me too on these thoughts. it kills me to see the prices on what have traditionaly been the cheapest items that many have relied on in the past to stretch their dollars. $4.79 for a 10 count of flour tortillas

they were FLYING off the shelves 2 weeks ago when one of the local stores had a cinco de mayo loss leader sale at $1.49 a pack. $2.99 is the going rate for a single can of refried beans
i've lost count of the number of times i've been behind a fellow senior citizen at the store and witnessed them have to pick and choose items to have the cashier back out b/c they can't cover the cost. just basic staples, nothing fancy




. i've gotten a few to accept letting me cover the shortfall-i've talked to cashiers after the fact and many have taken to paying out of their own pocket when they see a senior choosing between putting back an otc med or a carton of milk and a dozen eggs.
Food costs are hurting the young and old around here it is very sad. One of my coworkers told me all the meat that she could afford on a daily basis was the5 for $20 deal at the local store. So her family of 4 had less than a pound of meat to share each day.
the challenge many medicare recipients are experiencing is the staggering number of medicare accepting doctors retiring/leaving their practices and going unreplaced. we've seen a dozen or more general practitioners leave the local large provider groups in the last year. dh has lost 2 in the same specialty in a year and a half (a specialty that already has you schedule a year out for your next appointment). another specialty has lost 4. then when your medicare plan gets into a stand-off with a large provider you can be left stranded-the top story on many of local newscasts recently has been the 10,000 premera (including medicare) patients who are being cutoff june 1st from our region's largest outpatient diagnosic and treatment group. they will have to find primary providers and specialists.......if they can (most medicare providers have loooong waitlists).
having the insurance is great but you need a provider of the services your insurance pays for.