Well hello July!
I didn’t expect you so soon! But
you’re here now, and I’m sure you’ll pass by quicker than I would like.
So, on to my thoughts! I finally
finished The American Health Care Paradox which explained a lot of big picture
themes of how our healthcare system works, and gave a compelling argument about
why it is the way it is and how we can work to change our system for the
better.
It’s going to take time, but like all good things, you have to wait for
them.
Lasting change isn’t instantaneous.
Rome wasn’t built in a day… and SEE how long it’s lasted!!
Time, it’s what we need most and yet it’s working against us.
Yet, what would we be if we weren’t bound by time?
The documentary I watched, “Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American
Healthcare”, was also very interesting, and informative.
It shed a lot of light on how our system of “healthcare” is a “reactive”
system instead of a “preventative” or “proactive” system. It consists mostly of medical care and does
not do a whole lot of “supporting the good” when you visit doctors or
hospitals.
For example, one could go to the doctor for a check up or to seek treatment
for a minor malady and the doctor would give them very fine medical care and
perhaps a diagnosis, but I doubt they would even ask about how you were keeping
up your health in other senses.
Would they ask if you exercise regularly? Or whether you eat lots of kale
and healthy foods? Would they ask about
your drinking habits? Or if you smoke
daily?
Most often these questions are only asked if they have something to do with
your being in their office in the first place.
Yet, so much of our environment and social interaction contributes to
our overall health. Doctors are
specialized in medical care, not in asking about the social determinates of our
health. (Shout out to you Maggie!)
Can we train our doctors differently to see the big picture of what
determines health and give them alternatives to treatment with pharmaceuticals?
Can we start talking about how our healthcare system needs to see the broad
picture of health?
We have the constitutional right to be foolish about our health, but we should
be empowering people to demand access to healthcare organizations that make us
healthier in every aspect of our life.
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