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Re: why the heck

By: clo in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 07 Nov 15 4:01 PM | 93 view(s)
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Msg. 17519 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 17518 by Cactus Flower)

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There are many southern states that want to END sex education. They only want to support NO SEX as the form of contraception.
These conservatives even distort info, in hopes of scare tactics.

An aside, one of my jobs is care giving. I've been caring for a woman who turned 91 in August, been helping her for over a year. She is mobile, in decent health, with dementia issues.

Recently she thought she was having a heart attack. She was alone at the time. I got there shortly after she called her son, unaware when I arrived. As she explained what she was feeling, I looked to see what meals on wheels brought for lunch. Pork chop, sauerkraut & potato. I thought she had heartburn. Her son already had an ambulance coming & she spent the next 8 hours at the hospital.
It was heartburn.

The bill came this week, nearly 8,000.00!!! her insurance & Medicare covered it totally.
There is something terribly wrong, when you are billed 8 grand & didn't even spend the night or have surgery....

'Medicine' should be not for profit!




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: why the heck
By: Cactus Flower
in ALEA
Sat, 07 Nov 15 10:56 AM
Msg. 17518 of 54959

hi tkc,

to me, contraception's just an unexceptional form of medicine.

the reason governments need to get involved in protecting young women's rights to reproductive healthcare services is because old, usually male, religious plutocrats seek to control their behaviour.

usually the reason powerful people appeal to their religious rights is to try to impose their ideas on others. restricting contraception is one of those things.

perhaps such people feel they have a moral high ground. sex is naughty. it is sinful. don't encourage it. whereas for me, the folks making the moral claims are creepy. It's none of their business whether a woman decides to use protection.

if a bishop says he objects to someone taking the pill, i suggest he should avoid swallowing. but i would counsel him to leave a young woman alone to manage her own vagina. let her go to her gynecologist to discuss the issues that affect her.

for sure, don't let a church or a business run by a holy joe use its influence to impose its will on a hospital or a health plan.

of course, if catholics and other christians weren't using their powers to restrict access to contraception and/or abortion, there would be no need for the government to intervene to protect women's access to them. but because they do, the federal government is seeking to protect them.

as much as anything, this is what government is for. to protect vulnerable groups from powerful ones. to make sure a powerful organisation's capricious demands are restrained.

rights often overlap. i would happily advocate for a young woman's right to see a doctor to get contraception than a church's right to impose its religious views on that young woman.

as regards the general idea that actuaries make better health insurance systems, this is the hell the us was just delivered from. it's easy to fasten costs to high use individuals. what happens is that sick/needy people end up excluded from the health system or corralled into spiralling insurance premiums. the way to build a successful system is to embrace the necessary costs involved in providing healthcare and to spread them broadly. vary premiums based on income and not on usage, sickness, sex, or pre-existing conditions.


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