December 9, 2009 --
The first year after I graduated college was brutal. The George Bush Sr. recession of the early 90s withered the economy. It wasn't a happy time for young people. If you don't remember what it was like, just think of the angry grunge music that replaced pop music and glam rock. Jobs for graduates were scarce. I felt like everything I'd been promised my whole life (work hard + college degree = good job) was a farce. Between acting gigs and contemplating grad school, I accumulated substantial debt and looked for a real job. To scrape by, I worked as a bouncer, a substitute teacher, a sheet rocker and and jewelery salesman. None of these jobs offered health insurance. I remember I thought I could get by for bit without it. I suffered from the same delusion of invincibility as today's 20 somethings. This is despite an early diagnosis of kidney disease I received in college (when I had insurance). I felt like I was on top of it with inexpensive high-blood pressure meds.
Then I blew out my knee playing basketball. It swelled as large as a truck tire and I couldn't walk. I had no money or insurance, so I delayed treatment and hoped it would just go away. No luck. After a week I dragged myself to the emergency room. For a $1000 bucks, money I didn't have and that added to my debt, they X-rayed me, drained the knee, and injected it with cortisone. I had a medial collateral ligament tear and needed surgery. The doctor recommended I see a specialist and a surgeon. When I explained I didn't have health insurance, he shrugged and gave me some steroids to keep the inflammation down and said, "good luck."
I did not get the surgery. Once I did get health insurance several years later I ended up going to rehab three separate times because my knee didn't heal correctly. Go figure. A few years ago I got an MRI that showed as a result for not getting proper treatment, I have degenerative arthritis in my knee. To this day I have a slight limp and chronic pain.
- Jon is stupid and was probably high
- Being poor and in debt sucks
- Working temp, part-time work, or for small biz usually means no insurance
- 20 somethings don't understand the need for health insurance
- Ignoring an injury or medical condition leads to life-long problems and lower quality of life
Often we think of the uninsured as chronically ill people who are refused coverage. This is only part of the story. If you want all the facts please visit, http://www.covertheuninsured.org/. It's a detailed site that uses non-partisan studies from the Robert Wood-Johnson foundation to give you the straight dope. It's worth a scan. Know the facts. One thing that drives me crazy is the assumption that people who don't have health insurance are lazy welfare seekers. Not true, see below.
As the senate does it's back-room deals, don't let them forget about young people. If they extend Medicare and compromise on other alternatives to for-profit health care insurance, they must not do it with their normal superficial ass covering. We need real solutions to help all uninsured people.
2 comments:
I am trying to wrap my brain around the new health care plan. I am a big proponent of health care reform seeing as how the moment I hit 25 I was one of the few unlucky souls to be a) without any health care coverage; b) not immortal; c) disproportionately prone to life-threatening mishaps.
Cost of a root canal is US&A (as Borat would say): $1000
Cost of root canal in China: $20-40
Before you laugh me off your message board, I actually new someone who had to get one in China and they ended up fine.
I am trying to wrap my brain around the new health care plan. I am a big proponent of health care reform seeing as how the moment I hit 25 I was one of the few unlucky souls to be a) without any health care coverage; b) not immortal; c) disproportionately prone to life-threatening mishaps.
Cost of a root canal is US&A (as Borat would say): $1000
Cost of root canal in China: $20-40
Before you laugh me off your message board, I actually new someone who had to get one in China and they ended up fine.
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