Posts Tagged ‘HSA’

All I Want for Christmas is Dependable, Affordable Health Insurance

Share

If you don’t already know, I hate the health care system in America.  Not that I know that much about it, but I do know that my HSA, my health insurance, and my diabetes do not seem to play well together.  I did not have these types of problems in Italy.

My health insurance believes that the year starts in October.  Every October I have to begin to pay my health insurance deductible all over again.  That means everything comes out of my pocket and having diabetes means there is a great deal coming out of my pocket.  Which means every year, we struggle financially until income tax comes in.  Which means Santa Clause is on an extemely tight budget.  If he even has a budget this year.

Then, the accountant at work let me know after my last paycheck that I could no longer contribute to my HSA this calendar year.  I have apparently contributed too much.  I didn’t think I would reach the limit.  I assumed the inventors of HSA kept people with cronic illnesses in mind when they came up with this great plan.  Apparently not.  Now, I cannot contribute to my HSA until January.  The benefit of the HSA was that the money was all pre-tax.  When it is all getting spent on insulin anyway, pre-tax is nice.  Now I’m going to have to use taxed money for the next month.  I’m not a fan.

The other day, I received a letter in the mail about some changes in my health insurance.  Apparently, my health insurance company has decided that they should reduce the number of testing strips that us diabetics are using.  They actually sent me a chart telling me how many strips I could use during a given period of time.  Of course, they didn’t tell me how long a “given period of time” is.

While the pharmacutical company is making money off our need for insulin and the insurance company is making money off our need for anything medical, I’m struggling to make ends meet.  Capitalism is awesome.  Especially if you’re the one that is being capitalized on.

Why Can’t We Be Friends

Share

Before I even get started on my rant, I want to reassure Aunt Nurse that I have filled out the appropriate paperwork and I am waiting for a response from Veterans AffairsShouldn’t “Veterans” be a possessive noun?  I don’t know.  I got it off their website.

There is some weird stigma about being a diabetic.  I’m not sure exactly what it is, but I see it all the time in strange places.  It almost appears to be a natural human reaction to people with diabetes that no one even realizes they are doing.  You know how I love examples.  For example, Mamma and I would go out to eat at a restaurant in Italy.  At the end of the meal, the server would always offer coffee.  Beth would always ask for sugar and sweetener because I have diabetes.  I don’t see it.  She would ask for sugar.  Got that.  Then, she would ask for sweetener because I have diabetes.  She wouldn’t just ask for sweetener.  It was more like, “May we have sweetener; my husband is diabetic.”  That’s not all.  I continue to see this sort of behavior in the media we receive about our health insurance or our HSA.  Last week I received a document about the health care reform and it’s impact on my HSA and it had the phrase, “… you can still use it to pay for prescription medicines, including insulin… “  Including insulin?  Why?  Are diabetics so stupid we won’t realize that our prescribed insulin would be included with other prescription medicines.

Then, look at what we have to go through for these prescriptions.  I haven’t made my deductible yet, so I am still paying for everything medical out of my HSA.  I went to buy my insulin the other day.  It cost me $257.  I cannot live without it, so basically, I have to pay $257 to live.  That’s just one insulin and I have to go back next month to get some more.  I take two different types of insulin.  Then I went to get more testing strips.  A months worth was $106.  The pen needles were $50.  Looks like Amazon has better prices than CVS.  Too bad you can’t use your HSA at Amazon.com  I can’t live without this stuff.  My choices are buy it or die?  That is an AWESOME marketing strategy!  I basically rent my body for over $600 a month.  I pay over $600 a month for a body with a broken pancreas.  Hey!  If I’m going to pay $600 a month, I would at least like a body that functions properly.  He knows I can hear him.  When you rent an apartment, you wouldn’t pay extra for the one that doesn’t have air conditioning.  We get it already!  You wouldn’t pay extra for the one with the beautiful view of a landfill.  He just compared me to a landfill?  You wouldn’t pay extra for the one in a bad neighborhood or near bad schools.

Let’s move on, shall we? If I say no, will you stop?  My prescription for testing strips from the pharmacy has directions.  Insert blood here.  They say, “Test up to 6 times daily.”  Who decided that 6 was the magic number.  That allows me to test before and after each meal.  It doesn’t give me a strip for testing before bed.  It doesn’t give me a strip for testing when I feel low or high.  It doesn’t give me a strip to test if I have compensated appropriately to fix my abnormal blood sugar.  So we don’t like six?  Six was decided by the insurance company.  That is the most they will allow me per day.  Any more than that and I have to pay for them at full price.  My pen needles say, “Inject up to 4 injections daily.”  Four is one per meal and one before bed.  Thankfully, my blood sugar is never high.  You mean to say, “Sadly my blood sugar is never normal.”


When we lived in Italy, I paid 1 Euro for 25 strips.  In other words, I paid 4 Euros for the same number of strips that I pay $106 here.  I paid 1 Euro for my insulin.  There is a lot to be said about socialized medicine.  I am not saying that socialized medicine is the right way to go.  I truly don’t have enough information to say one way or the other.  Like most things, I am sure it probably has advantages for some and disadvantages for others.  What I do know, is that being a diabetic isn’t cheap, and the companies I depend on to provide the things I need to survive, are pretty stingy when it comes to giving me them.  That is the downside of capitalized health care.  I’m not certain capitalized health care means what you think it means.  Either way, whatever Obama’s plan is, I hope it is going to make the prices on survival for diabetics a little easier to swallow.  You mean inject.

Time for the Frizbian

Share

I hate that it has been so long.  Not that I have that large of a fan base, but I hate leaving it hanging.  Life happens I guess.

That is actually one of the biggest problems I have with diabetes.  Great segue.  Life gets in my way the majority of the time.  The rest of the time he is just lazy.  If I’m lazy, then what is a pancreas that quits?  In retirement.  Uh huh.  Diabetes requires the attention of the diabetic.  Well, when I get slammed at work or I’m rushing to get Tata to Girl Scouts on time or the baby is crying or the wife is calling or… This could go on forever.  It’s not easy, and life gets in the way.

I have a new meter.  Walgreens has been having this sale on the Bayer Contour USB, which I have wanted for a very long time.  Only because Nick Jonas uses it.  Only because the meter has a full color screen, plugs directly into the PC, comes with software on the device to track trends, has a little light to check your blood in the dark, has reminder alarms to remind me to check my blood after meals, the lancing device doesn’t fall apart like my other ones, the strips are better (I can’t really explain that), and Nick Jonas uses it.  All I really know about Nick Jonas is that he has diabetes, uses my favorite meter, and is part of the Jonas Brothers, which I am fairly certain is a TV show on Disney.  I could look it up, but that would ruin the fun.

The downside of my new meter, is that it doesn’t use my One Touch Ultra testing strips.  I just saw the endocrinologist recently so my prescription is for the meter I don’t want to use any more.  Well, that would normally be the downside.  The real downside is that he is an idiot.  I have an HSA (Health Savings Account) as part of my health insurance thing.  If the person who invented HSA had diabetes, it would have been a Health Spending Account.  Don’t ask me the specifics, but basically, every year, I have to spend $4,000 in health care costs out of my pocket or my HSA before my insurance pays for anything.  We call that a $4,000 deductible, idiot.  Anyway, every year, the counter starts over in October.  In other words, right now, I am paying 100% of my health care costs.  Which means my strips, that usually cost about $10 with my prescription, now cost $103 dollars.  It doesn’t matter if I have a prescription or not.  And you don’t need one for testing strips.  I still have to pay full price until I have spent $4,000.  Which means he could have bought the strips that go with his new meter instead of buying the ones that he had the prescription for.  Exactly.

I think I may have gotten off on a tangent there.  May have?  I have ADHD you know.  Excuses?  Even my time to write today was split into sections.  This morning we went to a new church.  It is a Nazarene church.  I’m not entirely sure what that means yet, but Mamma seems to like it.  We actually went there this evening for a pot luck as well.  They fired the pastor at our old church, and it just wasn’t worth the distance as we only stayed there because Mamma liked the pastor.  So what denomination are we?  Dolly Parton said it best in Steel Magnolias, “Oh, honey, God don’t care which church you go to, long as you show up.”

So I have a new meter and a new church.  Tomorrow is a new day.  I have to get up early and go to work.  It’s been a busy couple of weeks since I wrote last.  Hopefully, I will be able to get more writing in, and the gaps between posts will become less dramatic.

Bear