Ethical bankruptcy is going to kill us

Right now, everyone who has the money and the connections to get out of Liberia, Guinea or Sierra Leone, has either done so, or is considering doing so. This is what happened during the outbreaks of the Plague in the Middle Ages. This is what happened during the Spanish Flu epidemic. People flee to places they think are safer.

What I’m trying to make clear is that these people are just like you. They don’t think they should hang around in a hot zone and get sick anymore than you would. And no, I am not advocating the grounding of all flights to the affected countries,  because it does impede people coming in to help and fight the pandemic.  And it’s blatantly unethical to strand people in a place we have allowed, by our stupidity, our selfishness, and, frankly, our racism, to go to shit.via Our ethical bankruptcy is going to kill us, not a virus. | The Order of Turbulence

Published via MarsEdit

"Liberation" has limits.

The idea that today people with diabetes can eat everything is supposed to be a liberating philosophy – and certainly, compared to the restricted diets of the past, it is. I’m grateful for faster acting insulins, blood glucose meters and continuous glucose monitoring systems. But unfortunately, this supposed liberation can only go so far: even today, every meal requires you to correctly guess how much insulin to take, and to monitor and check yourself multiple times afterwards to make sure that you’ve succeeded. As Dr Richard Bernstein has pointed out, the greater the number of carbohydrates in your math problem dinner, the more likely you are to get it wrong. Catherine Price via People With Diabetes Can Eat Everything, Really?.

Which is why I called Mike Norris an idiot for organizing an Ice Cream Social for people with diabetes. In his anger, he organized an event that surely the public saw as "diabetics fighting for the right to eat crap". It's tough enough for people with Type 1 to overcome the stigma that we caused our diabetes because of poor dietary choices.

Yes, I popcorn. No, I don't eat ice cream. Yes, I eat pizza1. No, I don't eat cookies. The things I eat that aren't nutritious, I eat in moderation. I eat them occasionally. They are not a regular part of my diet but I enjoy them when I eat them. But ... I would never advocate that eating them is part of a normal healthy diet. That's just stupid.

This, I realized, leads to a contradiction in supposed liberation: while part of me was grateful for the flexibility that today’s medications and technology allow, another part of me felt oppressed. Here’s why: if diabetes itself is supposedly no longer restricting me, if I supposedly have all the tools at hand to eat whatever I want, then any time I finish a meal with high blood sugar or a scary low, then I must have done something wrong. The problem, in other words, isn’t my diabetes, it’s me.

No Catherine; it's not you. It's the people who think there is something normal about eating four scoops of ice cream and washing it down with a soda. It's people who think eating an 1600 calorie dinner at The Cheese Cake Factory is "normal".

No one can eat like that and stay healthy. Not even people with diabetes.


  1. I had stopped eating pizza because of the roller coaster job it did on my blood glucose. I have started eating pizza again now that I have an insulin pump. But it's rare. 

Health Insurance is really Health Maintenance

Now, on to my point: you don't have health insurance. At least you probably don't, and you almost certainly never have. I have health insurance, and it works quite well for me and my family. It's not perfect, but it allows us to really see what were spending and where.
 
You have car insurance, or at least you probably do. You carry that insurance to do what insurance is meant to do: protect you from bankruptcy in the event something unexpectedly bad happens. If you get into an accident or mow down some children, insurance kicks in to save you from losing your house.
 
But you don't pay a $10 co-pay every time you get an oil change. And if you go in for a tune-up you don't choose your spark plugs based on which ones your car insurance company covers. No, of course you don't. That's not what insurance is for, and you probably don't buy a third-party maintenance plan for your car.

When you go to the doctor, though, you do think about things like that. You probably don't know or care, even worse what an office visit costs. You just pay your co-pay and go on your way. You also may not know what your prescriptions cost for the same reason, but you darned sure make certain that the version of the drugs you're taking are on your plans formulary.
 
That's a maintenance plan, not insurance. Yes, that maintenance plan includes an insurance-like component because it also protects you from bankruptcy, but it does a lot more, doesn't it?Dave Hamilton.

I agree with Dave on some points. What is being offered as health insurance in the USA is in most cases health maintenance. Some of the insurers actually call themselves just that, Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO). Given that most American's don't seem to give a shit about "maintaining health" the current system is a giant ponzi scheme that will collapse eventually.

I looked up the definition of insurance and I couldn't find any definition that applies to what we call "health insurance" in the USA.

insurance noun

an agreement in which a person makes regular payments to a company and the company promises to pay money if the person is injured or dies, or to pay money equal to the value of something (such as a house or car) if it is damaged, lost, or stolen

the amount of money a person regularly pays an insurance company as part of an insurance agreement

the amount of money that a person receives from an insurance company

Insurance is meant to protect against financial loss.

However, Dave solution, paying out-of-pocket for health expenses, doesn't work for me. Back in 2006 I was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is an auto-immune disease in which the insulin producing cells of the body are destroyed by the bodies own immune system. I like to think of it as allergy to self.

Type 1 diabetes strikes both children and adults at any age. It comes on suddenly, causes dependence on injected or pumped insulin for life, and carries the constant threat of devastating complications.

Soon after I was diagnosed my wife checked my medical history. Other than a yearly physical I hadn't seen the doctor for any illness in over five years!

Insulin is expensive. So are the test strips, the lancets, the diabetes meters, and other supplies that I consume each day ... just to stay alive! The total yearly cost of my supplies is $6,744.56. The medical devices that consume those supplies cost $650.00. Factor in the cost of seeing the ophthalmologist (once a year), the endocrinologist (every three months), and the primary care physician (once a year physical) and the cost of keeping me in good health adds up quite quickly. Now add in the medical costs for my wife and two kids. Yeah! Shit!

Without insulin, I die! Without the medical supplies and doctor visits I can't maintain my health. So yes, I need a health maintenance plan. Out of pocket would be a financial challenge for me. I'm not sure if the Affordable Care Act will help or hinder with the costs of my life long goal of staying alive and in good health. But I sure hope it does.