Can’t Spare a Dime for Health Care
Posted by Youth Radio Editor on October 15, 2009 at 05:00am

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By Molly Adams

Molly Adams is an uninsured recent college graduate who sent us these thoughts on the health care debate. Originally broadcast on NPR's Morning Edition. For a related lesson plan, check out PBS Teachers.

 

 

 


 "So what do you do?” is a question people ask a lot when you're
  fresh out of college. I’m a freelancer, doing all kinds of broadcast
  production jobs. But that doesn’t cover my rent.

  So I’m also a bartender.

None of these jobs come with health insurance.

I was lucky growing up. My parents were always steadily employed, sometimes by the government, so I always had health care. I remember trying to argue my mom out of a wisdom tooth extraction in high school. I said, "I bet it's really expensive! It can’t be worth it."

"Honey. It's $70," she said back. "We have insurance."

Photo by teresia.

 

A few weeks ago, before I was dropped from my parents’ plan, I had an eye exam and a physical. It was like a last meal. I asked way more questions than I ever did before. I’ve started flossing my teeth every day, something I never did when I knew I could go to dentist if I had a problem.

My dad called me a couple of days before my final checkup. He asked what I was going to do. I told him Illinois provides free reproductive health care for women who make less than $1800 a month. But I didn’t have any other ideas.

Then my mom picked up the line. She told me she studied some COBRA information and that I could get a plan for around three hundred dollars.

Here's the thing: $300 a month is pretty much everything I make that does not go into rent, my school loan payments, transportation, utilities, and food. It’s the only extra money I have. If I pay for health care, I would literally have no other money. I couldn’t save. I couldn’t buy winter boots. I couldn’t buy anything.

I have co-workers at the restaurant where I work who have never been able to put more than two thousand dollars into their checking accounts. And it’s not just the artists. I know many people who are waiting tables or tending bar while they work two unpaid internships to earn a place in a company.

That’s why a lot of us are just not that into health care. It doesn’t make a lot of financial sense.

It’s a priority for my parents because they need it: They’re in their fifties. Colonoscopies, mammograms, all that gross stuff. I have other things to think about. Plus, dwelling on the fact I can’t afford health care is stressful and we know stress leads to health problems so forget it.

For now, I’m lucky. I don't have chronic health issues. My safety net is having financially secure family members who could take care of me.

  But I do worry about a Catastrophic Event. I ride my bike
  a lot in a city filled with bad drivers. I worry about getting
  into an accident. And when I think about not being
  covered, and maybe having to spend $20,000 on a
  broken leg, I admit I get bitter. Why is it that I'm working
  forty hours a week, contributing to society, and yet I
  still don't have health insurance? Aren't I earning it?

 

Image via Sberla.

Maybe someday I will get hired full-time and score a benefits package in spite of the conditions that so many recent graduates are dealing with: a crappy job market and no health care. Until then, I have to decide between every extra purchase and health care. And right now, it really doesn’t feel like a difficult decision.
 

 




Comments

health care

October will be the first month in over 4 years that I and my family will be covered by health insurance. I agree that health care needs reform, but like it or not my lack of coverage was by choice, as is yours. Nowhere in the constitution does it say,"life, liberty, health care, and the pursuit of happiness!" I like your article and definitely brings in issues that need to be looked at.

Excellent work

On the one hand, I maybe think we all *should* have to decide between "extra" purchases and health care. Maybe the planet isn't set up for us to "have it all" -- but I see your point. Keep at it. -Mick Opportunity

Extra Purchses and Health Care

I heard this on NPR and was disgusted by the tone of entitlement that was coming over the radio. I have no sympathy for a young adult who has to decide between "extra" purchases and health care. As a single mother, I moved out and had to make the same sacrifices. It meant working two jobs, paying for my own education and working a job I hated to get health care. There were no "extra" purchases. Just because you breathe does not mean your country should provide health care to you at no cost so you can free up your bank account for a pumpkin latte, or a new handbag. The thing is, I do believe in national healthcare but not for the reasons stated in this article. I'm fearful that more young adults have the same convictions- national healthcare because I "deserve" it. Unlike Mick Opportunity, I hope you will stop and think more of your community and what you can contribue, and less of what you deserve and your "extra" purchases.

Well done.

I heard this today and thought it was very well done. Bravo. Good luck!

Much needed perspective

Great piece. I just heard it on NPRs Morning Edition. This segment of the population needs to be heard, thanks for giving it a voice. No other national media has recognized how our hard working future leaders are challenged. The compassion by our current leaders does not bode well for the care extended to to our current decision makers at the end of their life.

Molly Adam's essay

I certainly agree with Molly. But wait, I broke a leg once when my horse fell on it. It only cost about a hundred bucks to fix. I had no insurance. A broke leg will only cost $20,000 if you have insurance. I have lived long enough to see how every test that can be done will be done if you have insurance. Without it, they fix the problem and send you home. Out-of-pocket payment for medical service is cheaper than monthly premiums. I have another option that most Americans do not have. I live near the Mexican border. I go there for most medical problems. My only concern is a traffic accident in which I am rushed to a U.S. hospital and then hit by enormous bills. But even this happened to a friend of mine. She is making monthly payments to the hospital. Those payments are still cheaper than premiums. So I wish Washington would stop trying to "help" me!

HEALTH CARE

Health care is not a right that young people get because they have finally got out of school and hit the work force. Welcome to real life. Ask your parents if they had it when they first hit the job market. Young people quit whinning, hit the bricks and remember we parents failed you because we made life to easy for you as a child because we worked our butts off to spoil you. REMBER, the governments money is our hard earned tax dollars. It isn't just printed so you whinners can have everything free. Maybe freelancing time should go to earning time, bartenders make good tips.

Can't Spare for Health Care

To Molly: What about looking into catastrophic health insurance? It would protect you in case of a severe accident or life threatening illness. You could see about going to a gov't health clinic for regular health needs. Take a look at this web site, maybe it will give you ideas or put you in touch with someone who could help you get some coverage you can afford. http://www.simplecare.com/

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