman from the left, not the right.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
Please don't think me "piling on", but perhaps you can illuminate my confusion. If I understand the term correctly ,parecon equals participatory economics, as a model or vision for a different way of conducting production, consumption, and allocation. The guiding values are solidarity, diversity, equity, and self-management. These values mean people caring about one another and being social in their inclinations, having varied options and outcomes, having fair distribution of wealth, income, and also circumstances, and it also means people having a say over the decisions that affect them in proportion to the extent they are affected.
As a key part of the definition, the one about people caring about one another and being social in their inclinations, I wonder when you start?
The plight of that family in the article received from you an almost gloating satisfaction I found quite appalling, frankly, and subsequent posts were not much better.
People may decide they think I'm "gloating," or not. That's not relevant to me. What is relevant is that, at one time, Michelman was actually in a position to DO something about health care. I don't KNOW what she and NARAL did. I'm too lazy to research it. But based on recent feminist behavior covering for Hillary, I doubt NARAL applied much pressure to Bill in 1993.
If people watch planes fly into buildings in New York and comment about chickens coming home to roost, are they gloating? Many Palestinians felt bad about 3000 American deaths, other Palestinians had reactions some might term "gloating." Regardless, why did the planes fly into the buildings? Because of U.S. foreign policy.
Why do we have a health-care crisis? Why has the right to an abortion been chipped away at for literally decades now to the point where it barely exists anymore? Why have unions shrunk to nearly nothing? Why are big pieces of polar ice shelves wandering off and disappearing?
The left whines about what it can't control, but never examines what it can control. Michelman's situation is sad, yes. But even now, she has access to resources poor blacks in ghettos can only dream of (let alone, say, people in Gaza). And above all, 16 years ago, Michelman and NARAL were actually in a position to DO something health care, like Gore a decade ago vis a vis the environment. EFCA is going to die because coordinator-class run unions won't adequately fight for it. The environment is crumbling because (metaphorically speaking) the Sierra Club is in bed with the company that makes Clorox bleach, allowing Clorox to be marketed as a "green" product. And abortion rights are evaporating because coordinator-class-run feminist organizations long ago stopped fighting for them.
If you're going to examine what you can control now, you should understand what you could have controlled before, and failed to. Yes, Michelman is no longer president of NARAL. But big liberal organizations keep doing what they do. And we have to be honest about that.
Liberals have aided and abetted the very problems afflicting Michelman now (including Michelman herself). So let's be honest about that. Instead of writing a tear-jerking piece, Michelman should write a piece examining the actions of NARAL during Clinton's first years in office, and how NARAL was inadequate to the task of bringing sufficient pressure to bear on Clinton to force single payer.
Then we can look at those mistakes, and attempt to correct them. I will tell you this though: No movement for single payer will ever win single payer. It's going to take an anti-capitalist, pro-pareconish movement to win SP. Nothing else has a remote chance of being strong enough.
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Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
How absurd, sir. First you say you dont have a clue as to the direction, actions, or intent of NARAL, and then you go on to insult this person based upon that ignorance.
I accuse you of fuzzy thinking and sophomoric discourse. You yourself claim laziness and ignorance.
Your comments do little to motivate and foster the unity and energy needed to win single payer. Well-paid workers, low paid workers, disabled people, unemployed people and all poor people have a common interest in single payer universal coverage.
You say "No movement for single payer will ever win single payer." I think we can get some things "Before The Revolution". Look at Social Security, which I think will provide me with some giant bags of rice after I retire.
In fact, there will never be a pareconish system or more equitable form of economy unless people get practice in what it takes to organize for what we need. Single payer insurance is something concrete, urgently needed and easy to understand. If we cannot organize for that, how will we ever be able to organize for giant complex changes that will have to challenge the ogres that now control the economy.
Joe
Not shocking, not surprising, and not unique.
(and that she is facing the "return to poverty" is too bad, but many of us have never left it and have no savings and pensions to rely on).
Women are bearing the burdens of a completely corrupt system (and I don't mean just the health care system).
Were we naive to think it could ever be different? Maybe.
"Health insurance" in my experience, and in the experience of virtually everyone I know, is nothing more than a cruel joke.
When you need to pay for something, it's either not covered at all or the cost of the "care" is so high that the percentage that remains for you to pay is exhorbitant (as this piece describes).
We need to wake up and DEMAND that this insurance scam end!!!
(and yes, Obama does NOT seem to be helping- way too many requests for war funds)
All the economic "stimulus" money in the world will not help the U.S. economy until the health care problem is fixed.
6 billion people in the world and you are crying about your bad luck? What about the people in Darfur? You are living in the richest country in the world and we should have sympathy for you? Get a reality check!! My stinking rich friends have the best health coverage and know exactly who to talk to when they have a crisis, and the insurance companies jump up with their money to cover them!!! You just dont know how to get it done. Too bad so sad.
Love
Glen Beickh
Forgive the previous post - I believe that we will may hear sincere versions of that piece on this page today.
But one thing is very clear - the insurance companies are not here to help you when you need them the most. I have been told more than once that it is a business and I should expect to deal with them in a manner so that they can make a profit, no matter what my grieviance.
The system works no different than the one in third world countries, and that is if you know someone in power who can help you, you can probably get it done for cheaper and more efficiently.
I believe that the American People have it in them to support people like Ms. Michelman, but that can only go so far. Do we have it in us to challenge the system?
We are about to find out.
Love
Zero
Perhaps if the population focused on one, main issue that they felt superseded all other issues (such as single-payer, universal healthcare), politicians would be forced to concede to the demands of the public.
What we need is a new organization or an existing organization like SinglePayerHealthcareNow.com to reach every American via e-mail and aggressive advertising in which they will do a candidate-by-candidate study on who is committed to universal healthcare. This same organization could then provide all eligible voters with a list of all candidates and their positions on introducing real healthcare reform via the single-payer system. This could be a powerful influence on whether a candidate gets elected or not... provided the healthcare advocate group reached out to enough of the electorate.
Of course this would be countered by the right-wing media due to it’s corporate fealty, but at least an alternative system would be introduced to a largely ignorant public for the first time. In the beginning I would expect that the vast majority of candidates would not qualify as “supporters of single payer healthcare reform”, but if the candidates anti-public position translated into electoral defeat, the single-payer agenda would grow into a powerful political force.
In the meantime don’t expect any serious progress on the healthcare front in America. Both parties currently rely heavily on corporate healthcare sponsorship to run their campaigns.
What a heart wrenching story, it raises some very pointy questions. What kind of a country operates like this? Are people so selfish?
Many years ago I worked in California, my employer presented me with a huge three ring binder from which I was to choose what I was to be insured for and what hospital and what doctor etc it was very detailed. About a quarter of the way through the very complicated process, I said piss on it, I'll just produce my BC health card if I were to get sick or need medical care. What a horrible system on offer and ditto heads in my country want to bring this bad management to Canada, I'll fight those bastards tooth and nail!
Single point of payment is the only way to go, and 100% of that cost should be carried by the employers. Whether employed or not, everybody gets covered. Anything less is an out and out shame. And a stain on the USA.
Sophie Scholl-The Final Days
My friend is on her second round of selling all her possessions, House, car, and furniture in order to pay her medical costs even though she has the best coverage availble. The CDC prohibits coverage for certain longterm treatments in certain diseases.
The latest political reports are that the healthcare insurers are coordinating Congress. A carefully limited minority in Congress will vote for health care, so they can tell their constituents, "Hey, I voted for the stupid thing." The real bill which comes immediately afterward is a bill designed to suck the life out of Medicare expanded for all, and it gives the healthcare companies vast, in the trillions, of subsidies, because everybody knows that the private healthcare insurers couldn't compete for ten seconds with expanded Medicare on a level playing field. So Congress is going to set this monstrous charade up for all you gullible taxpayers who are going to swallow the biggest pill you've ever swallowed in your life. The fix is on!
It's true, Despite it all, Americans remain way too passive about expressing their anger about the for-profit Medical System as it maims and kills us. If a couple of us would just picket the hospitals and insurance companies but we don't? Why not? I see sadness in this article yet not much anger.
Yeah, I hear a lot of you saying things like,"don't pay taxes" or "get the pitchforks" but it is all talk especially when there are many peacefull and effective ways to protest or demonstrate and they don't involve weapons or physical injury or tax evasion.
It's so twisted how we Americans love to screw each other over - it's not like "the health care system" is manned by robots - they're our friends and neighbors for f@#k's sake.
Worse, we all pay taxes, and we all want a portion of those taxes used to provide us all with fundamental health care, yet the will of the people is ignored by the people we elected to exercise our will.
Even worse, we all know what has to be done, yet, unless dragged there kicking and screaming by the "government," our "friends and neighbors" ain't lifting a finger. How is it that virtually none of the health care industry players are voluntarily moving to do the right thing without waiting for Big Brother to tell them to?
What really pisses me off is that everyone and I mean everyone I know with a GOV'T job at any level has great Health Ins. compared to the rest of us. We should all have a health system that provides us with at least what our tax dollars are paying these folks.
Thats because the rest of us can be made to pay for it. Just raise taxes or just borrow the money from China and increase the debt our grandchildren have to pay interest on.
Single payer paid for with debt free government greenbacks. It's a no brainer, and would be a huge boost for the economy to boot.
With the government sounding the mantra that financial institutions are "too big to fail", good families like Ms Michelman's are too small to save. Great priorities.
Health care reform is crucial for a number of reasons, including competing in a global economy, fostering new small business, and reigning in healthcare costs. There is NO free market operating in healthcare, so market reforms are not possible.
Insurance exists to make a profit for insurers. Incentives for wellness have, for the most part, not existed until recently. As the current system exists, it is unfair to providers and participants alike. Service providers often do not receive payment for 60-90 days and have their treatment plans revised by insurance companies. Plan participants must know their plans inside out in order to get treatment and payment for services.
As for family caregiving, it is assumed by insurers that families will do this and it saves money. Certainly not for the family providing the service. As Ms. Michaelman points out, careers suffer, finances suffer, even if you have planned for possibilities. I am a caregivier, have seen my career change and income decrease as I adjusted to allow for my husband's health needs. My insurance costs have increased, as have co-pays and deductibles - and I use a PPO and restrict care to in-network facilities. Bankruptcy is a possibility in the future, but we're managing for now.
With single payer, an emphasis on wellness and preventive care, better records management, less paperwork (or no hospital should have to know 90 health plans to be able to get paid for services); reduced administrative costs; and a serious discussion about end-of-life care, maybe we can accomplish something.
I know I might start a business, but I can't afford to lose coverage - both my husband and I have have "pre-existing" conditions - he has MS and I have asthma. Neither are self-inflicted because of poor diet or smoking - just genetics in my case and unknown reasons for his MS. I do everything possible to manage my issues and haven't been in an ER for years for asthma and haven't had to use a rescue inhaler for quite some time.
Health care needs reforming - at a minimum, health insurance should be organized as not-for-profit.
In the US 18,000 die every year because of lack of access to health care. SINGLE PAYER is the only answer. The voters voted 98% for repub/dems. Both of those Parties are controlled by the insurance companies. 18,000 deaths because the voters continue to reject candidates who support universal single payer health care. Unfortunately, the voters always get what they deserve.
I think the only way that our elected officials are going to listen to us is if we enact the National Initiative. We need to take some control away from representative government. They are nearly all bought and paid for. Please vote for the national initiative. www.ni4d.us.
Debbie...You prove my point. We continue to elect the wrong candidates. If more people had voted for Nader, we would have Single Payer.
I did vote for him, but even HE endorses the National Initiative. We need to enact this. We need to take some control away from representatives.
Reading your story reminded me that I am not alone. After a successful and fulfilling career in advertising and marketing, I have found myself caring for both of my 87 year old parents. I am currently unemployed (save for a paltry amount from writing jobs) and am too "old" to be hired doing what I know best.
Money is tight...my mortgage is 5 months behind and my house is worth $100K LESS than I owe. It is overwhelming with no place to turn.
Personally, I have no health insurance, and I tredd lightly and fly under the radar so as to keep myself out of the doctors office, or worse yet, a hospital. I have no idea where all of this will go from here...it's pretty scary out there...especially if you're too young for Medicare and too old for a decent job. My sympathies to you Kate! I understand.
Ms. Michelman, I agree with your conclusion that Healthcare reform must be enacted to save the Millions of Americans who are in your situation. One thing to note, its not just women who are thrown into this cauldron of deeping debt and despair. I had a stroke in October and had heart surgury in Dec., when the Dr's discovered a hole in my heart trying to find how the stoke occured. I work for Citigroup, they have good insurance,but my short term disability ended in Dec. and the long term disability is being questioned by Metlife as being a result of a "pre-existing condition", heart attacks I had 5 years ago.
The only money I have been living on is 293.00 a month.It is a pension check from my years working in a hospital as a counselor. The bills are mounting, unable to work, if it was not for the help of my 78 year old mother, I would be homeless. Unless Metlife approves my longterm disability, I will be forced to do something I would rather not do. But my situation is growing more desperate by the day and I cannot have my mother support me any longer. Healthcare is desperate for people in situations beyond their control. Politicans regardless of political party need to recognize how trapped people are.
DCDobbs
Right now insurance companies are broke and the tax payers are bailing them out. This is an opportune time to let them go out of business and institute a single payer system. It will not happen. Our political system will not allow single payer. We will continue to be screwed. Only a revolt will change things.
Kate, Very sorry to read about your family health disasters. It IS long past time for Single Payer and I hope you will educate yourself at PNHP.org/sitemap (FAQs) AND also read HR676 (Conyers) and HELP US now 16,000 physicians and many thousands of nurses and so many others to pass that bill. Long ago I did not respect your work. Now I do, having learned, like John Kerry, I have no right to decide what others do. My church also lost me in 2004, and repeatedly since. We must make President Obama do the right thing, just as Americans made FDR do so after he challenged them to "make me do it!" Our immoral for-profit health care non-system needs major surgical removal. Better times to you.
The expression "health insurance" has become an oxymoron. Having insurance, no matter how high the premiums, does not assure anyone they will get decent medical care when needed.
It's really time that politicians stopped worrying about campaign contributors and
actually recognized that the nation needs a whole health care system, built from scratch to replace the greed-infested pile of corrupt rubble we now have. There is nothing there to "reform", and bailing the insurance companies out of their financial difficulties by legislating mandates, as is being proposed, would be a total disaster.
At the moment, the only proposal that will solve our problems satisfactorily is single-payer - H.R. 676. We CAN get it passed. Right now those in power, both political and corporate, are tying themselves in knots trying to keep single-payer off the table, but we can put it there and get it passed. Camp[aign for it.
Tell friends and neighbors. Drown the relevant government officials with e-mails, phone calls, letters and faxes asking them to back H.R. 676. We can lose nothing by trying, but can lose everything if we don't.
We faced a similar dilemma. We were able to hire a trained nursing assistant for our parent. She worked a 40 hour week for 12.00/hr. Yes, expensive, but it was far less than 6,800.00 a month at a care facility. My other parent was free to work and had some relief from caregiving. We provided another citizen(not capitalist) with a job and our only obstacles were from the health system(for profit) which thanks to a sensible and understanding doctor(he made house calls) we were able to overcome. I write this not to block the urgent need for health reform but to remind others that care homes are not the only solution for people that need 24/7 care. The greatest benefit was that our parent was able to die at home with her family near.
given the choice of
free civilian care in
my hometown
or traveling 170 miles
to the va
the travel wins
always
folks at the va
are real
it is the model..
ken
I don't think you can expect to pay for military bases in most of the worlds countries, fight trillion dollar wars of choice and have decent health care.
Although America's ability to borrow is enormous B-2 bombers are expensive at around $3 billion dollars each. What would you rather have bombers or health care??