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What are some things that people don’t tell you about being pregnant and giving birth?

It’s dangerous, the hospital’s pump you fill of drugs whether you want it or not. They push c-sections quite heavily before there are any complications to warrant the action. It’s scary because we trust our hospital staff, but they don’t know you or your body. You do. If something doesn’t feel right, then you demand to talk to your physician!!! Do not let them take action that you and your physician have not discussed and approved before hand. This is your life. This is a life and death situation. Do not take it lightly. You are paying big bucks to be in that hospital and paying for high class care from your OBGYN. Don’t short yourself as just go with the flow.Hospital births are so extremely expensive even when you have good insurance. Baby 1 was about $30k with no complications yet I did need a few stitches. Very quick procedure right after birth. It only took 30 minutes of pushing. Baby 2 had complications, two emergency surgeries, ICU for me for a month, well over $50k and that’s just what was billed to me.When you get out of the hospital, you are in no condition to go running errands or to do much in the rest of the household. You’ll be super tired. Get all the help that is offered. Accept it. Be humble. Spend time with your baby and ask others to help with meal prep, dishes, laundry, vacuum, mop. Let a friend watch baby and get a girl’s day out scheduled.Don’t hole yourself up in your house for a year. It’s easily to become depressed when you are so worn out, body is being depleted of vital nutrients feeding 2. Get some exercise and walk around. Sit in the sun. Anything. You need social interaction that has nothing to do with parenting. You need to maintain who you are, social life, personal interests. This really helps work through post-partum depression. (Which is super common!)Breastfeeding was ridiculously hard. Then pumping. Then 30 min nap before repeating process. You cannot tell how much milk baby actually drinks when suckling, so you can be starving your baby without knowing it if you have low milk flow (my experience).Breastfeeding is painful. Babies bite. Your breasts are already tender. Breasts become engorged and it is super painful. They leak like crazy and those little breast pads just don’t cut it. I used an entire towel in my shirt. I’m pretty sure most of it leaked out on its own instead of baby drinking it. Lansinoh (lanolin) lotion really helped. It’s a must-have and use it often!Babies can have allergies to dairy and soy, like my kiddos. Baby 1 lost 2 pounds over 2 months before I found pediatrician number 3 who said to thin out rice baby cereal in a bottle and make the bottle nipple wider. That saved my son’s life for sure.SIDS episodes are more common than you think and it’s not your fault. It’s like faulty wiring in the brain and they stop breathing or start choking on nothing really. I never let my little ones out of my sight after that. They slept in a crib beside me, or on my chest or my husbands chest. So super scary.Learn infant CPR. It will come in handy. Kids are so quick to put stuff in their mouth and choke.Learn what infant and toddler milestones are. Get into a Healthy Families Program right away. They can help monitor progress so if your baby falls behind, then you can immediately find services. Don’t wait for the school system to do testing. Their testing is crap and serves an entirely different list of requirements and agenda than what your child actually needs. Hire your own clinical psychologist for evaluations, treatments, scores, and suggestions on the best methods for assisting and teaching your children.Don’t waste money on expensive and fancy baby clothes. They will grow out of them in 1–3 months. Invest in good diapers. Keep baby healthy from diaper rash and leaks. Most of my girlfriends had kids or grandkids recently. Almost all of my kids’ clothes were donated. They looked brand new, name brand, and the kids always looked adorable.

Should doctors getting into a medical school against a category display their category on their CV? Isn't concealing this information lack of trust?

If the concern was about the quality of treatment given, then the question would have been - Should the doctor display their final assessment scores at the end of their medical course?Clearly, the OP’s intent is not about getting quality care. If there was any concern about the quality of treatment received from these doctors, then there are ways to address them.Doctors need ethics, not just marks in entrance exams or money to pay the capitation fees. Here are some of those negligent and greedy doctors.Anuradha Saha case: Does SC judgment bring hope?It expressed its shock that a doctor as “renowned and revered” as Dr. Sukumar Mukherjee could have shown such disrespect to his profession and attempted to pass the buck to other doctors. But Dr. Mukherjee told The Telegraph he was just relieved he would actually get back money. An earlier National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission ruling had imposed a Rs 40.4 lakh fine on him. The Supreme Court verdict asks him personally to pay Rs 10 lakh. “Now I am supposed to get back three-fourth the amount,” Dr. Mukherjee said. The Telegraph notes the infamy did not affect his practice too much. He remains a busy consultant and is on the medical boards of top hospitals.Surgeon tied to India sterilization deaths arrested - 15 patients died in the hands of this negligent doctor.A surgeon has been arrested on charges of negligence and attempted culpable homicide in the deaths of a dozen women who had undergone sterilization operations at a mobile clinic in one of India's poorest states.Dr. R. K. Gupta, assisted by a team of fellow medical professionals, operated on 83 women in a span of six hours Saturday in Chhattisgarh state. His arrest is one of several measures authorities have taken in response to the deaths and the resulting public outcry.Doctor’s from under-privileged communities are targets of caste supremacists. These cowards would use the privilege of access to social media toSome of the no-reservation, private hospitals are into illegal organ transplants. It is largely known that these don’t happen without the knowledge of the doctors involved.Apollo kidney racket is the tip of the iceberg - private hospital - no reservations.The kidney racket that was busted at the Apollo Hospital in New Delhi is only the tip of the iceberg of a multi-million dollar racket with Kolkata at its epicentre.T Rajukumar Rao, the kingpin of the racket, was arrested by the police on June 7 in Rajarhat in West Bengal's North 24 Parganas district.Kolkata has over 48 government hospitals, some of which are alleged to be involved in this racket.Kolkata also serves as a convenient hub because large numbers of people from Bangladesh and Nepal come to the city for kidney transplants. A kidney transplant at a private hospital can cost up to Rs 35 lakh (Rs 3.5 million) though the rates in government hospitals are a little less.A senior nephrologist at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences believes a kidney racket of such a magnitude cutting across several states cannot take place without the knowledge of managers at a hospital and senior doctors.Rao confessed to the police that the racket spanned several countries including Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Singapore and involved middlemen, organ donors and their recipients and that he and his team of accomplices had ensured that over 100 recipients had received illegal kidney donations.Rao travelled abroad looking for kidney recipients and had bought three houses for himself in Kolkata. One of these houses was bought for over Rs one crore (Rs 10 million) and was located close to the airport.At the time of his arrest Rao told the police that he was in touch with 25 recipients and had taken advances from them.Kidney racket: Hiranandani CEO, medical director, 3 docs held - Times of India - private hospital - no reservations.MUMBAI: Five doctors of L H Hiranandani Hospital, including chief executive officer Sujit Chatterjee and medical director Anurag Naik, were arrested on Tuesday evening for alleged involvement in the kidney transplant racket+ unearthed at the trust-run facility on July 14. This may be the first time that senior doctors at a large institute in the city have been arrested for unethical medical practices.With these arrests, the police have so far taken into custody 14 people, including a kidney failure patient and his 'fake wife', to date. Of these 14, six are associated with the hospital, including a medical social worker, Nilesh Kamble.Mumbai police spokesperson DCP Ashok Dudhe said the doctors were arrested based on the state health department report that pointed to their involvement in the racket+ . "Based on the report of the state appropriate authority, the Powai police arrested the five doctors, including the CEO and the medical director, at 8.30 PM on Tuesday," said Dudhe. However, knowledgeable sources said that the arrests follow medical social worker Kamble's confessions to the police.There are plenty of reports of how these high flying hospitals which are run by non-reservation doctors provide medical services. If you are still wondering, you can google search their ‘surname caste’ to ascertain the category of these negligent and greedy doctors.If you are looking at category as an indication for trust on doctor’s capability, I’m sure you will be surprised. That is if you survived the surgery with your body parts intact and did not go into cardiac arrest looking at the medical bill.Handling casteism/racism in medical professionI’m reminded of the racism faced by Dr. Tamika Cross in Delta Airline incident in Oct-2016.From Dr. Tamika Cross’s postI'm sure many of my fellow young, corporate America working women of color can all understand my frustration when I say I'm sick of being disrespected.Was on Delta flight DL945 and someone 2 rows in front of me was screaming for help. Her husband was unresponsive. I naturally jumped into Doctor mode as no one else was getting up. Unbuckle my seatbelt and throw my tray table up and as I'm about to stand up, flight attendant says "everyone stay calm, it's just a night terror, he is alright". I continue to watch the scene closely.A couple mins later he is unresponsive again and the flight attendant yells "call overhead for a physician on board". I raised my hand to grab her attention. She said to me "oh no sweetie put ur hand down, we are looking for actual physicians or nurses or some type of medical personnel, we don't have time to talk to you" I tried to inform her that I was a physician but I was continually cut off by condescending remarks.Then overhead they paged "any physician on board please press your button". I stare at her as I go to press my button. She said "oh wow you're an actual physician?" I reply yes. She said "let me see your credentials. What type of Doctor are you? Where do you work? Why were you in Detroit?" (Please remember this man is still in need of help and she is blocking my row from even standing up whileBombarding me with questions).I respond "OBGYN, work in Houston, in Detroit for a wedding, but believe it or not they DO HAVE doctors in Detroit. Now excuse me so I can help the man in need". Another "seasoned" white male approaches the row and says he is a physician as well. She says to me "thanks for your help but he can help us, and he has his credentials". (Mind you he hasn't shown anything to her. Just showed up and fit the "description of a doctor") I stay seated. Mind blown. Blood boiling. (Man is responding the his questions and is seemingly better now Thank God)Then this heifer has the nerve to ask for my input on what to do next about 10 mins later. I tell her we need vitals and blood sugar. She comes back to report to me a BP of 80/50 (super low, to my non medical peeps) and they can't find a glucometer. We continue down that pathway of medical work up, but the point is she needed my help and I continued to help despite the choice words I had saved up for her. The patient and his wife weren't the problem, they needed help and we were mid flight.She came and apologized to me several times and offering me skymiles. I kindly refused. This is going higher than her. I don't want skymiles in exchange for blatant discrimination. Whether this was race, age, gender discrimination, it's not right. She will not get away with this....and I will still get my skymiles....Source: Tamika Cross - I'm sure many of my fellow young, corporate...Black doctor claims discrimination by airlineDelta airlines apologized changed their policyDelta changes policy after black doctor incidentMonday, Cross thanked Delta in a Facebook post, saying she was glad that "this unfortunate situation has brought about change in a major corporation like Delta Air Lines.""It is great that this incident was able to produce change and hopefully make other medical professionals, regardless of who they may be, feel comfortable assisting when 30,000 feet in the air," Cross said.India’s covert caste supremacistsCaste supremacists in India are not shamed in social media like the Delta airline incident. In fact, many of them use the anonymity of their social media avatars to show their true colors. They take pot-shots at doctors from under-privileged castes as incapable from time-to-time. They use caste category as an alibi to practice their untouchability in a modern nation.In doing so, they shame our country internationally.Best medical care for Indians is in the pro-reservation state of TamilnaduTamilnadu has 69% reservation for backward castes. The state provides the best medical care for all its citizens when compared to other top 10 big states.Institutional delivery by Indian StatesAmong the big states, TN is no 2. Institutional delivery means availability of hospitals, care centers for all the population.Source : Indian states ranking by institutional delivery - WikipediaVaccination Coverage by Indian statesThis is an important metric for delivery of preventive medicine in India. Tamilnadu is a top state among the big states.Source: Indian states ranking by vaccination coverage - WikipediaNumber of Blood BanksTamilnadu has the highest number of blood banks (per population) for a large state.Hospitals & Beds by PopulationWith 68000 beds, Tamilnadu is one of the highest among the big states.Source: http://cbhidghs.nic.in/writeread...Doctors per populationTamilnadu is one to the top 3 states among the large states. This is a result of affirmative action policy of giving the opportunity to all castes and communities to study medicine.Life Expectancy at birthTamilnadu is among the top 5 states in terms of life expectancy at birth.Source: List of Indian states by life expectancy at birth - WikipediaAs Tamilnadu has proven, medical care is way better when more SC/ST/OBC doctors provide the care. It so happens, that most of the SC/ST/OBCs are meat eaters and who are comfortable with the sights and smells of tissue, perhaps making them better doctors.This dramatic improvement in the state’s medical infrastructure is a result of the affirmative action policy of the state. Caste supremacists who look at category for quality of medical care should learn a lesson from experience of Tamilnadu, else they will become the next victim of the incompetent.ConclusionNo, they should not mention the category in their CV.One should measure success, not by the category of the doctor, but by the quality of the medical care.Going by the experience of TN, more SC/ST/OBCs doctors, better is the medical care.

How much does the average person pay for Obamacare?

What’s an average person?The problem with any such assessment is that a 25 year old in good health is going to “cost” way differently than a 60 year old with two pre-existing conditions, and that doesn’t suddenly go down when you cross the magic barrier of 65 for Medicare, whether or not you wrap that under the “umbrella” of Obamacare or not. And there’s all kinds of plans- ones which cover more, and pay less for insurance, but load it on after when you get sick. Obamacare was the first point where the was any kind of a “standard”, so apples to apples comparisons are hard. And per capita by state adds another twist.Sites such as How Much Does Health Insurance Cost Per Month? provide average figures for premiums paid that hover around $450/month per person. If you factor in the subsidy for people at lower income, that slice get about $195/month for a 40 year old nonsmoker making $30k a year- that’s about 8% of income.As a well off, married person in my fifties in California a couple of years ago, I was paying for a premium “Obamacare” HMO for the two of us that was about $1200/month, or about $600/pp. I now get private insurance for both of us through a group employer plan that costs them about $900/mo, 4450/pp/mo next year.A similar plan when I turn 65, if I turned 65 this year, would cost me $0/month. Yes, that’s right, Medicare would cover me completely. That’s not what I would “pay” for health care- it depends on what happens over the course of a year, although wellness care and routine appointments would be nothing additional. One long trip to the hospital might be somewhat expensive, but it should be largely covered under such a plan- provided I’m in state at the time.The problem never is what it costs today- it’s all about trying to do some sort of planning for the future. You have a choice of all sorts of plans with all sorts of coverages, with an ever changing regulatory landscape that keeps things unpredictable. In some ways, we should endeavor to not change things more than once a decade, just so that we can keep some things on plan. But inflation and expenses and changes in health status- think COVID- can easily bankrupt any well thought plan.But such questions invariably get into things like personal choice and behaviors and age and benchmarks and “averages”. In 2017, the US in aggregate is reported to have spent $10,739 per person per year[1][1][1][1]- that makes say $21K for 2. Consider that year my spouse and I paid roughly $15k in premiums, copays, and pills and we never got “sick” once that year- remember, we “threw that money away” above our yearly exam, but we maybe paid a bit less than our “fair share” if you don’t count the money we spent on medicare and other taxes used for healthcare- maybe another $4k in medicare taxes, not sure whether CA SDI or other fees might factor into that or my share of taxes spent on “research” and “vaccine development” and the like. I essentially “cost” the system close to nothing that year- maybe $1k tops for salaries and office space for the 10 or so minutes at the doctor, plus prescriptions and admin. My spouse maybe cost a bit more for obgyn care above that. let’s say $3k “all in for a year” would be a “pay as you go”. But that assumes a very good year.In theory, based on that $10,739 per capita number, if we converted entirely to everybody splitting equally the system we have today, and made everyone pay the same amount, we would all “pay” under “socialism” ~$900/month. So I can’t really say for sure that full blown socialism would be “unfair” or “outrageous” for someone like me- the final plan might cost more than I pay now, but probably less i think, depending on what the ultimate tax gets rolled out and how it’s adjusted by income, or it might cut the overall cost even more by cutting employment at dozens of healthcare intermediaries and billing offices, though those unemployed by such might balk. But the cost of rolling everyone who aren’t currently paying anything right now is not insignificant. And I think for people who have a good scene, with short wait times and low patient/doctor ratios, they might feel stiffed by such a plan.You could say for $200/mo or so, relative to full flat weight $900, “Obamacare” is a great deal for the less-well-off- it’s something for something, a bit of fair give and take. 8–10% of your yearly salary is not nothing. “Full blown socialism” would likely roll what I’m paying today into a flatter tax graded by income, which is why I think it gets a bad rap among the super rich- it might cut what I’m paying now, but not if I get super rich. It would likely require an expansion of the current healthcare system to keep patient/doctor ratios fair, which would boost employment.To some extent, in the current system and any more “socialist” plan, the young and healthy pay for the old, poor, and sick. Is that fair? If you’re young and healthy, you might not feel it’s fair, but if you’re like everyone you’ll be old and sick one day too. to some extent, by putting insurance premiums on a slight age-adjusted ramp, you can correct a little for that. That, too, was the point of the “individual mandate” that was struck down, and has caused a bit of a payments imbalance and ruckus in the overall budget of Obamacare.“Socialism” has a risk- by allowing the government to expand or contract the total share going to healthcare at any time, people are going to easily feel that they’re getting “shafted by freeloading” or “nickel and dimed by budget cutters” with no real connection to reality, and little control except the ballot box. I think overall I don’t mind so much the “cost” that I currently pay for insurance Obamacare adjacent. I think if it could be just a little touch “fairer” for those less well off, that would be even better. I don’t feel like current rates and expenditures and taxpayer outlays are “soaking the rich”.I like this plan that everyone seems to hate so much. I don’t really understand the hate.I think if anything, it would be nice if all of those costs got super transparent- show me how much of my tax dollar goes to things without it having to be a big data mining expedition. Let me see averages by demographic, just like census data.Some other random facts:(images: How do health expenditures vary across the population? - Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker)Out of pocket spending, that not covered by government programs or insurance, is about 10% of overall costs[2][2][2][2]. I don’t have good data to hand on the impact that has to medicare-age people.Footnotes[1] https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/nationalhealthexpenddata/downloads/highlights.pdf[1] https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/nationalhealthexpenddata/downloads/highlights.pdf[1] https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/nationalhealthexpenddata/downloads/highlights.pdf[1] https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/nationalhealthexpenddata/downloads/highlights.pdf[2] NHE Fact Sheet | CMS[2] NHE Fact Sheet | CMS[2] NHE Fact Sheet | CMS[2] NHE Fact Sheet | CMS

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