I certainly didn't plan it that way when I had the first one, Daisy Jane, or even the last one.
I can understand consecutive days but cumulative?
Cumulative. So even if it's a bug here and months later a bug there, you go over seven and you need a doctor's note for every absence. OR you get reported, and then you have social worker looking into it.
Oh, I'm not saying don't have kids if you can't afford their health care. I'm sure you end up sacrificing other things. I'm just not willing to sacrifice those things.
I want people not to have to take it into account when deciding, or lucking into starting a family.
Sorry if that came out all judgey sounding.
Aside from coming to the conclusion that they assume every parent can take their kid to the pediatrician for every sniffle.
Especially since you probably shouldn't be doing that. I mean for most minor things it's completely unnecessary and only spreads illness.
Sorry, DJ -- it's one of my few buttons. It's got a big red "shame" label on it, too. I jumped a little quick there.
And the point is that no one should be ashamed -- healthcare is out of control expensive and complicated when it should be available to everyone.
(edited to be clearer)
It has been really eye-opening to have the cost of healthcare be such an issue. Like, I now know to ask if there are options for similar drugs that come in generics, because even some of my meds that do come in generics, they were $70 for 2 months. I have taken them for years and never paid more than the basic co-pay of $10 or $20, but now, one generic is covered at the low-cost, but not the main one. it's all crazy. Like I want to shop around procedures, but that is crazy, right?
And the point is that no one should be ashamed -- healthcare is out of control expensive and complicated when it should be available to everyone.
The number of fucked up choices we end up making because health care decisions can mean putting your entire financial security at risk is just unconscionable.
I know when I was uninsured (or when I was on a shoestring and had a high-deductible plan) I made some really shitty decisions. I coughed up blood once and decided to wait and see for a few days because I was so scared that what if it was something? How would I pay for that? My sister right now I'm really concerned about - I (and my many medical degrees) see a lot of diabetes symptoms with her. And I've mentioned my concern, but I haven't pushed, because what if she gets diagnosed while she's uninsured? She had a (falsely) alarming test result from an exam at PP recently too and as scared as she was about what it might be, the fact of being unemployed and uninsured was almost paralyzing.
Cumulative. So even if it's a bug here and months later a bug there, you go over seven and you need a doctor's note for every absence. OR you get reported, and then you have social worker looking into it.
Yuck, that mostly seems to be encouragement to send the kids to school sick.
Sorry, DJ -- it's one of my few buttons. It's got a big red "shame" label on it, too. I jumped a little quick there.
It's ok. I could see how it could be read that way.
And the point is that no one should be ashamed -- healthcare is out of control expensive and complicated when it should be available to everyone.
Exactly this.
That is ridiculous. I don't take my kids to the doctor for most of the things I keep them home from school for - tummy bugs, colds, etc. I mean, 7 days in a row I'd go to the doctor, but 7 days over a year is not that many sick days.