It cost us about 6-7000 to move across town a few years ago with all the associated costs. It's not just the moving truck. If she had that money she could do the testingNever said I had all the answers. But I think my suggestions are valid.
It cost us about 6-7000 to move across town a few years ago with all the associated costs. It's not just the moving truck. If she had that money she could do the testingNever said I had all the answers. But I think my suggestions are valid.
It has everything to do with your OP! You cannot possibly have all the answers to make such a biased perspective when you have no children.
Most mothers that I know, put themselves last. Maybe a mother can put herself in a close second or 3rd if she has one child and a husband (STILL not even first!), but I can guarantee you that a mom of FOUR is a distant 5th or lower in the ranking of her family's needs. Their kids' daily, urgent needs come first - always. When you have to choose between groceries, shoes, school supplies, public school tuition (I paid nearly $1500 for my kids to attend PUBLIC school this year, and our property taxes are ridiculously high on top of it) and yes, even birthday gifts and $10 for a school field trip, and $5.00 so they can participate in the after school walk-a-thon, and all of the other little things you get nickel and dimed for to make your kids feel like kids (these are endless and add up quickly, so I'm not even going to begin to quantify or list them here), most mothers tend to take care of those things first, and the "chance" of diagnosing a serious illness second.
I've been guilty of it myself. It was 5-6 years between doctor visits for me at one point. Then when I did go, I, too, went for a routine screening and they found something. Scariest few weeks of my life. How long had it been there? Why didn't I go to the Dr? Why did I go NOW!? How am I going to afford this? How will I SURVIVE this!" It all ran through my mind. I kind of wish I'd never had even done the screening, kind of. The diagnostic ultrasounds, xrays, and biopsy cost me thousands, plus time off of work, and I still didn't even hit my deductible, much less my OOP. And everything was OK - all benign. But I paid for the tests for the next year, and prayed my kids wouldn't get hurt or sick enough to need to go to the hospital.
Like I said already....you have NO IDEA WHAT IT'S LIKE.
You are quite lucky.Sometimes I forget how luck I am to have the National Health Service. No-one left behind, no matter what... that's the idea, at least.
We all get that. It's just that there are a LOT of steps between having an abnormal pap and dying, and none of us know any details of her situation. But yeah, it does seem like we're beating a dead horse here.You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mother's are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.
You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mothers are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.
you are make a HUGE leap. There are many steps from abnormal pap to dying. And most women in their lives (myself included) will have an abnormal pap. It can be anything from you had sex too close to the time of the pap to cancer. 99% of the time they are nothing and in fact the recommended cause of action is a repeat pap in a couple months.You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mothers are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.
OK ... I'm back.
To continue with my thoughts on the subject. If I were in Melissa's current shoes where I needed various tests and treatments but I felt I could not afford them, I would have them anyway. I definitely have a "we'll cross that bridge when we get to it" mentality and I would see the doctor, have the tests and procedures and arrange for a payment plan later. If cervical cancer is treated right away it's only a few thousand dollars. If you wait and it spreads it can cost up to $100,000 to treat it.
I think it's shameful that these high deductible plans encourage people to think twice about getting medical care. We just moved to a high deductible plan ourselves and I hurt my foot/toe about 3 weeks ago when a heavy glass cutting board fell on my foot. I thought, "Crap. I wonder how much a freaking x-ray will cost just to tell me that my foot/toe is not broken." so I iced it, buddy wrapped the toe and didn't see a doctor. Earlier this week the pain had not gone away and seemed even worse. I bit the bullet and got an x-ray and thankfully nothing is broken. Now I can work though the pain and not worry that it is something really bad. I tell this story because even *I* got sucked into the self-regulation of medical care because of my high deductible plan (and yes, we do have a HSA to cover the x-ray). I could totally understand how Melissa got sucked into self-regulating her care.
I wasn't aware that was happening. We've never been asked to pay anything upfront but my DH's company self insures and has a UHC administer the plan. They bill the insurance company and then we get billed. I wonder if people could arrange a payment plan in advance in the circumstances you're talking about.I think you could receive care in an emergent situation without cash up front. But providers are reacting to all these high deductible plans by insisting on payment up front for the deductible. For the sheer reason that otherwise they will likely not be able to recoup these large amounts later.
I wasn't aware that was happening. We've never been asked to pay anything upfront but my DH's company self insures and has a UHC administer the plan. They bill the insurance company and then we get billed. I wonder if people could arrange a payment plan in advance in the circumstances you're talking about.
You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mothers are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.
You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mothers are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.
But shouldn't we be thinking about whether we need to go to the doctor (or the ER) or try to self medicate? It's easy to spend someone else's money, not so easy to spend yours. It's all a judgement call.I think it's shameful that these high deductible plans encourage people to think twice about getting medical care. We just moved to a high deductible plan ourselves and I hurt my foot/toe about 3 weeks ago when a heavy glass cutting board fell on my foot. I thought, "Crap. I wonder how much a freaking x-ray will cost just to tell me that my foot/toe is not broken." so I iced it, buddy wrapped the toe and didn't see a doctor. Earlier this week the pain had not gone away and seemed even worse. I bit the bullet and got an x-ray and thankfully nothing is broken. Now I can work though the pain and not worry that it is something really bad. I tell this story because even *I* got sucked into the self-regulation of medical care because of my high deductible plan (and yes, we do have a HSA to cover the x-ray). I could totally understand how Melissa got sucked into self-regulating her care.
But shouldn't we be thinking about whether we need to go to the doctor (or the ER) or try to self medicate? It's easy to spend someone else's money, not so easy to spend yours. It's all a judgement call.
That's obviously all part of the plan. But playing "doctor mom" often backfires and people put off medical care too long and things that would have been easily (and cheaply) treated right away become acute (and expensive) when treatment is delayed.But shouldn't we be thinking about whether we need to go to the doctor (or the ER) or try to self medicate? It's easy to spend someone else's money, not so easy to spend yours. It's all a judgement call.
You say I don't know what it's like because I don't have children. But then it seems that I'm the only one really considering them and how this could affect them.
An absolutely VITAL part of taking care of your family is taking care of yourself. As they say on airplanes, put your mask on first. You are going to be no good to anybody if you succumb to cancer. Early treatment is far easier and less expensive than dealing with it in stage 4 (if it can be dealt with at all at stage 4 that is). We're not talking about some virus that mom can just "power through". This is, potentially, cancer that could very well result in death.
Is it ok to have an opinion if a mom is doing something more directly to harm her children? Like not making sure they have a winter coat when it is 10 degrees outside? Or not providing them with shoes? Or not feeding them? Or do you just have to say that you don't know their whole story and just let it go?
I think, with this, I'm done with this thread. I'm not going to change anyone's mind and no one is going to change my mind that mothers are important to a child's well being and if they have one, it is important to take steps to ensure that she stays around. I just find it really strange that so many are ok with potentially leaving children without their mother when it could have been avoided.