Re: Uninsured Adults are 25% more likely to die Prematurely Originally Posted by ZASHAGALKA
But, I DO have healthcare. You don't have to be rich to take responsibility for your own health.
~faith,
Timothy.
While I agree that people don't appreciate what they don't have to work for, I find myself bristling at what seems to be an assumption that if you don't have health care you are irresponsible. Perhaps I misunderstand you???
I'm happy for you that you have health care. Likely your health care is subsidized by the hospital you work in. If you're posting on this board, likely you make a lot more than a large chunk of the public, who are working as hard as they can. Sometimes two jobs at a time.
You don't have to be on welfare to not be able to afford health care. For ten years my husband worked at a business that was small enough that it was not required to provide health insurance. I was raising four children, two of which were special needs, and doing what I could to bring in money as well. (day care cost more than I could make) We simply could not afford the 1200.00 a month it would have cost us to have more than catastrophic insurance. That was 1/3 and 1/2 of our takehome pay. (depending on the month)
It had nothing to do with responsibility. We did not have cable TV. We did not have cell phones. We did not have cars younger than 10 years old. (one was 20) We ate simply and I bought clothing at garage sales. We were not in debt...THAT is responsibility. We also didn't go to the doctor. At all.
It upsets me when people imply that those of us who are uninsured are somehow scamming, looking for a free ride. I'm now a single mother, putting myself through nursing school. I've made it two years, one more to go. I long for the day when I can afford healthcare for myself and my children. The instant I'm working as an RN, health care will be the first thing I buy. Not a new car. Not a satellite dish.
I don't have a good answer for how to handle health care. But our system right now is near-broken. The amount of uninsured and underinsured is growing by leaps and bounds, well over 40 million now. MILLION. They can't all be slackers, can they?
But I digress. The thread said uninsured adults are 25% more likely to die prematurely. And they will die after having cost the state more money than had they been healthy because they lacked preventative care. Preventative care is much less expensive than end of life catastrophic care. Who pays that cost? Taxes. That big chunk of money that keeps coming out of YOUR paycheck. Which would cost more? A few dollars for preventative care? Or the state picking up the tab for an extremely ill, terminal individual.