Enough to Cause a Heart Attack

Nothing makes you realize how ganked up our health care system is like looking at a bill for something like a heart attack: $70,278.94. That was JUST the heart attack. If I added in the ER visits after that, it would be more than $80,000. Add in follow-up visits with doctors, EKGs, X-rays, bloodwork and other tests, medications, follow-up cardiac echo, and cardiac rehab, and it would easily top $100,000.

Now imagine if I didn’t have insurance.

But hey, ‘Murica needs more bombs and jets to drop ’em!

P.S. Care for the final five months of my mother’s life cost roughly $3 million–in 2000.

The One Who Lives

Today at the cardiology practice, the nurse and I discussed the thing that burns itself into every heart attack survivor’s mind: What are the chances of it happening again?

“Very low.”

Oh, “And you WILL get back to those big walks with your friends. Just be patient. You’ll do everything you did before.”

See, there is an ugly statistic that has had me on edge since it happened: 47% of women who have a heart attack die within 5 years (page e493 of the PDF)—nearly one in two. However, I suspected, and she confirmed, that the 47% are largely those who smoke and don’t quit, who don’t exercise, who need to lose weight but don’t (argh, stuck at 10 pounds, come on, just 12 more…), who don’t take their medications, who don’t eat right, etc., and also those who are considerably older than I am or have comorbidities like uncontrolled diabetes.

So I am relieved. I’ll always be mindful and careful, and it will always be something to consider in many things I do (i.e., choosing which foods, if any, I can have while out with friends), but I am ready to look at my heart attack as one step removed from a freak occurrence.

Here’s the tree in the lobby of the cardiology practice: