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Drug News and Health Blog of Doug Bremner, MD.











 February 23, 2008.
Live Without Insurance

An article today in the NYT described people who go without insurance as "free riders", or at least that is what health economists describe them as. Isn't that term telling? I mean with the average cost of a family's health insurance at $12,106 if you don't go along with the Great American Slavery of paying whatever last dollar you have left after paying for you prescription medications and doctor bills for your health insurance then you are somehow not playing the game according to the rules. Well there is something seriously wrong with this picture. As I pointed out before ("Our Healthcare System Sucks")one out of seven Americans are uninsured, our country spends twice as much on health care as other countries where everyone is insured, and yet our health care outcomes (how long you live, how likely your kids are to get to their first birthday) are second to last amongst industrialized countries. For people without insurance, getting sick can be a disaster. In fact, half of all bankruptcies in America are caused by someone in the family getting sick. That means your house will be foreclosed upon, your children’s education will be threatened, your marriage may be ruined by the financial stress, and you will have to work for the rest of your life because you will never be able to get ahead. What is worse, many Americans are dying because they avoid going to the doctor when they do get sick, thinking that they can’t afford it. Does it have to be this way? I say not. I say that you can take control of your life by planning for your health care needs, changing your life, and educating yourself to become a smart health care consumer. And you can do it, even if you can’t afford insurance. How do you do that?

The first step is by educating yourself. Did you know that expensive colonoscopies ($2000+) have not been proven to be more effective at successfully reducing death from colon cancer than a $2 test you can buy at the drug store without ever having to see a doctor? Did you know that taking your kid to the doctor in the US will likely lead to an antibiotic prescription (not to mention an expensive doctor and pharmacy bill)—that won’t help her significantly and will increase the risk of future infections (and that experts say don’t do it)? Did you know that the American Medical Association says you should not get a yearly checkup with a doctor if you are not sick? If they say that, why should you pay for it?

And what if you do get sick? If you get cancer or need heart surgery, you can go to a country like Thailand and get state of the art care in modern hospitals with doctors that were trained in America or an equivalent medical education system… for 1/10th what you would pay in the US. Ditto goes for nursing home care. Many Americans are waking up to the fact that they pay 1/10th as much when they go south of the border—and they prefer the climate.

OK, what if I get in a car accident, they won’t be able to send me to Thailand, right? What many people don’t realize is that they can get better trauma care at large urban hospitals, like Grady Hospital in my home city of Atlanta, that use a sliding scale form of payment, than they would get at most private hospitals. But you can’t wait until you have a disaster to make those plans. You have to do your homework and plan ahead.

You can start a medical savings plan that will provide a cushion. Even putting a small amount into the plan every month will help ensure your financial future.

We all know that proper diet and exercise are important. But what most people don’t realize is how much money they can save by taking the right steps. The vast majority of costly health care is for chronic diseases like diabetes and heart diseases that can be prevented by diet and exercise—over 90% of the time! That’s pretty good odds.

  October 7, 2007. 10:31 a.m.
Private Insurance Company Abuses Associated with Bush's Medicare Drug Benefit Program Are Not a Surprise.

An article in today's New York Times ("Medicare Audits Show Problems in Private Plans") describes the abuses of private insurance companies of the government's Medicare Drug Benefit Plan. This was long expected by us. You see, Bush got a lot of donations from pharmaceutical companies and their allies, so in order to pay them back, he got the Medicare Drug Plan passed. The plan states that the government cannot negotiate the costs of these drugs, which means down the road the costs of this benefit are going to be immense. Another bone thrown to the advocates of free markets was to have private insurance companies administer the plan on behalf of the government. This was to assuage those afraid of having the government involved in health care. But it adds another layer of administration and makes no sense. Now these private companies are kicking people with HIV off their lists, ignoring people's petitions for off-formulary drugs, and calling up little old ladies at home and saying they represent Medicare and they have to sign up for their expensive plans to retain their insurance. I say, don't pay these goons a dime. Who says we have to buy health insurance, anyway? But more on that another day.

My book 'Before You Take That Pill: Why the Drug Industry May be Bad for Your Health: Risks and Side Effects You Won't Find on the Label of Commonly Prescribed Drugs, Vitamins, and Supplements' is now available at amazon and at local Borders and Barnes and Noble book stores.

Doug Bremner, MD








Doug Bremner, MD, is a physician
and researcher in Atlanta GA
and author of Before You Take That Pill: Why the Drug Industry May be
Bad for Your Health: Risks and Side Effects You Won't Find on the Label of Commonly Prescribed
Drugs, Vitamins and Supplements




Before You Take That Pill

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