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macirish's avatar

My wife and I have adopted (long story) a young man who, at birth, was 1 1/2#, 24 weeks gestation, 111 days in the NICU. A relative was his mother and she came to live with us when he came home from the hospital. It was not pleasant - and I admit I resented the child.

Until one day - when I looked at him and realized he was a fighter - from then on I respected him (it's odd to talk about "respecting" a baby).

He came to live with us when he was 4. His mother couldn't manage to get him to school - which he desperately needed. And we adopted him 5 days before Christmas last year, he turns 8 this year.

I don't know what it cost the hospital system - it's probably buried in their budget. I know he was on Medicaid - so some of the cost was passed on there.

The main thing is that he has a Life. Sure, he has problems - most of them mild. But he will grow up and with some luck live a life that contributes to his family and his country. Yes, I love this kid now.

When it comes to healthcare and money - I prefer a healthcare system that is flush with cash. It can pay to attract talent, it can make mistakes and there's no mean spirited accountant pinching every penny. And no matter how you design the system - that accountant has an impact on care. How long before we promote assisted suicide to cut costs?

If doctors routinely get a chart along with a cost estimate - maybe we've already crossed that bridge - which in my mind is a bridge too far.

But beyond that - would a healthcare system operating on the margin have EVER cared for premature infants - our system, a little at a time advanced the standard of care from a little premature - to micro-premies. Maybe a system on the margin would have rationalized making the child comfortable?

How many other advances have become standard of care medicine because the system had financial resilience that translated into tolerance for risk?

I've heard we blame the healthcare system for our generally poor health. But that's buried in choices we make - a government healthcare system isn't going to change behaviors - unless we give it dictatorial powers.

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Kathrine G. Sorensen's avatar

Hello Dr. G., History tells us that human life was not always considered precious, but that it was comparable to the worth of a sturdy farm animal while it was healthy and able to work. Therefore, (in my exceedingly uninformed opinion) the worthiness of extending effort to preserve a human life was linked to the promise that that human life would become a productive part of society, even if that society valued human life as a commodity, i.e. enslaved workers. Optimistically, I wish that this were not true today, but that the “least of us” could be cared for lovingly by a world of people with unlimited financial resources to do so. Hmmm. Thank you for your brilliant observations and analysis! - Kay

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