Girl, You Have No Faith in Medicine
Okay, we know the costs of health care are going up exponentially, and that's why we ostensibly have to do something to reform the system. Covering everyone is nice, but making it affordable in a bad economy is also crucial. Tort reform may be an answer but there's just as much belief that it won't be. There's been talk about closing the so-called Medicare "donut hole" that cuts prescription costs for people up to a certain income, only to resume the cuts at a higher income bracket. Making the pills cheaper would be nice, but isn't it possible that part of the problem is the fact that we're taking too damn many pills?
I've always been a believer that the answer to all life's problems does not come in a pill. I mean if you've got a bad illness and medication will prevent you from an untimely death, then of course you need to do that. I'm not one of those faith-healer wackos who think that praying will cure everything. I take an Advil when I have a headache, I took my meds when I got my wisdom teeth out a couple years ago, and I've had some not-so-good experiences with cold medication. So my opinion on this comes partly from experience.
However, I think we could do without a lot of the stuff that's being sold to us on TV these days. Ya know, the prescription drugs with advertisements that are 50% disclaimers about how taking these pills could result in blindness, loss of appetite, heart palpitations or even death. Do I really need any of those things to make my life better? Maybe I will feel differently about this when I'm older, but in most cases, I'll bet something over the counter will fix your allergies just as well as that stuff they pitch during football games. And the depression meds are just, well, depressing. I get depressed, everyone gets depressed, but getting dependent on meds whenever things go south is no way to live one's life. Mind over matter, that's how I treat it. As with all things, this too shall pass, and it will get better.
Supplements are another thing altogether. My stomach literally turns when I see these GNC ads showing happy (presumably healthy already) people popping pills like crazy because it will give them more energy or help them work out or whatever. The jury is out on multivitamins, and a lot of what you need comes in food that just needs to be prepared properly, so really the first thing anyone should do when they want to know how they can make their lives better is to check their diets. So should you go the organic/naturopath route instead? Well, a supplement's still a supplement, regardless of what it's made of. It's still gonna cost you money (more money, as organic stuff tends to cost more anyway), and I'll bet a lot of these people who are buying these things wouldn't do too badly to put that money away somewhere. You know, for a time when they might actually need money to pay the costs of some necessary health care.
And of course, there's the ED drugs. Viagra, Cialis, etc. A big fear of people who are against government-run health care in all of its forms (Medicare included) is that seniors are going to basically get free Viagra. Whether this is true or not, this should NEVER happen. Same goes with covering elective surgeries that aren't critical to someone living a normal life. I think this is really the problem, that people are going to try to have all of these things they take or do medically for the hell of it and not for any critical health need covered by Medicare/insurance/the "public option" so any kind of negative (the cost being the big one) is taken out of the equation.
What we really have to do is tell people, look, the American health care system is there to make sure you don't die. Okay, maybe that's going a little too far... we'll also do our best to make sure you can live a normal, productive existence. That's about the end of it. Anything else you want to do to make your life better, PAY FOR IT YOURSELF!
This rant just comes about because I know there are people out there who confuse what they need with what they want. Yeah, it's a larger problem than just health care and I could write for days about how that mentality has contributed largely to the financial mess we find ourselves in as individuals and a nation as a whole. What I mean in this context is that spending your disposable income on drugs that are either more expensive than something that will work just as well or you're taking just to feel better about yourself and then crying that health care costs too much... well, I think you can see how silly an argument that is now. But when self-discipline fails, get the government to fix things, right?
I've always been a believer that the answer to all life's problems does not come in a pill. I mean if you've got a bad illness and medication will prevent you from an untimely death, then of course you need to do that. I'm not one of those faith-healer wackos who think that praying will cure everything. I take an Advil when I have a headache, I took my meds when I got my wisdom teeth out a couple years ago, and I've had some not-so-good experiences with cold medication. So my opinion on this comes partly from experience.
However, I think we could do without a lot of the stuff that's being sold to us on TV these days. Ya know, the prescription drugs with advertisements that are 50% disclaimers about how taking these pills could result in blindness, loss of appetite, heart palpitations or even death. Do I really need any of those things to make my life better? Maybe I will feel differently about this when I'm older, but in most cases, I'll bet something over the counter will fix your allergies just as well as that stuff they pitch during football games. And the depression meds are just, well, depressing. I get depressed, everyone gets depressed, but getting dependent on meds whenever things go south is no way to live one's life. Mind over matter, that's how I treat it. As with all things, this too shall pass, and it will get better.
Supplements are another thing altogether. My stomach literally turns when I see these GNC ads showing happy (presumably healthy already) people popping pills like crazy because it will give them more energy or help them work out or whatever. The jury is out on multivitamins, and a lot of what you need comes in food that just needs to be prepared properly, so really the first thing anyone should do when they want to know how they can make their lives better is to check their diets. So should you go the organic/naturopath route instead? Well, a supplement's still a supplement, regardless of what it's made of. It's still gonna cost you money (more money, as organic stuff tends to cost more anyway), and I'll bet a lot of these people who are buying these things wouldn't do too badly to put that money away somewhere. You know, for a time when they might actually need money to pay the costs of some necessary health care.
And of course, there's the ED drugs. Viagra, Cialis, etc. A big fear of people who are against government-run health care in all of its forms (Medicare included) is that seniors are going to basically get free Viagra. Whether this is true or not, this should NEVER happen. Same goes with covering elective surgeries that aren't critical to someone living a normal life. I think this is really the problem, that people are going to try to have all of these things they take or do medically for the hell of it and not for any critical health need covered by Medicare/insurance/the "public option" so any kind of negative (the cost being the big one) is taken out of the equation.
What we really have to do is tell people, look, the American health care system is there to make sure you don't die. Okay, maybe that's going a little too far... we'll also do our best to make sure you can live a normal, productive existence. That's about the end of it. Anything else you want to do to make your life better, PAY FOR IT YOURSELF!
This rant just comes about because I know there are people out there who confuse what they need with what they want. Yeah, it's a larger problem than just health care and I could write for days about how that mentality has contributed largely to the financial mess we find ourselves in as individuals and a nation as a whole. What I mean in this context is that spending your disposable income on drugs that are either more expensive than something that will work just as well or you're taking just to feel better about yourself and then crying that health care costs too much... well, I think you can see how silly an argument that is now. But when self-discipline fails, get the government to fix things, right?
Labels: drugs, health care
