T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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965.1 | pointer | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity | Sun Aug 11 1991 13:17 | 9 |
|
see also:
womannotes-V2
735 - two-legged incubators
-Jody
|
965.2 | you _will_ be healthy | SA1794::CHARBONND | revenge of the jalapenos | Mon Aug 12 1991 06:58 | 4 |
| Being an independent cuss, I hate anything "mandatory".
Why can't the company just make the care available, and take steps
to _encourage_ their employees to avail themselves?
|
965.3 | but mandatory is too much. | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | feet of clay | Mon Aug 12 1991 09:43 | 29 |
| well I agree w/.2, but from the company's point of view it's
self-protection. They almost went under as a result of (possibly)
preventable health conditions. It _is_ true that women who don't
bother with docs while pregnant suffer more complications of pregnancy
and childbirth than women who do the reg-sched-doc-visits. (Though
heaven knows my own experience shows that this is not any kind of
guarantee!)
Other factors to consider, on various sides of the question:
Does the company mandate a smoke-free environment? Charge higher
premiums for smokers than non-smokers?
Does the company have an AIDS-education program? (jeepers, if they
think preemie-care is expensive, wait'll they see their first AIDS
case!)
How much of a budget does the company have/can the company afford for
education on these and other health issues?
How much if any employee participatin was there, is there, should there
be, in this kind of policy making by the company?
How do the employees in general, and the pregnant women in particular,
feel about this policy?
And lastly, remember that all the world loves a pregnant woman -- else
why would people I didn't know -- heck, people I didn't *like*, who
knew that! -- walk up and pat the belly without so much as a how-de-do!
It is offensive, but well-meant. It is hard to be unalterably opposed
to something that benefits the health of women and their children.
Sara
|
965.4 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Aug 12 1991 12:45 | 6 |
| Who pays the fiddler calls the tune.
If you shirk responsibility for something, does it not follow
that you also lose control over it?
Tom_K
|
965.5 | sick and tired | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Mon Aug 12 1991 13:07 | 3 |
| I wish the world would stay the hell out of my womb.
Nancy
|
965.6 | | TALLIS::TORNELL | | Mon Aug 12 1991 13:56 | 28 |
| Me too, but they're not likely to, Nancy. Who controls women's fertility,
controls women. The womb is the major "theatre of operations" in the
battle for control of women. And I fear the grip will even tighten.
We've gotten "way out of line" in the past 30 years or so. After all
the "woman's liberation" talk and stuff, it's all finally come down to
the bottom line - women's fertility - as being not only just the
traditional way but really the ultimate way to control women. There's
much more at stake than even insurance companies and lawsuits. As
someone already mentioned, wait until they get their first AIDS case.
It's likely they already have! They've probably got some emphysema
cases and lung cancer cases, too as well as some alcoholics and some work
injuries due to alcoholism, etc. But those cases don't elicit the
same absurd response and that's because traditionally those cases
involve mostly men and so they're pretty much just accepted as part of
life. The underlying battle for control of women is what makes caring
for these babies seem "unnecessarily expensive" and worthy of invading
women's privacy and limiting their freedom. It's an irresistable
platform for furthering the hidden agenda of a desire for control of
women. Not that they *wouldn't* save money and not that it *wouldn't*
result in healthier babies, but because they are not choosing to save
money and create healthier people by invading men's privacy and
limiting their freedoms makes this particular choice suspect. If they
did it all, I'd say ok. But selecting out only this one single area
and then *requiring* participation rather than simply making this
alleged "help" available, betrays the real motive.
Sandy
|
965.7 | some things really are different | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Debutante Deranged | Mon Aug 12 1991 15:00 | 15 |
| I don't know about this particular compnay but many companies *are* starting to
act on the smokers, the overweight, the geneticaly predisposed to disease. It's
not *just* pregnant women. We are in a health care crisis and lines are going
to be drawn. And some individuals are going to be virtually unemployable becasue
of it.
I also think the pregnant women is special case. It is different. The child who
results is usually better off for having had pre-natal care. I just read in the
paper where some state is thinking of requring Norplant use by women who have
already had one drug baby and who still use drugs. (meaning they've been busted)
Interestingly enough, the forced use of contraception(and possibly abortion) was
the reasons Justise O'Connor gave for disenting on one of the anti-abortion
cases. She said if the state could prevent abortion, they could also mandate it.
liesl
|
965.8 | an artifact of the US health insurance scheme | AYOV27::GHERMAN | Are you ready for patchanka? | Mon Aug 12 1991 15:42 | 24 |
| It was pointed out in the EXPATRIATE notes conference recently that
the American system of EMPLOYERS providing the means for insuring people's
health is unusual in a world sense. While a person's employment may
have *some* impact on hir health, most people will get sick, have
accidents, have babies, etc. regardless of whether they are employed
or not, let alone by whom. Most countries in Europe have a system of
National health coverage, regardless of a person's employer/employment
status.
With health insurance being related to employment, maintaining ones
position at a certain company may actually become an issue of life or
death! If a person has a 'pre-existing condition' type of
illness/disability and gets laid off/fired from a company within
whose system s/he was insured and is no longer insurable for that
condition, their life may actually become at risk.
This strikes me as fundamentally flawed.
Having an employer-based insurance system can yield the type of issue
in the base note. It also can (will) be addressed in different ways by
different employers' insurance schemes.
Cheers,
George
|
965.9 | | ZFC::deramo | I'll be back. | Mon Aug 12 1991 16:01 | 12 |
| Wasn't there a similar case in Massachusetts that affected mostly
men? Something about firefighters, a law declaring that any heart
or lung disease they developed was automatically considered work
related (with subsequent disability payments, etc), and a resulting
ban on smoking for them?
re .-1, with employer based medical insurance, the insurance company
and employer tell you what you can and can't do in order to maintain
coverage. With a government based medical insurance, it is the government
that tells you.
Dan
|
965.10 | The only major medical expense? | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Mon Aug 12 1991 16:02 | 10 |
| I wonder how many employees had heart attacks during that time?
I wonder whether, if a significant number (say five) of
male employees suffered from some expensive condition, they would be
ORDERED to have checkups and attend health classes on site? I have a
hard time imagining that would happen.
-Tracy
|
965.11 | Ho, ho, ho. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Aug 12 1991 16:06 | 9 |
| Tracy,
Here's something even more interesting to wonder about:
If five of the one hundred men with a given medical condition had
it turn expensive on them, would all one hundred then be "ORDERED to
have checkups and attend health classes on site?"
Ann B.
|
965.12 | Things that make you go, "Hmmm..." | CUPMK::CASSIN | | Mon Aug 12 1991 17:03 | 37 |
| I saw the broadcast discussed in .0.
I think this company did the right thing, given their set of
circumstances.
First, I must say I agree with every person that put a note in here
stating something to the effect that no one has the right to tell
any other person what to do (or not to do) with their body.
But while I was watching this story about a factory in a small town, it
occurred to me that the management of this company was really helping
out by providing the training and making the women attend it. The
reason I feel this way is many of the women they interviewed hadn't
gone to the doctor (and didn't believe it was necessary to) until, say,
the seventh+ month of a pregnancy. They simply saw no need or benefit
from doing so.
Just because the company made training available didn't mean the women
working for this factory would attend it. By making the training
mandatory the women now realize how important prenatal care is during
the entire pregnancy. (It so happens this factory produces irons as a
product, and the workforce there is comprised of mostly women of
child-bearing age.)
The way I see it is the company is not only protecting those unborn
babies from potentially avoidable birth defects, it is protecting the
futures of those unborn babies. It was implied (if not stated) that
this factory was one of the only places a woman could work in this
small town. If the factory couldn't afford to stay open due to costly
hospital bills, hence closing the doors to the factory, the local
economy would be destroyed. Food for those babies could then very well
be a concern.
>sigh< Whatda world.
-jc
|
965.13 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Wollomanakabeesai ! | Mon Aug 12 1991 17:04 | 33 |
|
Gee, whiz ! All this talk about control of the womb and
stuff ! This ain't Red China !
It's more likely that the paternal "Now go see the
nurse, honey" stuff is pure self defense on the part
of the company.
Ever wonder why everything you buy has warning placards
all over it ? As:
"Caution: This basketball may cause severe injury if
thrown from a speeding car into a baby carriage."
"This GE oven uses electricity, and there is a danger of
fatal shock if you pour salt water into the control panel
while standing in a puddle."
.... and so forth.
These days, juries award MILLIONS of dollars for "injuries"
that may or may not be attributable to a defendant. It's
gotten so bad that I know of companies that have renamed
themselves: "The Uninsured XYZ Company". They hope to
deflect "deep pockets" lawsuits.
These days, with unproven accusations flying about
video display radiation, electromagnetic fields, and
the dangerous effects of exposure to pink Post-It Notes,
I can understand a company's impulse to go overboard on
this stuff.
Steve H
|
965.14 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | Yup! Yup! Yup! | Mon Aug 12 1991 18:47 | 8 |
|
I can understand their impulse to go overboard
but I don't have to condone it
nor should I be forced to comply with it.
U.S. out of my Uterus.
-Jody
|
965.15 | On the Soapbox, Smelling a Familiar Rat(hole)... | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Mon Aug 12 1991 18:52 | 33 |
| I'm not trying to step on anyone's toes here, but I don't agree that
this is a bad thing.
In fact, it reminds me of the seatbelt law... which Massachussetts
people got appealed, but most of the rest of the nation puts up with.
Maybe the fact that lots of Womannoters are in Mass. explains some of
the "its my body I can die if I want to" attitudes.
Its obvious that many state governments have decided to legislate
safety. Its not a new thing. And by the fact that most states haven't
repealed the laws, I tend to assume that lots of people think its okay.
So, when a company mandates medical care, especially FREE PREVENTATIVE
care, I ain't gonna complain. The fact is, if people were doing the
right thing, they wouldn't notice the mandate!
I think anyone in the situation of wanting to have the choice of
whether to obtain proper pre-natal care, or whether to wear a seat-belt
or whatever, should sign a waiver, witnessed by at least one relative
and two other sane individuals, including the insuring party, waiving a
right to sue, seek redress, or obtain reimbursement for sustained trauma.
Last time this came up was when we went down the enforced Norplant
rathole. This strikes a similar chord. Its all well and good to wish
that companies would try positive incentive programs instead of mandatory
programs. But the motives are different. The latter is designed to
reduce risk and save money, the former is a nicety. I think its highly
understandable for a body which bears financial responsibility for
others to impose mandates which reduce financial risk.
If you don't want someone else telling you what to do, its time to
become SELF-EMPLOYED and SELF-INSURED!!!!!!!!
|
965.16 | | TENAYA::RAH | itinerant sun god | Mon Aug 12 1991 20:16 | 8 |
|
its an extension of the politikal korrektness syndrome that sez
the liberal we-know-whats-best-fer-you cognoscenti have every right
to ride herd on what we say, who we hire, what we buy, how fast can
you drive.
you can't expect to enjoy pc-ness in some things and have freedom in
other things...
|
965.17 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | ungle | Mon Aug 12 1991 21:45 | 14 |
| HOLTski, of COURSE you can!!! all depends on who's defining pc, and
who's defining freedom.
a little grok that applies here:
Freedom means you're free to do
Just whatever pleases you
If of course that is to say
What you please is what you may
(Piet Hein)
remember, the conservative viewpoint also has its view of what's
'korrekt', and the question of which viewpoint wins (and in what areas)
is far from settled.
|
965.18 | When do rights/life start | EICMFG::BINGER | | Tue Aug 13 1991 05:33 | 8 |
| Not an attempt to bring ab8r&io- in to the discussion please. But,
Surely it is all a matter of timing, When does child abuse begin?
Whether the abuser is ignorant, sick or malicious, I believe that the
child should be protected.
Is there really a difference between the mother who exposes the unborn
to *unnecessary* injury and the father who lets his 3 year old play
beside the main road.
Rgds,
|
965.19 | For child abuse, first you need a child. | TALLIS::TORNELL | | Tue Aug 13 1991 09:40 | 25 |
| A lot of you are talking in generalities. And from that angle, those
who support this "forced compliance" are right. The problem I see is
that they're only choosing *one particular area* in which to force this
compliance! I have no argument with a company who moves to reduce its
liability. We've got a ton of lawyers and they like to keep busy and
well fed. But when only one area becomes the target, I can't help but
suspect that more is at work than just "covering their behinds".
Why have they not considered forcing all cigarette smokers into yearly
lung X-rays? Why haven't they considered forcing all drinkers into
liver function studies? Are they monitoring the local drinking water
closely? Are they checking the tires on their employees' cars? How
about making sure their employees have smoke alarms in their homes -
are they doing that? Are they as interested in children as they are
fetuses? Are they supporting, (or even mandating which they are for
women carrying fetuses), visits to the well-baby clinics and immunizations?
There is much that can be done. My beef is that they've chosen only to
focus on women of child-bearing age when that's merely one area. And
not even the biggest. So I wonder how much of it is really interest in
saving money or interest in employee well-being and how much of it is a
desire to view women of child-bearing age as a "special" group in need
of "special" treatment, (like being kept away from the jobs that pay
the most, for instance).
Sandy
|
965.20 | | TALLIS::TORNELL | | Tue Aug 13 1991 09:48 | 19 |
| One real solution would be preventive care for *everyone*, wouldn't it?
So, uh, why don't they just do that? Too much like a national health
policy? We all know the AMA is huge, powerful and extremely profit
motivated. It depends on sickness and disease to survive. And there's
no glory in immunizing babies but there certainly is in transplanting
the lungs of a smoker! The AMA is mainly interested in heroic medicine
and has little patience for standard patient care. To ascribe such
altruistic motivations to the company policy we're talking about here
is to know nothing about the AMA or the insurance companies. They
don't want to get into the business of preventive medicine, it's boring
and inflating a pressure cuff 85 times a day just doesn't bring the
same personal rewards to doctors, (and I've already talked about the
medical school selection process which selects for highly competetive
and profit motivated candidates), that transplanting a heart or saving
a preemie does. Your "well-being" is of far less interest to them than
a body ravaged by disease whose life they might be able to prolong by
some heroic measure.
Sandy
|
965.21 | | AYOV18::GHERMAN | Are you ready for patchanka? | Tue Aug 13 1991 11:17 | 32 |
| re .9 Dan,
While I agree that *any* policy of health insurance will have 'rules',
there is a large difference to me between having one governmental
policy and thousands and thousands of employers/insurers establishing
a wide variety of policies.
In the latter instance, some companies will, as in the base note, have
mandatory pre-natal care, some will offer optional pre-natal care of a
wide variety of usefulness and others will offer no pre-natal care at
all. Also, the types of inconsistencies Sandy pointed out have a
higher likelihood of occurring in many more instances.
The wide variation of health care made available and especially its
linkage with employment is what seems strange to me. If someone works
for Company XYZ s/he is covered for <condition A> but if s/he works
for Company ABC s/he's not. If s/he loses hir job, s/he may lose hir
coverage.
If there were a national policy, individual companies such as Sunbeam
would not have to set its own health policy based in part upon fiscal
reasons. To adjust health offerings based in part upon the
profitability of each of many thousands of businesses seems extreme.
There would, of course, be issues of what the correct national health
policy should be. But the issue is addressed once, and not many
thousands of times with a wide variation of answers. It also becomes
separated from employment or individual company profitability issues,
and can be addressed on health grounds.
Cheers,
George
|
965.22 | | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Tue Aug 13 1991 12:13 | 13 |
| I too saw a bit of this program. I was bothered by the mandatory
business and surprised at how one-sided the reporting was. They did not
interview any woman complaining about this program and I'm sure there
must be a few who resent it.
On the whole though, I'm with 'ren. The company providing the insurance
has a right to say what it'll insure and not. A lot of companies have
different rates for smokers and obese people. I see this in the same
light. Basically cutting down medical costs. They started this program
after they went almost bankrupt over five premature babies. They did
have some numbers about how the cost per birth has gone down.
manisha
|
965.23 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Tue Aug 13 1991 12:38 | 9 |
| re .9
I'd rather have the multitude of private plans. What is best for
one is not always what is best for all. Also, having a multitude
of plans makes it easier to experiment with different approaches
to health care issues than a single government plan. Lastly,
government has an abysmal record in the majority of its endeavors...
Tom_K
|
965.24 | Why must we choose between services and rights? | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives! | Tue Aug 13 1991 12:51 | 21 |
|
I disagree with something 'ren (I think) said a few back - that
mandatory programs are to manage risk and voluntary programs are just
niceties. I think both are different approaches to managing risk (or
increasing productivity) -- I don't think any program exists in a
corporate setting that is JUST a nicety.
For example, Employee Assistance Programs are mostly (if not entirely)
voluntary, but they were created to help deal with the problem of
alcoholism in the workforce (I believe that is what the first EAPs were
designed for, though now EAPs provide a wide range of counselling and
referral services). Anyway, an EAP is a nice thing to have from an
employee perspective, but it saves a corporate money to keep employees
functioning at their best.
I think if a company sees that it's losing a lot of money (worker
productivity) because of pregnancy-related illnesses, work-site
prenatal care is an excellent idea. I see no reason to make it
mandatory.
Justine
|
965.25 | | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Tue Aug 13 1991 13:12 | 29 |
| 1) Sounds like the insurance plan maybe needs better management or the
whole system needs revamping. Suppose the near-bankrupcy was due to
five people requiring full life support for the next 39 years. And
suppose one of those persons fell off a ten story building. Would you
expect the insurers to set a requirement of insurance on not going on
any roof higher than two stories? Maybe you could live with never
going to the top of the World Trade Center. I couldn't.
2) Ok, suppose it's ethically sound for my insurer to require some
particular behavior like not going to the top of the World Trade
Center. Why not let me sign a waiver stating my responsibility if I do
decide to go up that high.
I rented a car in Edinburgh once. I wasn't told I *couldn't* go into
Northern Ireland, I was only told that if I did I would be entirely
responsible for any damages to the car. Sounded fair to me.
I would be deeply touched if my insurer cared so much about *me* that I
was *offered* coverage on any procedure to protect my health. But only
*I* decide when my child's life begins. I cannot list a child as a
dependent on my policy until *it is born*, so why act like it is being
insured ahead of time?! Then again, I could afford to pay for my own
prenatal care and delivery if I had to. There is no freedom without
economic freedom.
I don't believe this type of policy would be so easily mandated for any
male-oriented condition.
Nancy
|
965.26 | | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Tue Aug 13 1991 13:36 | 36 |
|
Okay, here's another example, real close to home.
A man died in the Hudson, MA Digital facility because of an accident in
which a breathing apparatus had been disconnected, but not labeled. The
man was alone at the time, his "buddy" had left the room to grab
something, and by the time the buddy returned, the man had suffocated.
As a result of this one incident, the Hudson facility has a MANDATORY
buddy policy in the lab areas.
Because a voluntary policy won't keep DEC from getting sued if someone
else dies.
So, while Digital has not removed the safety hazards that exist, it has
MANDATED that people take precautions. And you can get fired for not
doing so.
The policy is NOT well liked. It requires that a buddy be present, when
at many times and in many cases, it forces one person to stand idly by
just so that an accident won't become a disaster.
But there's no question about the reason. This isn't a "nicety". Its
Digital's way of saving itself from lawsuits by saving its employees
from injury and death. There is no doubt in my mind what the bottom
line is.
Digital does have its share of niceties. Volunteer stuff. But when you
see something MANDATORY, its because someone has determined that the
risk is not worth the gain, or the expense is worth avoiding the losses
of a suit.
I'm running, so this isn't coherent. But I don't think this is about
being warm and fuzzy and protecting women. I think its about protecting
a company's profits. Those are terms I can respect. Because they keep
ME employed, too.
|
965.27 | A different solution? | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Tue Aug 13 1991 13:46 | 19 |
| Maybe the problem is that the company is for whatever reason acting
as a parent not an employer. Laws mandating that employers provide
health insurance result in employers attempting to control the
employees lives in ways that have nothing to do with an
employer/employee relationship. Maybe we should let employers return
to the practice of compensating employees for services rendered, and
let individuals take care of their own health as they feel best.
I am not advocating abolishing health insurance, only having the
premium payer and the beneficiary be the same person. This of course
would be very unpopular with the powers because individuals would make
cost/benefit decisions about care, instead of taking/spending as much
as possible in each case. If this were done, our health care crisis
might come to a sudden end. We might even get better care because good
doctors would get paid more and bad ones would go broke. The present
system tends to equalize the reward to all doctors regardless of
competence, and in the case of HMOs not even give the patient a choice
of which incompetent will treat them.
John
|
965.28 | safety vs. lifestyle | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Tue Aug 13 1991 13:52 | 15 |
| I differentiate between my work life and my private life. If the
company in the basenote is requiring prenatal care because of a
potential workplace hazard to the pregnant woman or fetus, I read the
situation a little differently but still do not condone mandatory
behavior of this type. Here in Hudson I am allowed to *not* work in
the wafer fab while I am pregnant (and lactating?) because of the known
hazards.
Remember the story of mandatory sterilization for the women in a
(battery?) factory? Wasn't there some discussion here--Jody--can you
help, please?
Love ya, 'ren, cuz we can do this and still go for walks during lunch!
Nancy
|
965.29 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Wollomanakabeesai ! | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:27 | 31 |
|
Hi folks,
These companies' behaviour is really NOT about keepin'
'em barefoot and pregnant.
It's not about some power move to "reach into the womb"
or any of that. Looking at this policy through political
lenses distorts the problem.
The problem is the tort system today. Any woman who gives
birth to a child with birth defects can sue anyone or
any entity she had contact with during the gestation period.
Since we don't know what causes birth defects, lawyers
can take cases like these and use a non-objective, possibly
uneducated jury to extract huge judgements against a
defendant.
So, employers who may have been the targets of suits in the
past adopt defensive measures: barring women from some types
of work; insisting on company-monitored prenatal care, and
so forth.
My sympathy goes out to mothers of handicapped babies, but
we reap in these defensive policies what we sow in non-objective
law....
Regards,
Steve H
|
965.30 | The manmade tale | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:38 | 10 |
|
Every human female should have a blood test at birth. If she is found
to be suitable for breeding, she should be kept in a pen where her
environment and behavior can be efficiently monitored. This would only
be for her childbearing years, after which time she could be released
to help care for the babies and the younger women still in the pen.
The future of the species cannot be entrusted to irresponsible women.
Ofnoman
|
965.31 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | Yup! Yup! Yup! | Tue Aug 13 1991 15:09 | 6 |
|
I've put in all the pointers I could find, folks.
what you want is in there somewhere!
-Jody
|
965.32 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Aug 13 1991 15:20 | 10 |
|
'ren, your analogy doesn't hold up because in the Hudson
plant's case, the requirement is part of the *job*. I do
believe it's an employer's right to require a job being
done in a certain way. I might not like it, but I wouldn't
feel like it was *wrong* for Digital to insist on it.
This doesn't extend as well to a woman's personal life and
that of her baby. I *would* be upset if I had to take
mandatory prenatal classes. And that's just the way I feel.
|
965.33 | | RENOIR::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Aug 13 1991 15:25 | 4 |
| re .30, funny. :-)
Lorna
|
965.34 | This is an argument I'm destined to lose... | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Tue Aug 13 1991 15:52 | 34 |
|
Ellen, I am comfortable with my analogy because I'm not very defensive
about my "private time". If you don't like that example, consider the
seat belt laws which exist in nearly every state. Its the same issue.
There was an amusing Robin Cook novel about something similar recently.
Spoilers follow...
In the novel, the hospital was trying to cut its losses, and had found
that high-profile VP's with a history of smoking and eating red meat
etc. were prone to cost the hospital more money from high-cost surgery,
heart attacks, etc. So the hospital undertook to kill them off...
I can only re-iterate, with privilege comes responsibility. And vice
versa. When you give the responsibility for your well-being to someone
else, they should have some privileges in your life. And if you don't
welcome such an invasion of privacy, then you shouldn't hold them
responsible for your care.
When we ask a corporation to underwrite our health costs, and they turn
around and ask us to act in a healthy, responsible manner, it seems
quite fair to me. On the job or off the job.
What is most amusing to me is that I would predict that many insurance
companies and actuarians will keep an eye on this company. And if the
cost-benefit ratio is good enough, this isolated incident may spread
easily.
I'm rambling... and the more I think about it, the more I realize that
my opinion is going to be a minority one here. So, I will try to bow
out gracefully...
|
965.35 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Aug 13 1991 19:07 | 43 |
| There are a few seperable arguments here. Perhaps the most
pervasive is "Does society have a right to limit the risks that
individuals can take?". Closely related is the question of whether
an individual can accept the responsibility for taking a risk
which society feels is inappropriate. Many people argue for this
ability to accept responsibility, but nobody actually fully
accepts those risks because we are unwilling to watch someone die,
even if he is dieing of a risk which he voluntarily assumed.
We are even less willing to allow children to suffer when their
parents take a risk. (I'm talking here about visible children with
serious, catastrophic problems. Allowing people to starve is
apparently quite different.) Given this societal behaviour, it is
meaningless for someone to say "I'll do this even if I lose my
health insurance.", because if someone says that, and gets hurt
we will insist that a hospital treat that person. For proof, look
at the tremendous bad press insurers get when they try to refuse
treatment, even when that refusal is within their contract.
The next issue is whether we accept requirments for our health
care, and we clearly do. Most insurers won't pay for any but
emergency surgery unless the patient submits to an examination by
another doctor (second opinion). What is different here is that
the requirement be enforced by an employer.
Sandy's questions about discrimination are interesting, but the
problem is that pre-natal care is one of the most cost-effective
kinds of preventive medicine. Underweight babies are tremendously
expensive to care for. Routine examinations of men are not very
useful, as there are very few diseases which they are likely to
catch. Routine exams for women make sense for breast cancer and
cervical cancer. (This despite the claims that far more money is
spent on men's diseases than women's. It is the case that most of
the diseases which can be caught by periodic exams are women's
diseases.)
Her point makes sense in a more global view, if one can claim that
while each instance of different rules for women is defensible (as
I believe this rule is), the fact that whenever the rules differ
they are more demanding of women points to discrimination. This is
the argument for statistical evidence.
--David
|
965.36 | | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Wed Aug 14 1991 14:19 | 30 |
| Sorry, Jody--should have read bach thru first.
re: .35 >>Underweight babies are tremendously expensive to care for.<<
It deeply saddens me that underweight babies are considered a
commodity on which we have to affix a cost. (Nothing personal,
David 8-) ) More of our objectification of women and children....
Guess I'd feel a whole lot better about all this if I thought the
company was trying to ensure the health of mothers and babies on a
caring basis first rather than a financial one.
There seems to be a myth that we don't pay for our (company-
provided) insurance. Sure it's a cost to the employer, but I'd
take a rebate over mandatory prenatal care any day.
Education would be the best preventive medicine. Maybe we need to
benchmark against countries which have better infant mortality rates.
(Ours is not as low as one would expect, compared to other
industrialized nations.) Anyone know how we compare on birth weights?
Seems to me I got thru public school without any mandatory anatomy and
physiology or reproductive biology. There was the term paper I did in
10th grade bio on various forms of birth control, my way of educating
myself, but I was too embarassed to leave it on my desk with the title
page up. That sort of thing wasn't discussed openly in the 'burbs in
the early 70's. I remember seeing a public service announcenent on
television or a bus stop or something in the last year urging women to
get prenatal care. It was phrased in real-life language--very effective.
Nancy
reactionary_at_large
|
965.37 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | revenge of the jalapenos | Wed Aug 14 1991 14:58 | 4 |
| re.36 I don't think the implication was that 'babies are a
commodity'. It's a simple observation of the fact that resources
are finite.
|
965.38 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Aug 14 1991 19:53 | 34 |
| RE: .36
I was talking about costs for two reasons. First, the company's
(public) rationale for the rule was costs, and second, the US is
currently wrestling with limiting the total cost of health care.
Health care was around 11% of the Gross National Product last time
I looked, and still climbing. One way or another, that growth will
have to stop. There are a lot of efforts to control health care
costs, some well thought out, others less so. This note started as
a discussion of one attempt to control those costs.
In answer to your question, the US has more low birth weight
babies than most (any?) other industrialized nation. Considering
the number of underweight babies, our post-natal care is actually
quite good. The US also has a remarkably high number of teen-age
preganancies, which tend to be more difficult (for both mother and
baby) than pregnancies in the woman's mid- 20's. I personally
believe that if we made contraception more available the number of
teen-age pregnancies would go down, and that would be a good
thing, but our politicians disagree.
As for health coverage, the US is the only industrialized nation
which does not have some form of universal health care (often
referred to as Socialized Medicine, but the German system isn't
all that socialized.) I would argue that this is mainly
responsible for our very expensive health care which leaves large
numbers of people without health care.
I don't know of any countries in which individuals are primarily
responsible for their health care costs (with or without an
insurance system) which have respectable health care (measured by
infant mortality, life expectancy, or something similar.)
--David
|
965.39 | Pro National Health | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Fri Aug 16 1991 09:15 | 16 |
| I think that the company's main problem is that it decided to become
self-insured instead of using an insurance company. That made the
size of the group over which to spread the risk very small. The
company should change to using an insurance company so that the
risk spread is much larger and therefore would not cost as much
I used to work for an insurance company.
I'm very much in favor of national health. Insurance companies have
taken on too much power. They should not be able to tell a doctor
or a hospital what is required for patient care. If a doctor decides
a patient needs to stay in the hospital for 5 days instead of 3, then
the insurance company should not say it won't pay!!
Linda
|
965.40 | Be PC or go to gaol!!!! | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:46 | 30 |
|
Well, this may be closer to all of you than you may think.
I was watching a documentary, and it was regarding a State in the US,
I think it was Carolina.
If you go to the state run ante-natal clinic, you are tested for
alchohol/drug abuse.
If any traces are found, you are asked questions of how you obtained
the substance, and if you sold your body to obtain the substances.
You are put on a programme to help you quit.
If you fail to turn up at the second testing, or are found positive
on the second testing, you are gaoled until after the birth.
You may, or may not, get your child back, it could be taken into care.
This is only the procedure for the state ante-natal clinics, not the
private clinics.
Most of the women interviewed who were detained in gaol were black, and
I quote "from the wrong side of the tracks".
I was absolutely dumb-struck (very unusual for me)
If one state already does this lawfully, which ones will be next?
Heather
|
965.41 | sounds barbaric, but... | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:48 | 3 |
| Whats "gaol"?
D!
|
965.42 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:48 | 5 |
| "Jail," in English.
;-)
-b
|
965.43 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Southern comfort - Tennessee plates | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:59 | 6 |
|
Nah - "gaol" in English, "jail" in British, and "prison" in most
other languages...
;-)
gaol...oops....'gail
|
965.44 | gay-all? gowl? gole? | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Tue Aug 20 1991 13:48 | 3 |
| How is that pronounced?
D!
|
965.45 | not a lot of people know that | RDGENG::LIBRARY | unconventional conventionalist | Tue Aug 20 1991 13:50 | 4 |
| "gaol" is pronounced in exactly the same way as "jail" and both are
correct in Britain. "Jail" seems to be used more often, though.
Alice T.
|
965.46 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Aug 20 1991 16:58 | 1 |
| RATGAOL
|
965.47 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Aug 21 1991 10:57 | 15 |
|
When you say Gaol or Jail, they sound the same (give or take an
accent or two).
Gaol is the correct spelling according the the Oxford English
dictionary, it has (jail - in US) printed after it.
But back to the point, this isn't just a company reducing or refusing
money for medical aid, it is people being deprived of their liberty for
not being PC.
How long before anyone who drings or smokes gets locked up????
Heather
|
965.48 | my opinion | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | ungle | Tue Aug 27 1991 00:08 | 23 |
| Heather, not long. Here in the good old land of the free, you can get
your property seized for just looking like you might have been going to
make a drug buy with all that cash. Or for 'fitting a profile'. Less
savory motivations left to the imagination of the reader. And so far
the courts have upheld the practice, as it is a civil procedure, not a
criminal one, and thus not subject to the protections enumerated by but
not limited to the Bill of Rights.
(this is about an application of the federal RICO laws. Bad laws, they
are too widely applied, with few-to-no safeguards or oversight. They
were/are bad when applied to pro-lifers too. SOAPBOX has a fair bit on
this topic. Don't have the note # just now.)
You don't say whether or not the pregnant women who test positive for
drugs are offered counseling or treatment for addiction. If not, the
whole thing is just another net in the WoD, and on the rights of the
individual. If yes, then ditto since I still have much discomfort
about the govt intervening in such a way. These my feelings on this
are all *before* we get to worrying about racism/sexism, though it
seems to have those kinds of effects, even if we assume good
intentions. Which I'm not sure I can.
Sara
|
965.49 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Aug 28 1991 07:36 | 31 |
|
> You don't say whether or not the pregnant women who test positive for
> drugs are offered counseling or treatment for addiction.
Opps, I thought I did, yes they were offered councelling, but it wasn't
just drugs, it was also alcohol.
> If not, the
> whole thing is just another net in the WoD, and on the rights of the
> individual. If yes, then ditto since I still have much discomfort
> about the govt intervening in such a way. These my feelings on this
> are all *before* we get to worrying about racism/sexism, though it
> seems to have those kinds of effects, even if we assume good
> intentions. Which I'm not sure I can.
My real shock was twofold,
Firstly that these people were locked up for the remainder
of the pregnancy for being tested +ve the second time, for traces of
drugs OR alchohol - they were NOT taken to court and charged
with drug abuse or alcohol abuse - they had no defense opportunity.
NOONE tried to find their dealer - they weren't asked about who their
dealer was, just how they got the money to pay for it (ie prostitution).
Secondly, that this was only for people who had to rely on the state for
care, anyone with enough money to pay for their own care didn't get
tested.
It gave me the creeps
Heather
|