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Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 21:52:37
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Auntiemel » Estella, posted by Phillipa on August 8, 2006, at 20:28:58
Of course someone with ALS should qualify (automatically) for disability.
That is what I am talking about.
THAT is a REAL disease with OBJECTIVE findings.
YOU CANNOT FAKE ALS!
Posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 22:04:50
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 21:27:29
> but why the ER? why in the middle of the night? why not when they were feeling really bad? why not this morning? why not in a couple of hours? Why is your 6 year old up at 4 am on a school night?
have you asked them?
> I just fail to believe that that many people really think that waiting until some ungodly hour (or during the day) and GO TO THE ER for something that IS NOT AN EMERGENCY are abusing the system, they know it, and they simply couldn't care less. They aren't paying for it.
have you asked them why they do this?
maybe they haven't really thought about it...> When I work the ER, I am very lenient on what I consider an "emergency" because I try to look at it through the eyes of the patient. But when I can see that it is just blatant abuse of the system. I realize new parents are frightened and nervous of every little sniffle! I know that a child that you thought would get better, but didn't and now it is three a.m. and you are REALLY getting worried that something is terribly wrong is an emergency.
Right.
> Like a kid with "ringworm" in the ER.
> When was the last time ringworm killed anyone?Do you think the people who come in to the ER know that their kid has ringworm and know that it won't kill them? You are the doctor, remember.
> That is wrong, and they know it, and if it is repeated after it is brought to their attention there should be some repercussions, and THAT is what will increase the efficiency of the ER and THAT is what will bring health care costs down in this one small slice of the pie, and THAT is putting personal responsibility back where it belongs. On the person; not the public.
I see. You good patient doctor... They bad poor and abusing the system.
Sorry you are overworked... Sounds to me like... You are overworked.
What concerns me about this is the knowing that the person is poor -> thinking they are likely to be abusing the system inference.
I mean... Suppose some wealthy and dignified businessman comes in at 4am with the sore throat thing. If he was paying... Would you consider him to be abusing the system. Is it that these people aren't paying?
I'm sorry you feel so strongly about this.
But this reminds me of how people have made assumptions about me all my life. Poor therefore... And you wouldn't believe what people come up with. If you want people to 'abuse' the system then the fastest way to get them to do that is to... Begin with the assumption that they will.
I don't think people tend to think they are abusing. I mean... Doctors are on duty whether people go or not - right? Maybe they can't get time off work during the day. Maybe they think that there will be less wait at night. Maybe their kid couldn't sleep and they did feel worried.
If you think they are abusing the system... Well then I guess you aren't going to be feeling so sympathetic to them.
I'm sorry you are stressed.
But I still don't condone judging a group of people based on their income or lack thereof.
Posted by Phillipa on August 8, 2006, at 22:14:49
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Auntiemel, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 21:52:37
Kylenn go back and read your original post . I don't believe you said heath care was a basic right but you are now. Love Phillipa
Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 22:36:09
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Phillipa, posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 20:44:16
Yes, I also think Laziness in many cases is depression in disguise.
If we could get the diagnosis, and they would accept (and respond to) treatment, that would help.
Depression is a tough, tough, tough thing to get over.
If you ever even do.
I realize that it is not a diagnosis with OBJECTIVE (not really) findings.
You can (IMHO) fake depression. (at least maybe when you are in front of the examiner)
It would be very hard to fake it 24/7 because when I was really at my worst I could barely bring myself to get up to go to the bathroom when I didn't have to go to work.
But now, if I had to lay around like that, it would be very difficult, and I do not think I could pull it off.
Work was hard, but I put myself on "auto pilot" when I was working; emotionless/robotic (functional, and even good, but empty inside, just a thinking and decision-making machine)
but when I was at home, I let my kids go, I let my house go, I let my bills go, I let my looks go.
I hated life. I hated the sound of my own voice.
Sleep was my only escape from the misery of my waking existence. And existing was all I could do.
I am VERY scared that I could fall back into that abyss.
If I bend over a bit and look down into my psyche, I can see the pit.
I don't look long.
I understand depression. I know it is a true and debilitating illness, because I have it.
Thank the LORD my depression (but not my dysthymia, which is not even close to being as bad as major depression) is in remission. May I never go into that dark, lonely, scary place again.
I worked while I was depressed, but looking back, I should have taken a leave of absence. Not because I was not competent to do my job; I was. But because I was so, so miserable. If my profession was less biased towards mental illness, I believe I would not have felt so ashamed; so much like a failure; that I just could not allow myself to admit to myself, let alone my peers, how bad off I was.
I felt like I had failed somehow. That the macho world of hard core modern day medicine was just too much for poor little me and who did I think I was kidding and on and on.
When I took one of the dozens of tests in the midst of my depression after my SA (and henceforth the awful and humiliating repercussions administered by the very peers who proclaim publicly that mental illness is just that, an illness, and should be treated as such.
Ha what a laugh., but anyway, I digress, which I am wont to do)
I took many tests, and one was an intelligence test.
I was so stressed out when I took this test; I had just come from the "bad cop" shrink.
I think in some forensic psych evals they employ the "good cop/bad cop" deal, only with shrinks.
Anyway, I was so destroyed by the "bad cop" that I could not stop uncontrollably sobbing throughout the intelligence test, which of course, made me even more stressed out since my whole life my intelligence was the one thing I was proud of and expected of myself, and I just could not bear to miss even one question; I HAD to ace this test. But, how could I? I was a complete emotional mess, I was so, so sad and hopeless.
Anyway, I really think I could have done better on the intelligence test.
And when they had their little group summary meeting at the end of the week with me, they told me that I was smarter than 99.9% of the population. Well, that figures, I thought.
I could have done better. What a loser I am.
Then they told me that one of the reasons that they thought I had PTSD (which I do not have, go figure) was because I was so hard on myself when I missed questions during that part of the testing!
And I was proving their point by being disappointed in my score! I wanted another chance at the test when I wasn't so stressed out, I told them. It wasn't fair to administer the test right after I had been literally emotionally destroyed by the "bad shrink".
They, of course, did not admit to (and I hadn't really thought about it and come to that conclusion at that point about the good shrink/bad shrink ploy, but I 100% - well almost- think that is their M.O.) they did not admit to that good shrink/bad shrink thing.
They were just amused at how much I was beating myself up over not doing better on that test, and congratulating themselves for being "right about me."But, back to what I started out with.
Yes, anyone could have interpreted my inertia and my messy house and the pizza delivery place having my kid's favorites memorized to me being lazy.
I am quite certain I was accused of laziness more than once; and still am.
And, my middle child, I believe, is depressed.
He plays video games nearly 24/7 and hasn't had a job for more than 3 months since he was old enough to work; and he dropped out of/flunked out of school after his 3rd time in 9th grade, then flunked out of/dropped out of three GED programs.
He is an excellent XBOX live player. He is always bragging about his "ranking".
I have tried to get him help
(he also has dyslexia and ADD, and I could have signed him up for SSI when he was a kid, but I didn't, because I was determined that he would not go "on the dole" and that he would overcome.
Now, I worry that I may have done him a disservice. He is definitely having trouble with living a self-sufficient life. Trouble? No, he is not having "trouble" living a self sufficient life, he just isn't doing it.)
Now, is it laziness (he stays up all night playing video games; he sleeps most of the day) is it depression (he is a candidate; mom has it)
or is it both? It is a chicken and egg dilemma.
I expect him to be personally responsible for his livelihood. I have given him a deadline to get a job, and I have driven him around and called in favours to get him jobs. I am really, really worried about him. He is my son.
I have tried to get him to take anti-depressants, but he will not. When he was a kid, he refused to take Ritalin. But, hey, the kid likes to smoke pot and drink alcohol and smoke cigarettes.
I do not get it.
I know he probably is "self-medicating" with the booze and the pot.
The self-destructive behavior is a big red flag for depression.
I know I felt inertia when I was severely depressed, and still it is one of my lingering symptoms. But, what do I do with a 21 year old Man living in my house that stays up all night, messes up the kitchen, plays video games and cusses so loud I can hear him outside when some thing in the game doesn't go his way (around my 11 year old son and my 2 year old grandson)
and won't get up to look for a job, and when I take him and introduce him, he slumps over, wears his lip ring, and generally acts disinterested, and he has done this since he was 14.
He has had one car repoed and the one he is in now, my mother helped him get, and it is about to be repoed too.
For 7 years, I have taken him to shrinks, counselling, inpatient, social services, private tutors, Sylvan Learning Centers, The Reading Center, indulged his hobbies (skating and gaming) as ways to make his life more enjoyable as I also assuaged my guilt over his problems being somehow my fault either genetically or socially or both.
and now, I have to face a personal dilemma about this lazy vs depressed issue with my own son
and I am at wits end.
I am starting to think he may truly be disabled himself, even for my stringent definition, but it is hard for me to accept, since I know he is not retarded, he is quite bright, he is really adept at the gaming, so I know he can learn, make quick decisions, and has really good eye-hand co-ordination.
I have tried to get him into tech schools, but he can't until he gets his GED and he has had so many chances to get it, and he just won't.
He was at a do it at your own pace GED program in Austin, and he dropped out-twice.
Well, I may have to do something I don't want to do here in the near future.
This lazy vs depressed and what to do about it is very close to home with me.
Posted by Phillipa on August 8, 2006, at 22:47:20
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Phillipa, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 22:36:09
Kylenn be kind to you. Take a few weeks or a few months off. Do it for you and your kids. Love Phillipa
Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:02:10
In reply to Re: cost of drugs, posted by Jost on August 8, 2006, at 21:51:45
I am admittedly not an economist and not an accountant and am very bad at managing my own money.
I was merely responding to the comment about the super rich having all the money and the least amount of social responsibilty as it is currently legislated.
I admit, readily, that most of my opinions are not well thought out with more emotion to back them up than factual and exacting information.
I have not well-thought it out. I do not have the time, the inclination, nor the education to embark on such a task.
I have "heard" these different theories on social economics from various, and perhaps even, dubious, sources.
And I have taken my life experiences, my sense of fairness (especially as it applies to me which is something I will not ask forgiveness for because I also do not think altruism exists except in the case of the soldier jumping on a bomb so that he will absorb all the shrapnel and thereby save his friends and how often does that happen)
my education (excellent at math but ignorant of social economics) and these different ideas from other sources and decided for myself, as best as I can, what I believe to be possible, and if doable, the most fair way to tax the people to run the government which will have certain responsibilities to spend it as the taxpayers, not the lobbyists, see fit.
I did not claim to be an expert.
I admitted it was all conjecture, and opinion, my opinion, and I am offering it forth not only to hear arguments for, but arguments against, (and I do not mind opinions, since that is all I have anyway), to perhaps broaden my mind (and maybe even change it)
and maybe, maybe, broaden someone else's mind.
At least get people to think about it, like I do, because I think people should think about it, even if they aren't experts, because it matters.
We all vote. Well, we all have the right to vote.
And some people vote for someone because he is good-looking. and no other reason.
or he comes from their neighborhood. or he knows their cousin. or whatever. not well thought out, but it is ok, and they vote, and they should, although we all wish we had all the facts, and that everyone was always honest, but we don't, and they aren't.
But that doesn't mean we shouldn't think about it, and it doesn't mean we shouldn't talk about it, and it doesn't mean we shouldn't voice our opinion, no matter how not based in fact or well thought out.
I learned about Finland, and changed my mind about National Health Care just in the course of these discussions.
Maybe I am wishy washy.
Hey, maybe I am a nut case!
But, you know what, I still will say what I think,
and you can say I haven't thought it out, or you can sarcastically say that I have and know I will get what you mean. But, I will not be quiet.
some of what I say makes sense to some people
and some of what I say is right and I will reserve my right to discuss my opinions, based on fact, fiction or the folly of emotions.
Otherwise, I would never open my mouth about anything unless I could guarantee it was 100%, grade A, USDA inspected scientific fact.
And, since I am sure you practice what you preach, neither would you, and it would be a really boring forum, wouldn't it.
The meds I am taking are supposed to work for depression via the serotonin system. But no one knows 100% the mechanism. And it doesn't work for everyone. And some of it's effect may be placebo.
But that doesn't make it a bad drug.
And my not knowing everything there is to know about and all the consequences of my ideas for change in the tax system, etc, of our country, does not mean that I should keep my opinion to myself.
Last time I checked, we still had some semblence of Freedom of Speech in this country.
I do not recall a disclaimer in the Constitution of "but only if you have your facts straight and understand the full consequences of what would happen ifyour ideas were put into action before you put them forth!"
Feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:09:38
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella » kylenn, posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 22:04:50
Yes, I have asked them.
Usually, it is phrased thus:
"Mrs. X, your daughter has been ill for several days, you must have been really worried.
Can you tell me, what was different about her symptoms tonight that led you to bring her to the ER."
sometimes they have a really good reason, and it can be important to coming to a diagnosis.
sometimes they don't, and sometimes, I have gotten sideways looks and defensive answers, even though I need to ask the question, as it is central to figuring out the problem.
It is, to me, and to most people who make it through med school that have learned what they were taught, a very important, maybe the most important question in the history of present illness, which is the first, and most important part of, the evaluation of a sick patient.I am fed up with explaining things that I keep assuming would be understood.
Of course I ask them.
I am curious by nature, and usually it is an important part of the history, and can be very, very important.
Geez.
Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:21:19
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella » kylenn, posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 22:04:50
As far as knowing it is ringworm,
again, I would NEVER presume a mother KNOWS it is ringworm, or ANYTHING ELSE.
I use this example, because this actually happens.
The mom comes in SAYING my daughter has ringworm, and they won't let her go back to school without a doctor' excuse.
How much more do you need to know??????
I am tired of the personal bashing I am getting.
As usual, no place for me.
No place for a PHYSICIAN with depression to be able to participate in an open, supportive forum.
I am merely presenting ideas.
Yes, I have opinions.
Yes, I may sound harsh.
Why do I keep being misinterpreted?
I do not understand.
I ran into this during my worst part of my depression.
VEry isolating, being depressed and not having any peers.
I didn't fit in with the Cadaceus groups because they are mainly a 12 step group for addiction.
I looked, but could not find, a support group for physicians with mental illness without addiction problems.
I have read many posts in this forum and found many to be interesting and insightful, many seem to be well-informed and supportive.
But, not for me.
And, I am sorry if I have offended alot of people.
I am sorry.
I know a lot of what I say and think is not "politically correct". And I do not like to go around just saying what ever to who ever, for fear of just this. Like a lynching.
Thanks alot, guys.Well, I'll keep plugging away at my job.
I know I help people; I keep my opinions to myself with patients, and when they give me opinions and such, I do not argue with them; that is not my role.
I am there for them; I am there to make them feel better in whatever way I can.
But, you guys are not my patients.
Apparently, not my comrades, either.
Good luck,
God bless,
and keep looking up.
See ya on the other side, guys, when we'll all have the truth and our worries will be but a memory.
a
Posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:27:56
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella » kylenn, posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 22:04:50
one last thing, estella,
I did say that it happens, the well off abuse the system.
Good god.
And when they do, YES, EVERYONE in the ER knows, and discusses, the abuse.
A simple sore throat, does not belong in the ER.
rich, poor, or purple and hairy.
Missed my point.Look, I am not spouting things that are not nearly UNIVERSAL among health care workers.
EVERYONE that I talk to, hear talking, or just mumbling to themselves, says the exact same thing,
I never used the word "poor", that was your word.
I said that the workers without insurance are the least likely to use the ER.
What the f ever.
go ahead on thinking like you do.
keep your head in the sand.
you sound like the one who is getting emotional!
little bit of an overreaction to a totally non-personally directed statement.
why?
you know what, it doesn't matter.
it is ok.
maybe you just gotta be there.
Oh, and hon,
I am not overworked.
but thanks for caring.
Posted by Phillipa on August 8, 2006, at 23:30:00
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:21:19
Kylenn Please take some time for yourself and your children. Love Phillipa
Posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 23:46:57
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:21:19
> I am tired of the personal bashing I am getting.
I'm sorry that you feel like you have been getting a personal bashing. I'm sorry if I've said anything to contribute to that.
> As usual, no place for me.
I'm sorry that you feel like there isn't a place for you. I've felt like that a lot of my life. Like people wish I wasn't around. It isn't a nice feeling :-(
I think that Babble can be a very nice place. I think you could stick around if you choose and you might be able to find some support here.
> Yes, I may sound harsh.
Why do I keep being misinterpreted?
I do not understand.Do you understand why you got PBC'd? The bit that Bob picked out to PBC you? Can you see how that statement is likely to lead to people feeling hurt and feeling upset themselves and then the conversation is likely to escalate into a conflict? That is the purpose of PBC's. To show us our role in why it is that people may be likely to get wound up and misinterpret / misunderstand etc.
I have trouble sometimes. I want support but I'm feeling kinda upset and irritable. When I feel like that I tend to free associate my thoughts kinda like what you have been doing. And that can be okay... But it is a fact of life that we have to be a bit careful in *how* we express ourself so that others are more likely to support us rather than feeling upset in response and posting something hurtful back at us.
I've learned a lot about interpersonal communication in my time here. It is hard... It can be very hard for me.
I'm sorry you are having a hard time of it. I hope you stick around. I'm not sure whether some of the things you have said since your PBC are likely to result in admin action or not. I'll be sad to see you blocked. I hope you stick around. It is okay to express yourself... But one does have to be careful about *how* one expresses oneself because of how other people are likely to respond.
Posted by Estella on August 9, 2006, at 6:00:07
In reply to Re: » kylenn, posted by Estella on August 8, 2006, at 23:46:57
Is their anyway that you could go to see a therapist with him? Not a matter of blaming or ganging up (on either of you) but more a matter of your being concerned about what he is doing with his life and your wanting him to try and talk to someone about what he wants to do with his life because... You can't keep on supporting him like that (financially) forever. You have other kids and retirement and medication and stuff like that that you have to worry about too.
Smoking dope and sleeping all day and sitting around all night playing x-box does sound kinda depressive / avoidant / drug abusive. I'm not thinking lazy so much as... There is something wrong, yeah. Drug abuse / addiction can be a problem. Can make you forget about the long term... What does he see himself doing in 5 years? How about 10?
Does he envisage staying at home with you forever? Does he want to maybe get married one day? If he could have any kind of job... What would he like to do? Are there related things? What could he do towards being able to do a job that he would like to do?
When he was little... What did he think he wanted to do?
Mj can make those plans kind of... Go out the window.
A councellor could help you both. Help him think about where he wants to go in life, what he wants to do, the kind of life he wants to have. Help you set limits on what you are prepared to do in the way of providing for him (x box live connection, food, clothing, rent etc) and what you expect from him in return.
Maybe starting with little steps like... Cleaning the house adequately in exchange for internet access. Maybe have a chat with a councellor and see how it goes. Come up with some things that you and your son can both agree to and then progress reports to therapist.
You know he isn't stupid... But does he? Maybe he has troubles with self esteem. Maybe he does think that he is stupid. Chatting to a councellor (by himself) might be able to help him sort some of that out... Perhaps.
Sometimes kids need... Boundaries. Direction. Limits. I imagine that is the hardest thing in the world. Really. I honestly don't know how people raise kids...
I'm sorry things are hard for you.
Posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 6:07:37
In reply to Re: Your son, posted by Estella on August 9, 2006, at 6:00:07
thank you
Posted by Estella on August 9, 2006, at 7:54:38
In reply to Re: Your son, posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 6:07:37
You are welcome.
I really am sorry that things turned out as they did on the thread (before and after the redirection). I got to reading back through it and you know... I think we actually have a lot of the same ideas about politics and stuff.I imagine that your job is pretty stressful. I don't mean that as a comment on how you are coping, I just mean that I imagine you get all kinds of people coming through the ER and when it is late and things are busy and stuff... Well I imagine it would be a little trying on my patience at times (hell, I don't know that I could do that kind of job).
The son thing is a bit of a hard one. I guess I'm thinking back to something that a councellor tried with me when I was at school. I wasn't allowed to do anything because I was always being punished for something. The councellor met with me and my mother and tried to help us agree on what things were reasonably to be expected of me in exchange for what kinds of things I could reasonably be allowed to do in exchange. The councellor was a helpful comparatively objective third party. It stopped the discussion between my mother and me disintegrating in unhelpful ways... It helped both of us sort out reasonable limits and reasonable things I would be allowed to do.
It was kind of helpful. He is a bit older than a teenager now, but sounds like this situation has been going on for a while now. Mj can also affect social and cognitive development so in many ways he might be more like a teenager than the young adult that he is.
But I do indeed think that it is realistic that he have some responsibility around the household. Doing laundry or chores or something like that. Maybe even something external too in exchange for you financially supporting him. Steps might have to be slow at first. A councellor might also be able to assess the extent of his drug use. Sometimes... Kids don't tell their parents all...
I guess the hardest part might be getting him along to see one. Also finding one that he can get along with. Does he have a father around? Maybe some kind of guy who he can respect and look up to a little as a positive role model would be a nice bet. Someone who isn't going to take sides... But someone who he can perceive as being on his side. I think it is likely that he doesn't think there is anything meaningful that he can do that he would enjoy. He is good at x-box so that makes it meaningful to him and a source of pride :-) It is about extending that into other areas. Especially if he had a bit of a hard time of it at school...
Posted by adrift on August 9, 2006, at 10:39:53
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:27:56
Kylenn, I hope you do not leave. Although I understand that this was a heated thread and probably didn''t feel all that welcoming. But, I for one, found reading your posts very interesting/thought provoking. I hope you stay!
Posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 11:05:31
In reply to Re: Your son » kylenn, posted by Estella on August 9, 2006, at 7:54:38
Thanks again for the advice.
Some of those things have already been done.
I mean, counselling, that has been done several times.
He actually had a job with Microsoft problem shooting for customers via telephone about their new XBOX consoles; and he reports he was one of their best people at that job.
But, he lost it because one day his friends and he all got together for a "lan party" which is basically like a little video game competition with your friends.
He decided the game/party was more important than showing up for work.
It was not his first time to get fired from a job for misplaced priorities.
I told him this morning after thinking about what you said last nite about me providing the xbox live hookup and I told him I was cancelling our internet connection at the house, and he told me no problem because he has so many games stored up he could play those and not miss the live connection at all. And he could go down to McDonald's because they have free wifi, and on and on.
He rightly told me that I would be the one to suffer most by not having an internet connection.
I have to padlock my bedroom when I go to work because just asking him not to go in there has never worked. He told me two days ago that he has gotten in my room 3 times in the last week to get stuff while the door has been padlocked.
He simply unscrewed the latch from the door, went in, and then screwed it back in.
I also, unfortunately, cannot afford to pay for him to go to counselling anymore.
His father was an absentee father. He never even sends a card on Richard's birthday.
I have also thought that the lack of a good male role model probably played a part in his lack of initiative.
But, all that is behind me now.
It is getting really close to crunch time for my son. And I have to be really strong and not let my feelings of sadness and guilt cause me to enable him for much longer.
That is going to be the hard part for me.
It will break my heart to have to kick him out of my house.
But, I am getting near to that as my only option to keep my own sanity.
Either choice is a threat to it.
THe only thing that would be good for me is if he got up today and found a job and his life finally turned around.
But, I have been hoping for that for a really long time.
Posted by Dinah on August 9, 2006, at 11:39:30
In reply to Re: Your son, posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 11:05:31
I'm sorry about your son. That must be so heartbreaking for a mother.
I think you're right about it being time to draw boundaries and enforce them. When he told you about taking off the padlock to your room he crossed a big boundary. Stand firm.
I understand your frustration. I think anybody who works with the public in a capacity where you run into people who don't feel the rules apply to them feels that same frustration, especially if they try to live by those rules. It happens. It stinks that it happens. It's not fair. I wish there was some way to make the world fair.
But I'm guessing a black market trade in luxury items to avoid taxation would flourish just as the underground economy flourishes now.
People are ever resourceful at things like that.
Posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 13:48:05
In reply to Re: Your son » kylenn, posted by Dinah on August 9, 2006, at 11:39:30
so true
Posted by AuntieMel on August 10, 2006, at 8:51:25
In reply to Re: cost of drugs, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 20:56:08
"My employees all worked about 10 hours of overtime a few weeks ago. I was excited for them and they were excited. Guess how much
more their average paycheck was? Less than $30 more than if they had worked NO OVERTIME. They were essentially paid LESS
THAN MINIMUM WAGE for their overtime hours. WHY? BECAUSE THE STUPID INCOME TAXES TOOK SO MUCH MORE OF
A PERCENTAGE SINCE FOR THAT TWO WEEKS THEIR INCOME GOT BUMPED UP A BIT.
noW, who thinks that is fair???????
I know they did NOT."In addition to my day job, I keep the books and do the payroll/payroll taxes for my hubby's business.
The payroll is done using IRS generated tables, for the income level the person is in. In the one-off case of a lot of overtime, or a big bonus, the amount of taxes really does look large.
But that isn't really the true tax bracket. This gets evened out at the end of the year when the total taxes are figured for the hear. If too much was taken out in that one-off case, they will get it back then.
If the employer knows that it really is a one-off, they can request a new W4 with more dependents listed for that pay period, and then get a new W4 to go back to normal.
Posted by AuntieMel on August 10, 2006, at 9:02:57
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 21:27:29
Well, then, where you live is better than the part of the US I live in.
My mom was an ER nurse for years and years and she *did* see lots of people come in for sore throate and all.
And they were generally people on medicaid.
But, see, where we are medicaid will pick up the bill for an ER visit, but many doctors don't take it for regular clinic practice. And there are no clinics for those who can't pay. So, actually the ER is the only place they have to go.
So, they wait until the doctor's offices are closed, because if it is regular office hours the ER will turn them away. But if the offices are closed, they can't.
It's a huge burden to the hospital staff, the taxpayer, and the people themselves who have to go this route.
I live in a much larger city in the same state and we don't have any clinics either - at least on this end of town. So the situation is the same.
And that's not counting (touchy subject for many) the undocumented aliens - those who can't get medicaid - who are the working poor. They, too, have no where else to go and human kindness (not to mention the local law) tells us to not turn out sick kids.
----------------------"You are right about the ERs being used as clinics. but as a person who has worked in ERs MANY times as a student, resident, and
now as an attending, I have to point out that the ones who truly abuse the ERs generally (sorry, I have to generalize because I am
aware that there are exceptions but public welfare systems run on statistics and statistics are, by definition, a way to find out,
GENERALLY, what things are or how things are used, etc)
but generally, the biggest abusers of the ER for things like an earache for 3 days brought to the ER at 10p.m on Thursday night ARE
folks that are taken care of by the system, and they DO have clinics they can go to during the day and they GENERALLY get better
care, wait less, and have better follow up, if they go to their clinics.
But, they don't they go to the ER. At 10pm or 1a.m or 4a.m with their 6 year old who has had a sore throat for 5 days. I kid you not. Now,
what was that kid doing on Monday, Tuesday? Wednesday, all day Thursday? I have EVEN seen them come in like that and actually
say THAT THE KID IS FEELING BETTER TO DAY BUT THEY THOUGHT THEY SHOULD JUST GET IT CHECKED OUT!!!
Guess what, I agree, but why the ER? why in the middle of the night?
Posted by AuntieMel on August 10, 2006, at 9:15:09
In reply to Re: Your son, posted by kylenn on August 9, 2006, at 11:05:31
I saw a thing on 60 minutes this weekend about a guy who's a professional gamer.
They have tournaments for cash prizes! He's actually making a lot of money, and he travels the world for the tourneys.
He looked quite normal. A bit geeky, but otherwise normal. I wouldn't be embarassed to call him mine.
Posted by Meri-Tuuli on August 10, 2006, at 14:11:05
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella » kylenn, posted by AuntieMel on August 10, 2006, at 9:02:57
See, this is one of the bonuses of having a free (at point of use anyway - heaven knows we pay enough for it in tax!) national health system like here in the UK. You completely avoid all the aforementioned ills with it. For instance we have these 'walk-in' clinics whereby you don't even need to be registered with a doc, operating 24 hours a day. Totally free for everyone (even the aliens....) Stops the burden of people with sore throats clogging up the ER.....
----------
> Well, then, where you live is better than the part of the US I live in.
>
> My mom was an ER nurse for years and years and she *did* see lots of people come in for sore throate and all.
>
> And they were generally people on medicaid.
>
> But, see, where we are medicaid will pick up the bill for an ER visit, but many doctors don't take it for regular clinic practice. And there are no clinics for those who can't pay. So, actually the ER is the only place they have to go.
>
> So, they wait until the doctor's offices are closed, because if it is regular office hours the ER will turn them away. But if the offices are closed, they can't.
>
> It's a huge burden to the hospital staff, the taxpayer, and the people themselves who have to go this route.
>
> I live in a much larger city in the same state and we don't have any clinics either - at least on this end of town. So the situation is the same.
>
> And that's not counting (touchy subject for many) the undocumented aliens - those who can't get medicaid - who are the working poor. They, too, have no where else to go and human kindness (not to mention the local law) tells us to not turn out sick kids.
>
>
> ----------------------
>
> "You are right about the ERs being used as clinics. but as a person who has worked in ERs MANY times as a student, resident, and
> now as an attending, I have to point out that the ones who truly abuse the ERs generally (sorry, I have to generalize because I am
> aware that there are exceptions but public welfare systems run on statistics and statistics are, by definition, a way to find out,
> GENERALLY, what things are or how things are used, etc)
> but generally, the biggest abusers of the ER for things like an earache for 3 days brought to the ER at 10p.m on Thursday night ARE
> folks that are taken care of by the system, and they DO have clinics they can go to during the day and they GENERALLY get better
> care, wait less, and have better follow up, if they go to their clinics.
> But, they don't they go to the ER. At 10pm or 1a.m or 4a.m with their 6 year old who has had a sore throat for 5 days. I kid you not. Now,
> what was that kid doing on Monday, Tuesday? Wednesday, all day Thursday? I have EVEN seen them come in like that and actually
> say THAT THE KID IS FEELING BETTER TO DAY BUT THEY THOUGHT THEY SHOULD JUST GET IT CHECKED OUT!!!
> Guess what, I agree, but why the ER? why in the middle of the night?
Posted by Meri-Tuuli on August 10, 2006, at 14:14:10
In reply to Re: Your son » kylenn, posted by AuntieMel on August 10, 2006, at 9:15:09
>I learned about Finland, and changed my mind about National Health Care just in the course of these discussions.
I'm glad you liked the article... how would you say your opinion has changed?
Kind regards
Meri
Posted by Dr. Bob on August 11, 2006, at 2:52:06
In reply to Re: Yikes! I agree with Estella, posted by kylenn on August 8, 2006, at 23:27:56
> go ahead on thinking like you do.
> keep your head in the sand.
> you sound like the one who is getting emotional!
> little bit of an overreaction to a totally non-personally directed statement.Keeping in mind that the idea here is not to post anything that could lead others to feel accused or put down, could you please rephrase that?
But please don't take this personally, this doesn't mean I don't like you or think you're a bad person.
If you or others have questions about this or about posting policies in general, or are interested in alternative ways of expressing yourself, please first see the FAQ:
http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/faq.html#civil
http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/faq.html#enforceFollow-ups regarding these issues should be redirected to Psycho-Babble Administration. They, as well as replies to the above post, should of course themselves be civil.
Thanks,
Bob
Posted by Dr. Bob on August 11, 2006, at 2:52:30
In reply to Re: please be civil » Dr. Bob, posted by AuntieMel on August 8, 2006, at 14:24:31
This is the end of the thread.
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