Leo: sleeping during a sleep study [image: close up of a sleeping white teen boy's hand resting on his chest, with a glowing red oxygen sensor on his index finger tip.] |
But we still want to know what is disrupting Leo's sleep -- even though we already know sleep disturbances are common for autistic people -- and if it is related to the daytime unhappiness he's been experiencing for almost a year. So we took him in for a sleep study last month, the last in a series of appointments with at least seven specialty doctors and four different scanning/monitoring procedures.
It's been a month since he did that sleep study at a local research hospital, and, according to his referring doctor (who referred him in August, mind you) the results won't be in for another week or so. I'm frustrated, because it's been months and we still don't have answers, but this is also just the way it is. Apparently the sleep study results reading backlog is huge.
Just the way it is -- and we have good insurance. And live in a major metro area with world-class medical options and facilities. And are part of a fantastic, responsive medical group. We are 1) lucky, 2) lucky, and 3) lucky. For now.
But what if the GOP's ongoing attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act succeeds? Will that affect us? Even if it doesn't, we know -- for a fact -- that a repeal would affect many, many people with disabilities, and/or their families, not to mention far too many other Americans. According to Families USA, the Congressional attempt at ACA repeal is:
"...the biggest threat to the health care law that we’ve ever experienced. And the stakes could not be higher. All the gains we’ve made in expanding health coverage to a greater share of people and strengthening the health care system in America are at risk."What exactly is at stake for Leo and other members of the disability community? According to NPR,
"[Before the ACA] insurers would cover rehabilitation to help people regain functions they had lost, such as walking again after a stroke, but not care needed to either gain functions patients never had, such as speech therapy for a child who never learned how to talk, or to maintain a patient's current level of function. The Affordable Care Act requires plans to offer coverage for such treatments, dubbed habilitative care, as part of the essential health benefits in plans sold to individuals and small groups."So, losing the ACA will, for many, be catastrophic. But what can you do? If you need specific guidance or reassurance about how you can make a real difference, Kit Mead put together #SaveTheACA - Affordable Care Act Resources and Actions, which is a great resource list, with sections for:
- Direct action, calling, and sharing stories
- Tips for calling and contacting
- Background information
And if you don't have ties to the autism and disability community -- and aren't incredibly wealthy -- you should still be worried because The ACA repeal may affect you too:
Republicans’ planned bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which is expected to be similar to the repeal bill that President Obama vetoed in January 2016, would provide an immediate windfall tax cut to the highest-income Americans while raising taxes significantly on about 7 million low- and moderate-income families.This is such a distressing time. (Protip: if the current state of politics is as dismaying for you as it is for me and you haven't watched the series Black Mirror yet? Now is a really bad time to start.) It is easy to feel like nothing matters and you can't make a difference -- but you can, and the best way to do it is to take action by contacting your senators and representatives. Even if you think it doesn't matter, it really, really does.
Please use the guides above to help you take whatever steps you can to #ProtectOurCare. And thank you. Especially if you'd rather be like Leo, especially if you'd rather Just Keep Swimming.
Leo blissfully hanging in a relative's pool on NYE. [image: white teen boy from behind, in a lighted-up pool, at night, with city lights in the background. |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Respectful disagreement encouraged.