A
Missourian takes the pulse of citizens on health care issues, gazes
south of the border, and routes the results to Washington, D.C.
Richard Oswald Linda
Bennington Nolan (center, in black and white shirt) and a handful of
volunteers reached out Saturday to visitors at a mall in St. Joseph,
Missouri, asking for their views on health care and health care reform.
Everyone talks about the weather but no one does anything about it.
It’s a big complaint in Langdon, Missouri. What started out as a
perfect crop in the field this year is now turning into something less,
as more and more rain pours down on the flatlands.
An
angel once whispered to me that the more difficult the task, the nobler
and more magnificent it becomes. By that measure health care is mighty
noble, but it might be easier to dry up the heavens than cure what ails
the nation.
I sure wish someone would do something about it.
The
angels must have been cheering on Saturday, looking down on the area’s
first health care day of service. Achieving health care at a reasonable
cost is hard, but setting up this event proved nearly impossible.
That’s what organizer Linda Bennington Nolan discovered when she
started looking for a place to hold it. Wal-Mart wouldn’t have it, and
the farmers market opted out, as did the shopping malls. Nolan hoped to
offer blood pressure screenings; even though she’s a trained health
professional, legal liability was a big obstacle. (If you find someone
with high blood pressure and they die or have a stroke once they leave
your booth, the law says you should have prevented it.) When she asked
the blood bank to participate so the screenings could be offered, they
declined. She planned a bake sale, but the city of St Joseph doesn’t
allow them in a public space. “They say it’s a health risk,” Linda told
me, “especially fruit pies that aren’t refrigerated.”
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Richard Oswald Linda
Nolan, at left, drew together proto-volunteers June 6 at the St. Joseph
Library to plan a "health care day of service." Thirty-five people came
to the planning session; eight volunteers turned out last Saturday for
the event. Just finding a venue turned out to be a struggle.
When she was still Linda Bennington, she and I grew up on
opposite sides of Langdon, separated by the railroad tracks. We have
never worried about which side of the tracks was the wrong side because
back then, everyone in Langdon was equal. We both did very well eating
our mothers’ cooking. But by today’s city standards, we grew up in a
death trap baited with fruit pies, fresh baked cookies, and homemade
ice cream.
I guess it’s a miracle we survived.
So the
bake sale was out. But at the last moment the manager of the East Hills
Mall relented and allowed Linda and her volunteers in on the condition
that they post no signs, make no public address system announcements,
and do nothing to hinder merchants and their customers. In other words,
“Keep it quiet.”
Still, Linda was up for the task. She told me,
“We hope to give people with healthcare issues a chance to share their
personal stories and sign a declaration of support for affordable
healthcare choices reaching all the way to Congress.” Linda called
this “a once in a lifetime opportunity to share our thoughts in an
actual healthcare reform bill written 'for the people'. It is
imperative we do something now.”
“Excuse me, are you happy with
your health care?” a volunteer, Adrienne, called out to a passing
shopper. “Yes, I am,” the shopper replied as she walked toward the
exit.
But not everyone was happy… or kept walking.
One
man, Larry, who was using the mall as an indoor track, promised to stop
by as soon as his walk was finished; “Once I get my heart rate up, I
need to keep going” he said. When he returned he explained why he felt
a national health care plan might never succeed. “I’m not ready to sign
up yet. There’s too much to be decided,” Larry said. “For one thing,
it’s just too darned expensive”.
Then another volunteer, Patricia, told her story:
“When
my insurance was canceled we had to move to Mexico because of what my
prescriptions cost here in the US. In Mexico, the same prescription for
the same identical drug costs just 20% of what it costs here. A visit
to the doctor of my choice runs $30 to $40. Charges for a private
hospital room are $150 a day. And even the poorest people in Mexico
get health care whether they can afford it or not.”
Patricia
showed off her Star Medica card. The $17 card qualifies her for
discounts (25% off hospital and emergency room costs, 10% off lab work
and x-rays) for her medical care on the Yucatan where she lives a
medical expat’s life with her husband, Glenn.
“I guess I’m ready to sign now,” Larry said.
Patricia and people like her are part of Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim’s latest business venture: medical tourism.
Slim’s company, Grupo Star Medica, is building state-of-the art
hospitals in popular baby boomer resort towns like Puerto Peñasco,
Sonora, and in Los Cabos on the Baja California peninsula. By offering
economical treatment plans for medical tourists from the US, Slim is
also spurring a development boom for new homes that he expects U.S.
residents to buy so they can be closer to their Mexican doctors. A Star
Medica hospital was even approved to treat President George Bush on his
2007 trip to the Yucatan Peninsula.
If it’s good enough for Bush
II, it’s good enough for me, but I hope I never need it. Still, my wife
Linda, grandson Ryan, and I spend $1000 a month for medical insurance
in addition to a $5000 deductible, and no help with prescription meds,
dental or eye care. Last year our total medical expense including
insurance premiums was well over $20,000.
Patricia says it takes
her six days to drive from Yucatan back to St Joe, where she visits her
daughter and grandchild. The good news is that Grupo Star Medica is
expanding facilities into border towns like Ciudad Juarez for those
U.S. residents who prefer being closer to home.
So chin up,
America, reasonable health care costs along with cheap luxury housing
await you, not here, but just across our southern border.
Richard Oswald Blood pressure checks were out, but opinions were plentiful at the East Hills Mall during Saturday's health care day of service.
As more people stopped to talk, we heard about people’s fears of
changes to the current health care system. One retired lady seemed sure
that reform would mean poorer Medicare service for her. Others
expressed doubts about how the law might be created or how much a new
system would cost: “In Congress you never know what they’re going to
come up with until it’s done,”… “Health care costs always go higher,”…
“How are they going to pay for it?”
But there were no doubts
among the half-dozen volunteers that day. Patricia said she trusts
President Obama and believes in what he’s trying to do. “I feel that
it’s the first time I ever voted for someone who is really a good
person,” Linda said. “Poor people here have no concept of poverty the
way it exists in Mexico, yet in Mexico even the poorest are provided
with medical care.”
Another volunteer, Annie, said that even
though she has health coverage through her employer, one uncovered
prescription to control her epilepsy costs about $300 per month. “I
have to cut the pills in half and take a reduced dose just to afford
them,” she said.
Richard Oswald The
health care service day brought in food donations, collected residents'
experiences with the current health care system, gathered signatures in
support of health care reform, and attracted more volunteers for a
future effort.
In the end Linda Nolan and her volunteers collected 64 signatures to
the declaration of support for health care reform, eight stories of how
high health care costs are impacting Americans, and three boxes of food
donations to be distributed to the poor; plus she signed up eight new
volunteers.
Linda
sounded gratified: “Even though I have a $15,000 deductible, my
insurance still costs over $850 every month. I’ve been working on this
for decades. But this is really my first chance to actually do
something about it.”
With that spirit, Linda might take on our Missouri weather next.