Aestu wrote:
I'm smart and well-informed. I have no stake in anyone's ideological bullshit. If other people want to believe things that are illogical or wrong that's their choice but it's not a fault that I identify the fallacies.
The fact that I agree and disagree with Jubber, Eturnal, Dvergar and Zaryi according to a cohesive set of facts and ideas that are grounded in no ideology or political affiliation should tell you something.
Don't break your arm patting yourself on the back. If anything, the fact that you agree with me makes me wonder whether or not I haven't weighted the concerns Zaryi mentions properly.
Aestu wrote:
Zaryi wrote:
I like how the argument went from 'no way birth control costs 1000$ a year' to 'you're just getting the wrong kind' when I proved it can and does.
Like any medication, there are variations between brands, and you have to test/shop around to find the one that works the best with the least amount of side effects.
I am aware of the differences in formulation. Doesn't change the fact the markup is outrageous for an extremely marginal benefit. Tens of millions of Americans make far greater compromises with more important issues.
If the $10/mo pill treats the condition then that's what the patient should take. If they want premium they can get it on their own wallet.
Even in the best of all worlds - which we do not live in - it would be expected that patients make reasonable economic choices.
An excellent comparison would be diabetes. Insulin is expensive and has a short shelf-life, but it saves lives and allows these people to live a reasonably normal life. There are also a variety of other palliative medications of varying expense. It's to be expected that diabetics should get access to the insulin they need to treat their chronic condition but not the best, most expensive top-of-the-line palliatives on the market.
Or asthma - same thing. There are steroid inhalers that are necessary to control the condition, then there are premium palliatives. Humidifiers and breathers can cost anywhere from $50 to a few thousand. Again, it's expected that general coverage provide what they need to get by, but certainly not the most premium options on the market.
1. Why should this issue be regarded any differently than say sutures vs reconstructive surgery, generic vs brand-label meds, or various grades of painkillers or antibiotics or other medications?While I agree with the bulk of that, especially when we're essentially in the midst of switching to a system where we pay for everyone's medical care as a collective, this is the first thing you say that makes me think I haven't credited Zaryi's argument properly. I've personally known people who have tried generic versions of various drugs, only to find those drugs were not, for whatever reason, as effective for them as the name brand. While I find that this is a rare occurrence, it's not one that should be overlooked. If Zaryi has to spend $100 a month because a $9 a month variant causes her some kind of discomfort or doesn't effectively treat what it's meant to treat, then forcing her to use it to save the collective $91 a month kind of defeats the entire purpose of nationalized healthcare...which to me is just another reason why the whole thing is a bad idea.
Aestu wrote:
Zaryi wrote:
Also, my mother uses birth control to fight symptoms of menopause despite the fact that she's unable to conceive, and she had to shop around just as much as I did to find a brand that worked for her. It is cheaper than mine, though it doesn't matter because our insurance provider is awesome, and I'm very thankful for that.
Menopause is a natural part of the life cycle and doesn't need to be treated.
This does nothing to address the crux of the matter.
Again, this is a little absolutist, and while hormonal therapy is probably used in many cases where it isn't needed, there are some women who have serious problems with menopause. Given that this mandate is going to make it possible for more women to use contraception to treat this, though, it's more likely that it's going to be prescribed even when it's not really necessary because there's no cost to either the physician or the end-user. This will increase demand with no guarantee of an increase in supply, which will drive up costs which will have to be absorbed by someone, and that someone is most likely every end-user/customer, whether they will ever use the drug in question or not.
Aestu wrote:
2. Why should this extremely narrow and over-privileged demographic get special treatment?
3. Why should this issue be addressed through massive outlays to inefficient and disreputable third parties?
4. Why are we approaching this purely from the perspective of women and not from the perspective of people who need meds?
Because making a private business pay the cost does several things at once. It appeals to people's sense of "fuck big business." It avoids any legislative maneuvers to block the mandate based on moral objections (even Al Gore voted for not using taxpayer funds for abortions), and it opens up a huge political opportunity to tell half the voting population that the other party wants them barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen with 12 kids. However disreputable insurance companies may be, they're still far more efficient than the government at allocating resources, since, as you yourself note, the government has a bad habit of throwing money into the hands of groups like Planned Parenthood who squander a lot of funds on administration and activism/advocacy.
Aestu wrote:
Zaryi wrote:
And Jubber, yes, it's a reasonable argument, and if you had paid any attention to Mrs Fluke's testimony, then you'll realize that her friend was denied the coverage/payment for the medication for an ovarian cyst, and ended up having to have her ovaries removed because the college didn't believe that she wasn't going to use the medication for the reason she stated she needed it for.
Oh man. Her nameless friend that didn't testify supposedly had her ovaries removed for an apparently naturally occurring condition that we've never noticed even existed, needed treatment let alone surgery until a few years ago.
Not only that, but when Ms. Fluke's other thoughts on socialized medicine/insurance, like her opinion that sexual reassignment surgery should be covered, become more well-known, people are going to see her "testimony" for what it really was: crass political bullshit. Like I keep saying, the people who should have been testifying were doctors in relevant specialties and, because of the way the mandate is going to impact religious institutions, theologians...not 30 year-old still-in-grad-school social activists looking to advance an agenda.
Aestu wrote:
5. Pray tell how women got by before we discovered this condition and realized it urgently required medication and surgery?
It's lies and fearmongering in the service of graft.
Probably not well, to be honest. Karen used to tell me how terrible she felt all the time until she found a doctor competent enough to diagnose her cysts. By the time they were properly diagnosed, they were very large, somewhere between the size of a golf ball and a tennis ball. Even her family noticed the change, I was constantly being told how I was "lucky" I hadn't met Karen before she had the damned things removed. They cause a lot of physical discomfort and can cause an imbalance in hormones, which leads to many other health issues outside of "crabby bitch." I will be the first to assert that women pull the "hormones" card far too often and generally to justify behavior that is not justifiable, but despite the abuse of the privilege, there are those occasions when it's a legitimate complaint.
Your Pal,
Jubber