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REAL Health Care Reform

  

by: Joy B.

Mon Jul 27, 2009 at 13:54:08 PDT


(noon. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

I keep reading on all the blogs that the debate is about how to get everybody (including those who simply cannot afford it) to buy in to the health insurance scam. But that's not health care and it's not health care reform. It's just a way for insurance companies to make a lot more money denying medical care to people who need it.

So if you're like me and see clearly that none of this is going to "reform" our health care system or extend health care delivery or fix any of the serious problems we've got within the health care system itself, bear with me while I cite some of the details.

Yesterday was the 17th anniversary of my son's death. It always hits hard, due to the considerable amount of trauma involved in having your son bleed to death while hovering in a Life Flight helicopter refused permission to land for a pre-approved transfer.

It was a situation of such gross medical malpractice involving blatant lies, clear violation of regulatory and criminal law that it took seven years, 6 regulatory and criminal complaints, more than $150,000 we didn't have, and a whole lot of do-it-yourself investigation and lawyering to get a modicum of justice. 2 of 5 doctors are no longer allowed to practice medicine, an  ex-Medical Examiner has a criminal record for producing a completely fraudulent autopsy report (on an autopsy never performed), and laws governing emergency services and transfers were strengthened considerably. And when I say a "modicum" of justice I mean just that. It cost us money, we didn't make any. Though several lawyers padded their pockets nicely. See, that's how insurance scams work. It's ALWAYS the lawyers who make money.

Joy B. :: REAL Health Care Reform
I keep hearing the right say it's all about medical malpractice premiums, because people like me sue doctors for their criminal and negligent acts. Bullshit. Medical malpractice and delivery 'errors' kill more than 195,000 Americans every year. Only one in eight injured patients ever files suit. Just 26% of those 'win'. There are caps on non-economic damages, and NO punitives no mater how egregious the negligence or error.

That might make you as not-fond of doctors and hospitals as I am, but consider these statistics. A West Virginia investigation by the Sunday Gazette-Mail revealed that just 40 doctors accounted for 1/4 of the claims in that state between 1993 and 2001. In Kentucky, records show that only 16% of doctors were responsible for 100% of the malpractice claims there. What are states doing to weed out the bad apples? Not a whole lot, it seems. Nationwide, fewer than 30% of doctors who were disciplined for "substandard care, incompetence or negligence" or misprescribing or overprescribing drugs have to stop practicing medicine, even temporarily.

The insurers aren't above fault either for escalating costs of malpractice insurance. When they claim there's a "litigation crisis" that cuts into their profits, they are - as usual - being less than honest. They make their money on investments, not on premiums. The St. Paul Insurance Company announced in 2002 that it was getting out of the business, claiming that growing verdicts in malpractice claims were responsible. But the truth was that its economic straits were caused by lousy investments, including a loss of $108 million when Enron went down in flames.

The insurer for all of the doctors named in our suit, Physician's Mutual Assurance (based in Baton Rouge), was thrown into receivership shortly after our son died because a couple of the corporate bigwigs skipped the country with more than $10 million in negotiable bearer bonds, putting the company seriously bottom-up on outstanding claims - 2 years before we filed suit! So the receivers were named, an ex-Louisiana governor and his son, who proceeded to loot another $10-15 million before getting caught and put in prison. So the company was in federal government receivership when we filed suit. The policy was to ignore, delay and deny rather than attempt to settle. We went through 4 lawyers, 4 judges and 7 years of insisting adamantly on our right to trial before we finally got it. 3 doctors settled on their own pre-trial, one settled after a week in the dock, the other one got a slap on the wrist by the jury and his license taken away by the state.

There are many suggestions out there on how we can address the third leading cause of death in the U.S. Basically, the equivalent of 390 jumbo jets full of people dying every year due to medical malpractice/medical error.

One would hope that one's own doctor isn't one of the few bad apples that kill or maim so very many, but because state regulatory agencies are highly uncoordinated and obsessively secretive, you are not allowed to know how many claims your doctor has racked up or how many times s/he's been disciplined or suspended.

It of course helps to be informed as much as possible. When my father-in-law had a heart attack the day of my son's funeral, we consulted our several medical books, Merck Manual and even went to the hospital library to keep track of every tiny little thing they were or weren't doing for him. Having lost one, we weren't about to lose another so quickly. When he was discharged a couple of weeks later the doctor had only left a prescription for HALF the dual-drug regimen required. The nurse fought with us about it, but we finally prevailed and made her call him while we were standing right there. Yup. It was a boo-boo. That would have cost him his life in a day or two had we trusted the doctor or the hospital to get things right!

So. Just wanted to say my piece about the "Tort Reform," "Litigation Crisis" and related malpractice whining doctors, hospitals and insurers use to cover their incompetent asses and extort ever more money from regular people for nothing very useful. No matter what they do or don't do about "Health Care Reform" in this Congress or any other, I am never going to trust doctors or hospitals any farther than I can throw 'em, and you can bet your bippy I'll keep close tabs on every little thing they do or prescribe if I or my loved ones have no choice but to submit ourselves to their meat grinder.

It's all plain shit, period. Health insurance is NOT health care, and health care is the third most deadly thing in America right now. If we want reform, we need to go whole hog and reform the whole unholy mess. The futures trade in human suffering is just low-hanging fruit. Yeah, put 'em out of business with universal care. Take profit out of general practice entirely by putting the doctors on salary. And require hospitals to institute oversight of EVERYTHING, with real power to ban doctors and nurse practitioners and even staff nurses who fuck up a lot. Don't wait for the Board of Medicine, don't keep the statistics secret, let people know how good or bad their practitioners are, and encourage people to learn all they can about every procedure and every drug they're prescribed.

Oh... and make medical malpractice complaints easier and less expensive to pursue, not harder-to-impossible. Even if most of it goes to arbitration for reasonable settlement, that's much better than we've got now!

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Truth is... (4.00 / 14)
...we have a system that is so seriously broken on so many levels that it might never get 'fixed' and may have to be re-built from scratch. I'm hoping that in my grandchildren's lifetimes people will look back on all this and shudder at how positively barbaric the whole approach was!

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


Great essay.... (4.00 / 9)
I get so mad about that mess up there.

Thanks, wilberforce. (4.00 / 9)
I'm hoping that the absolutely unacceptable level of actual medical CARE in this country won't be forgotten while we're fighting with insurers and their hired guns in Congress to get universal coverage. What's got us at the bottom of the list among ALL modern, industrialized nations in terms of health care outcomes across the board is only very slightly influenced by the fact that ~50 million of us have no access and another ~100 million can't afford a doctor after paying usurious premiums every month. Those nearly 200,000 people who DIE every year of medical malpractice and/or error are people who DID have access to the system. And the system killed them.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Part of what makes me so mad (4.00 / 6)
is that it's profit that motivates so many US MD's.

Cuban MD's that I've seen a few of down here in the '3rd world' , for instance , are motivated by the urge to help someone, not live in a McMansion.

And, although they may not be any better, I'll give more latitude to someone who is not making a decision based on their profit from it, as we know happens so often in the US--there's an article in todays NYT on that BTW.

My daughter died as a result of poor US care, so I take this issue very personally--and I'm less likely to give US MD's any benefit of the doubt than most others.


[ Parent ]
I'm sorry for your loss. (4.00 / 6)
This is something you and I (and another 200,000 people's family members every year) have in common. The way the statistics are so often manipulated irks me no end. When someone tells me the US has the "best breast cancer survival rate in the world," I want to know how many of the 200,000 were being treated for breast cancer, how many breast cancers are NOT being treated because the victims can't go to a doctor or afford treatment, what, exactly, is defined as "survival" for the purposes of the isolated statistic, and what the timeline prognosis works out to be if someone with a breast tumor in early stage without treatment (how that compares). The moment you look past the convenient fictions, things don't look so good at all.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Excellent (4.00 / 6)
May I also add that while HIPPA tells you your medical records are private the electronic digital age tells me otherwise.
Here is the chart.
http://www.patientprivacyright...

Remember to refuse your Unicorn flu shot this October.

Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what your country can do to you.


Yeah, the "privacy" thing is just... (4.00 / 8)
...another way to keep those 195,000 people (or their survivors) from suing. When the first lawyers took us all the way to within weeks of the statute of limitations before informing us they had no intention of investigating malpractice, we had to do it ourselves. The hospital refused to release the records because I'm not related to my own son. I sent ample documentation, they still refused, so I petitioned a magistrate who had to ORDER them to release the records to me.

Then when the first BOM complaint got to probable cause, they told me they couldn't make that determination because they had no right to see the records. I told the Board of Medicine the records - with analysis - were all included in my complaint, thanks, and kindly gave them permission to READ THE DAMNED THINGS!!!

But if you get sick and your insurance hack pencil-pusher practicing medicine without a license wants to deny, he can get your records and then axe your coverage - that you may have paid tens of thousands for over years - because you didn't report a bad head cold twenty years ago. Nifty how that works, isn't it?

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
there is no privacy (4.00 / 5)
When the patriot act took effect, they made it impossible for you to find out who has seen your records, and the government has the right to take a peek any time they want, and they probably have them all.  

Its only private to you.  


i love the smell of bipartisanship in the morning...
smells like...fucktory. -bubanomics


[ Parent ]
As far as I'm concerned, you are (4.00 / 6)
100% correct about everything you've stated.  I can also well imagine how difficult it must be to recount the pain of the loss of your son and the painful steps you took thereafter to attempt to achieve some justice.

My work background was about 98% in the legal business.  At a point, I was involved with insurance defense work, including medical mal-practice suits.  Some of the cases were so negligent, they were not even defensible.  But, of course, the insurance companies with their mega bucks would fight the suit(s) to the bitter end.  

As you say, the whole is completely f..ked up!!!!

Capitalism promotes greed and greed has no conscience!  

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle


whoops! "As you say, the whole SYSTEM . . . . " (4.00 / 3)


"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle

[ Parent ]
"Justice" for us was... (4.00 / 3)
...taking a couple of licenses. The in-charge 'Physician of Record' makes more money owning the CT and MRI scanners than from patients or insurers anyway.  It's pretty clear that the 'system' could save billions a year just by fairly arbitrating malpractice claims on professional review, sans lawyers, compensating people for their damages. If we can admit that 195,000+ people ARE harmed every year by their medical care providers, that seems like a no-brainer. Claims would still be minimal (1/8), maybe even less if everybody were honest from the git-go. Mistakes that cause death could be cut drastically by decent oversight and open (in-house) record keeping. And prescription drugs should NEVER be advertised directly to the public. Sheesh! How hard is this to figure out?

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
On the total other side of the coin, Joy B, (4.00 / 1)
I want to offer "some" defense on the part of doctors --some, mind you, not most who have been negligent.  And that is this, many doctors are carrying huge caseloads -- is that greed or is it a lack of enough doctors to provide care for Americans?  I, myself, question this!  I have seen doctors very stressed out from pressure of getting on to the next patient, etc.  Is this because of greed?  An actual lack of doctors?  Or just what?  

Just, maybe, we're not producing enough doctors -- the reasons are multi-fold -- you need only look at the costs of the education, the internship for each of them, the devotion, while accumulating massive debt!  I know this first-hand and it is awesome!  Again, the government provides NO incentive to medical practitioners and they are caught up in a huge case-load, massive insurance coverages, and endless barrage of bureaucracy, etc.  I, sometimes, feel sorry for what doctors go through.  But, in no way, am I attempting to excuse your case scenario, Joy B. -- that was quite something else -- and there are way too many, "quite something else's!"

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle


[ Parent ]
Yeah. Like 195,000 plus... (4.00 / 1)
...at least another 200,000 who are merely harmed (but not killed) by medical malpractice and/or errors every year's worth of 'something else'.

There's many reasons for this, since it's not only doctors doing the harming - the medical system itself does this. The only possible fix I can see having even a tiny bit of a chance to correct things is to take the profit motive and the dozens of middlemen and their protection squads (and their secrecy) out entirely and start all over again with a public, single payer system. That means standardized forms, codes and notes accessible to all involved parties, coordinated care plans among all pertinent providers, total drug and dosage records from all providers to facilitate that coordinated care, oversight by people who know about drugs and interactions as well as the patient's entire medical status, streamlined claims processing to the single payer. Now, such a plan would no doubt end up with hospital claims, doctor claims and associated claims under different divisions, but with coordinated care and oversight, that should be doable in the course of regular paperwork, to be submitted to the payer per schedule.

Let the private for-profits and expensive face-and-tummy-tucker crowd do things however the rich people are willing to put up with. The whole POINT of health care reform is to make health care available to everyone, not bankrupt anybody, and turn the lousy outcomes around by getting rid of the chaff that leads to this unacceptably lousy system. Health care should not be the third leading cause of death in this country. It is the third leading cause of death right now. Then we can die of our accidents, diseases or old age instead of our doctor or our hospital.

In a single-payer tax funded system, the doctor situation will get worked out by paying for education in exchange for x service in underserved locations or going into y field, etc. Then put 'em on salary. Pay them well. Doctors, nurses, equipment, hospitals, supplies, etc., etc. are COST, not profit. Their costs will have gone down considerably, they should do fine in life and be happier for it.  

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
YES, and yes! (4.00 / 1)
I agree, Joy B., and I hope you understood my point -- not to belabor the REAL needs in this country.

I LIKE your ideas and I agree with them!  This country lacks something very important in it's make-up -- sophistication!  If we could but just grow beyond the "ME" country, we might just get somewhere!

Very appreciative of your points and efforts, Joy B.

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle


[ Parent ]
I do understand, tahobasha. (4.00 / 1)
Research has demonstrated over and over again that basic honesty in situations of negligence/error - telling the patient about it and working to rectify the situation - prevents a large majority of meritous claims from ever being filed. People know that doctors and nurses are human beings, and that humans make mistakes. Honesty is fought by way too many invested 'players' to protect their bottom line, NOT to make medical care better or safer for the patient. An open window would bring some much-needed fresh air.

But of course I know that's not going to happen in my lifetime, probably not in my children's lifetimes. Too much money to be made off other people's suffering and death.

I do hope that the U.S. will grow up someday. I just won't be holding my breath. §;o)

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Great diary (4.00 / 4)
I've really thought that the health care debate has really missed the debate by focusing so much on insurance. Just because you are insured does not mean that you will receive (quality) health care, but it does mean that you will be paying to line the pockets of insurance company executives.

My thought has been why not focus instead on providing great health care for those who do not have health insurance through a first-rate public health care system of hospitals, clinics, etc?


What got us to the bottom... (4.00 / 3)
...of the list - heck, LATVIA does better than we do - is the fact that our health care is seriously lousy. They don't count those who are never treated in any health statistics beyond how many (a whole different statistic) are 'uninsured'.

Universal insurance is just putting more people into the system. It won't fix the system, or better any outcomes.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Personally, I'll go to an acupuncturist (4.00 / 4)
or something before I go to an MD, except in cases of a broken limb or something like that.  

Didn't they tell you? (4.00 / 5)
ERs no longer set bones. They give you a referral to a specialist for next month or so, then he re-breaks your bone in order to set it, a multi-thousand dollar procedure. A friend's daughter had her humorous (upper arm) bone badly broken by an out of control skier on a field trip a couple of years ago. They gave her a sling at the ER, some pain medication. By the time they got to the re-breaking specialist, her bone had knit quite nicely. He still wanted to break it again, they laughed and left.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
It has occurred to me... (4.00 / 4)
...that much of what's wrong with our system is that allopathic medicine has become largely drug-oriented, though it's kept quite a bit of its only other option - cut-and-paste - intact as well. Because it's for profit, the doctors WILL find something wrong with you, even if it's just at your required annual physical. For which they will get a kick-back from a drug supplier, plus more money from the insurer for all the nifty expensive tests they'll then order.

Most people will take the drugs without asking a single question, and get every single test without ever knowing if they're needed. Just because the doctor said so. When the side-effects of the drugs kick in, they'll be back for drugs to counter the side-effects of the first drugs, and take more tests "to make sure" the side-effects aren't some other problem. Eventually they'll be sick enough to cut on, and that's always a big money-maker. Once had a specialist give my hubby a clean bill of health and orders to "stay off your knee" for a week or two after twisting it in a tag football game. Then his UAW insurance paid quickly and the doctor (who drove a Lamborgini) called back to say he'd reconsidered, hubby now needed all the cartilage in his knee surgically removed. Something guaranteed to cripple him for life! Hubby hung up, loudly.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


Custody Taken Away b/c woman refuses C Section: (4.00 / 3)
Outrageous. But all too typical. (4.00 / 3)
C-sections are done way too often, for the convenience of the doctor not the health of mother or child. She was labeled 'combative' and 'erratic' for not bowing to the doctor's demand, they took the healthy, vaginally born baby away from birth, and two years later she's "unfit" because she's still labeled. "Unfit" for what? She never got a chance to BE a mother. What do they know about what kind of a mother she is?

Glad my daughter decided on home birth after a Medicaid doctor insisted she abort at 26 weeks due to what he claimed from ultrasound was a cleft palate. There was no cleft palate (or any other genetic/developmental problem). He's 19 and in college now.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
46% of births in that hospital by C Section... (4.00 / 2)
should be 10% or so.

[ Parent ]
Then they need to be audited... (0.00 / 0)
...and their entire stable of OB-GYNs investigated by the BOM. These guys should NOT be deciding that Moms who resist their efforts are "unfit parents." Shame on the state!!!!

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
This, just received! (4.00 / 1)

Dear Friend,

If you're like most Americans, there's nothing more important to you about health care than peace of mind.

Given the status quo, that's understandable. The current system often denies insurance due to pre-existing conditions, charges steep out-of-pocket fees - and sometimes isn't there at all if you become seriously ill.

It's time to fix our unsustainable insurance system and create a new foundation for health care security. That means guaranteeing your health care security and stability with eight basic consumer protections:

--No discrimination for pre-existing conditions
--No exorbitant out-of-pocket expenses, deductibles or co-pays
--No cost-sharing for preventive care
--No dropping of coverage if you become seriously ill
--No gender discrimination
--No annual or lifetime caps on coverage
--Extended coverage for young adults
--Guaranteed insurance renewal so long as premiums are paid

Learn more about these consumer protections at Whitehouse.gov.

Over the next month there is going to be an avalanche of misinformation and scare tactics from those seeking to perpetuate the status quo. But we know the cost of doing nothing is too high. Health care costs will double over the next decade, millions more will become uninsured, and state and local governments will go bankrupt.

It's time to act and reform health insurance, drive down costs and guarantee the health care security and stability of every American family. You can help by putting these core principles of reform in the hands of your friends, your family, and the rest of your social network.

Thank you,
Barack Obama

O.K., so you see it's just great -- all you have to do is make sure your payments are on time for renewal, etc.  Geez, what if you just lost your job?  What if you simply can't pay?  You're screwed, that's what?  (And just think, any employer would be off the hook for providing any kind of group coverage, to boot!)  So, this is just great, so long as nothing happens to prevent you from paying for your insurance!!!!!!  Ah, American ingenuity!!!!  



"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle


Is that real? As in... (4.00 / 1)
...NOT a parody? I ask, because you never know these days. I've heard the penalty for not buying junk insurance once there's a mandate is that they'll deduct the premiums from your tax refund. Great if you get a refund, but at least they won't be refusing you necessary care.

"If you pay your premiums on time" is NOT universal health care, universal access, or anything at all in the way of addressing what's wrong with out SYSTEM. The whole ugly mess of it.

Sigh. I'm pushing 60, might make it to Medicare, might not. In the meantime I avoid doctors as if THEY were the plague. I'm not afraid of dying. But I am still waiting on those 'Really Great Drugs' my generation expected to materialize a long time ago to ease us on our way out. Not morphine or heroin or any other clever opiate derivative. Something that won't knock us out, make us forget, or incapacitate us further. Just something that takes the pain away, maybe offers some 'oomph' in the spiritual at-oneness direction.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
It is for real -- NOT a parody, Joy B. (4.00 / 1)
Well, there's this 82-year old, Republican billionaire nut-case, who believes the elderly are a burden on society and he's funding his foundation to go after social security funds ("fiscally responsible," he calls it) to pay back some of the U.S. indebtedness.  He's  been working on Obama on that.  And there are others that are trying to find ways to sabotage social security funds.

It seems the elderly are just not wanted in this country period.

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle


[ Parent ]
Oh, forgot! (4.00 / 2)
Here's the Peter Peterson Foundation link:  Peter G. Peterson Foundation

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle

[ Parent ]
Thanks (I think) for that... (4.00 / 1)
"Unfunded?" I have paid SS taxes on 100% of my income since I was 16 years old. It was supposed to be held in trust for us bazillion 'boomers', since we were paying in so much more than then-current retirees got out. It's been raided, the IOUs are worthless, tough titty. I have a great idea. If your total monthly income after age 65 is more than $3,000 per month, your SS payments start going down. If you're so rich you only paid SS taxes on less than a quarter of your earned income, you can take care of yourself. I've lost 4 of my boomer friends since January, none of them yet old enough for SS. Expect to lose at least 6 more through December. I don't know all boomers, but if the ones I do know are dropping like flies well short of 65, what's the problem? There aren't enough working members of the THREE generations behind us to pick up the slack? Bullshit.

When the rich pay as much of their total income in taxes as I do, there won't be any shortfalls. Or, if worst comes to worst, we can always Eat the Rich... §;o)

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Sorry, the SS trust fund... (4.00 / 1)
...has been raided by so many administrations for so long as the "Petty Cash Drawer" to make their deficits look less like profligate spending, that there's nothing left. Of course, it's backed by Treasuries, since that's where it was invested. Unfortunately, those aren't worth anything anymore...

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Yeh, well, we're talking about $3 trillion (0.00 / 0)
in funds awaiting the baby-boomers!

"At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst."--Aristotle

[ Parent ]
That's less than we paid in. n/t (4.00 / 1)


Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Plus, it's $7 trillion less... (4.00 / 1)
...than Bush & Obama gave to Wall Street since October 1 of last year. So long as the Fed's printing money, they can print enough for me. I don't need much.

No nation in debt to itself is in any danger of collapse.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
I feel so sad or your ordeal, Joy B. ... (4.00 / 1)
...yours and numberless others.  It seems we, as a nation, have simply forgotten how to respect life.

Thanks for this diary.

Breathe in emptiness and luminosity.  Breathe out compassion.


To tell the truth... (4.00 / 1)
...dharmasyd, I have never much liked doctors or their technology, not to mention their attitude. No doubt comes from experiencing way too much of them as a child (with an over-anxious Mom and a Dad who didn't mind volunteering me for 'projects'). Soon as I figured out what they wanted from me - besides blood, the Vampires! - I was easily able to convince them my synesthesia had magically disappeared with the onset of puberty. [evil grin]

Also have a sister who got her Ph.D. in plant physiology researching plant alkaloids as possible treatments for cancer. She and I shared a bedroom for 17 years, a love of nature, and a pure fascination with any old-time remedies we could find out about. With a mother and younger sister who both died of prescription drug dependence (the long-term effects thereof), I'd much rather drink chamomile or St. Johnswort tea from herbs I've tended and gathered for sleeplessness or anxiety than be able to walk out my front door some morning and yell, "VALIUM!" and have six neighbors offer me some of theirs (yeah, I've seen that).

We're a strange breed. We'd love to take a magic pill that will make all our excesses go away, but there's no such thing. So we have obese children with gout and rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes, obese adults with bad hearts and livers and colons from eating crap all their lives. Simple answer is we cannot indulge with impunity in all seven of the deadly sins and expect some doctor's going to magically make us well so we can do it all over again to ourselves. All the while soaking in ever more and more of the cancer-causing filth in our environment as well as our food supply, then wondering why the heck God picked on "Me, Me, Me!" to get cancer. Instant gratification is our scourge, the Modern Plague. It does not look much like we've learned anything, or our kids wouldn't be so fat, sickly and lazy.

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
Allopathic medicine... (4.00 / 1)
...has never been my preferred choice.  So it is dsmaying to find myself at 76 taking gobs of pharmaceuticals.

Started 25 years ago after I had been exposed to the highest concentration of acid fog ever recorded on the planet up until that time.  

Long story.  But I have found myself sucked into the medical malaisse.  At least I have a good lady doctor with whom I can communicate.  But sometimes, due to poverty, etc., one doesn't have much choice.  

I had been a Rolfer, so was very much into alternative systems.  But I had just finished off paying my student loans and for my Mother's final illness and funeral.  It was then a case of take the pills the government will pay for, or be unable to breathe.  Maybe this is an over simplification, but I tried to make the best decisions I could from the options I had at the time.


Breathe in emptiness and luminosity.  Breathe out compassion.


[ Parent ]
I hear you. (4.00 / 1)
I've been known to take an aspirin rather than boil up black willow bark (too much trouble when every joint in my body is complaining). Also take Benedryl, thank God (or the FDA) that it's OTC these days. They used to shoot me up with 250mg at a time when hives would close off my airway (not to even mention what it did to my face...) at the Navy Hosp. ER back in the day, told me they wouldn't give me a prescription because I might abuse it. Ha!

Living this far out in the woods doesn't help allergies that get worse as I get older, I'm no doubt doing the wrong thing treating symptoms instead of causes. One of these days I'll figure out the culprit, find its antidote growing nearby. Oh... and yes, we do live on DEET all summer. It may well cause cancer if I live to be 110, but that's less of an issue right now than West Nile or Encephalitis... §;o)

Some are born to weirdness, some attain weirdness and others have weirdness thrust upon them...
- OPOL


[ Parent ]
 

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