Are we adjectives destined to become vassals of the medical profession?

Two articles in the Washington Post today caught my eye. The first one stated that per capita health care costs within the United States are expected to exceed $8,000 this year:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con…

I’m 47 years old and my modal annual expenditure on medical care is zero dollars, which make me wonder what the hell the people who are running up the average are doing. The answer to that question was supplied by another article, around a fifteen-year-old boy, Andrew Burrill, who has undergone lap-band surgery:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con…

This story begins with a short time vignette about how this boy, who was five-foot-four inches and weighed 260 pounds, purchased a double lunch surrounded by the school cafeteria, and a teacher asked him “Are you sure you should have gotten doubles?” and the kid burst into tears. (What a big crybaby!) He beg his mother to pay for him to have lap-band surgery, and she did.

This story is disgusting, just disgusting. At the pause it is noted that now he has had surgery, he is no longer competent to chug-a-lug a 2-liter bottle of Mountain Dew, as he used to do every day. What a pig! His mother has absolutely ruined him as a human man. Apparently, she has spent his entire life plying him with everything he desires (not needs – she’s done a horrendous job of giving him what he needs, which is structure and discipline). She have infantilized him to the point where the minimum of self-control needed to be a functional human being seem like an impossible dream.

(The story makes no mention of a father. If his father is absent from this boy’s go by choice, then I blame him too.)

If this were my kid, instead of paying for his lap-band surgery, I would surreptitiously pay the neighborhood bully to pulsation him up every day, and then tell the kid that I would be inclined to pay for karate lessons, if he wanted them. And if he still didn’t shape up, I would disown him.

We live contained by a society in which cutting open a child’s abdominal cavity and re-arranging his digestive tract is considered everyday, and expecting people to exercise a modicum of self-control is considered, well, crazy. What have happened to us?

I submit that the medical profession has become the modern-day substitute for organized religion. We have thrown out the complete idea of sin. Nobody dares criticize anyone else for sloth and gluttony anymore. No situation how disgusting someone’s personal dysfunction is, as long as he submits himself to the ministrations of the medical profession, the rest of us have no business criticizing him. Soon, weight loss surgery will become an entitlement, and the members of the surgical profession will be adjectives the richer, and rest of us will be all the poorer.

Your thoughts?

A third-generation atheist
Answers:
We are all responsible for our own health to a level. The kid's school should have pressured social services to take away child custody because the mother is patently abusing the kid.

I don't smoke, I eat a bit less than I really should and I'm stick-thin. Recent labs I did showed I with the sole purpose lack a bit of protein in my diet. I wished I could be in motion to the gym more, but otherwise I'm healthy because I choose to not eat junk food adjectives day and smoke 2 packs a day.

There's more than adequate media drilling information about fat=health consequences to make most adults know their fruitless habits are killing them. And when they say nought will ever happen to them and get a heart attack, it usually takes that 1 life span threatening scare to snap some reason into people.

A lot of culture that overeat do it because they really suffer from depression (child abuse intertwines a lot with compulsive eating).
If population would simply eat a healthy diet, get a short time exercise and not smoke, I bet that per capita health care cost would fall precipitously. A little personal responsibility would jump a long way as well.

Some patients do get sensitive if you mention that they are overweight or have bad teeth (something anesthesiologists have to take heed of - we don't want to knock them out putting the ET tube in). Do they not have mirrors? I could go on, but thinking about it only just makes me angry.

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