by threadbear » Sat 19 Jul 2008, 14:00:31
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('joelcolorado', '.')
When ppl come in just to visit or cuz they are lonely or to have blood pressure checked it costs EACH of us a lot of money. They never consider that it has to come from somewhere. Or a lot of them come in to tell my wife that they didnt poop today. GOD....How bout eating some fruit and fiber and waiting a day or so. OH NO, have to poop every day or you go to doctor. geesus
About 25 years ago, my family doctor told me he was quite happy to just shoot the breeze with lonely old people, who just came in to talk. I told him that there were plenty of community services that provided that kind of volunteer service and that I resented the tax burden.
There is no way in hell a physician in Canada would get away with that now. The B.C. system, also, will not prescribe unnecessary newer medications that have cheaper counterparts that are out of patent, for patients whose prescriptions are covered by govt.
And people who are not on social assistance or senior citizens, pay for their own prescriptions. This is all good. There are long wait times for elective surgeries like knee replacements, and the system has to be further streamlined and inefficiencies removed to speed up other procedures that straddle the elective and emergency categories.
I think that people have to do what they can, on their own, to look after themselves. Keep their weight down, eat right and exercise. Also, morbid obesity has to be given really close scrutiny in the U.S. The country stands out as having the fattest people on the planet. Ironically, they have grown fatter while working longer hours. They surpass Japan, in that regard, now. Chronic sleep deprivation could play a much more important role in weight gain than has previously been thought. People are drinking a lot of coffee to stay awake to do their jobs. This inhibits proper sleep, kicking off a vicious cycle. Caffeine can also lowers blood sugar making the individual ravenously hungry. Years of hypoglycemia put one at risk of hyperglycemia, or diabetes.
Anyway, enough of that and on to Olaf.
Olaf, I feel for you, (with my mind, not my hands!

) You are going to have to restrict activities that have a high injury risk factor, even if the injuries aren't life threatening. If you wish to garden and do other activities that are more work related, don't burn your physical capital on fun. Sorry, Dude.
You're close to my age, so you've had a good run! Now kick back. If you really did live in the middle ages, you'd be dead from old age or injury, already. When you think about it, if you really want to mock up the past, as the SCA attempts to do, you have succeeded by being injured and not receiving proper care!
