I don’t watch a lot of live daytime TV. (In fact, I don’t watch a lot of live TV at any time.) I do see it several times a week for the 45 minutes I spend on the elliptical at the gym, which requires that the two TVs be tuned to sports. In practice, that means ESPN and ESPN2 and I try to position myself between them so I can look at whichever has the least boring talk. Daytime is not a time for actual sports; it is all sports talk. And mostly I listen to music in my headphones.
But I did seem to notice a really lot of the commercials were medically-related and aimed at my demographic (ie., “old”). Since I was recently in the hospital for several days and had the TV on different stations, I can attest that this pattern is not limited to sports shows; it is absolutely as ubiquitous on CNN, MSNBC, etc. (can’t personally attest to FoxNews, but I bet it is also true there). Sure, there are a few non-medically related commercials aimed at my demographic (e.g., reverse mortgages) and once in a while even something of more general generational interest – I particularly liked a half-hour infomercial for the NuWave Bravo air fryer/convection oven. But the medically related dominate.
Such commercials include those related to insurance
(Medicare supplements and in particular Medicare Advantage – which seems a bit odd,
since open enrollment doesn’t start until October), those advertising medical treatments
for disease of the age-challenged, and lots of commercials for incredibly
expensive recombinant DNA (anything ending in “-ab”) for relatively uncommon
diseases. This last group is in the traditional (if your idea of “tradition” is
40 years) mode of direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising first legalized under
the Reagan administration: “ask your doctor if this is right for you”. The
implication is that it probably is, although the litany of unpleasant side
effects that always starts with bloating, and moves to serious infections, and
ends in death, should give us pause. It is certainly right for the drug
manufacturer, who – shock! – makes HUGE HUGE HUGE amounts of money on these
things. Some of these drugs cost $100,000 a year. There are neurologic drugs
that cost $30,000 a MONTH. Or more. Thus it is worth advertising to lots of
people in the hope that even a small percentage will “bite”.
NOTE: Most doctors hate this DTC advertising. Yes, it is in part because of how irritating and time consuming it is for patients to come in and keep asking about whether they should be on these drugs. But more important, it is because they are trying to take care of you, to best manage you condition using drugs (when drugs are appropriate) that are the most effective, have the fewest and least dangerous side-effects, and are affordable for you. Why on earth anyone would ever think that a multi-drillion-dollar multi-national drug company would have your health interests at heart more than your doctor? If you think that, 1) you’re wrong, 2) you’ve been watching too much TV.
In addition to the insurance and drug commercials, there are
multitudes of miscellaneous others, especially for devices. You can get an app
for your phone that will check your EKG. You can get endless numbers of devices
that will monitor your blood sugar, many of which apparently come with the
added benefit of turning you into a totally fit mountain biker! Indeed, if you
have always wanted to play the flute, direct a play, or kayak whitewater, these
devices are for you! Also, the you-know-what. And let’s not forget the “mobility
devices” like scooters, available at “no cost to you” (although such ads seem a
little less common since some of the big operators have been imprisoned). These
commercials provide a regular source of income for actors in their 50s playing
people in their 70s. Even the ones in scooters look not very old, not very sick,
and not very obese. Of course, sometimes they feature a real person in their
70s, if they’re famous. Joe Namath, is, I think, 77.
There seem to be endless ways for the companies to make
money off of your Medicare benefit. Medicare Advantage is one issue that
deserves a little more discussion, since they often seem to (and may) offer you
actual advantage. Medicare Advantage (Medicare Part “C”) takes the money that traditional
Medicare would pay, usually has you put in more, and basically puts you in an
HMO. You get the benefits of an HMO – stuff not covered by traditional Medicare
like maybe eye, ear, dental, or other stuff. Also, the disadvantages, like limited
choice of doctors, hospitals, etc., especially if you’re not in your usual geographic
area. People with traditional Medicare do not get bills from doctors who are
out of network (unless, and this is rare, they have opted out of Medicare
altogether), but Medicare Advantage patients do. So, if you never leave your
home area, and are happy with the hospitals and doctors in the network, it may be
a good choice for you, just as an HMO may be for anyone (disclaimer:
probably, however, if you are to choose one, it shouldn’t be the one advertising
on TV!)
That’s about you, though. Societally, it is much worse.
Medicare Advantage plans, compared to traditional Medicare, have way higher
overhead costs (about 12-18% vs about 2%). They also get paid extra by the
federal government. Why? Well, you’d have to ask Reagan and his GOP successors;
essentially it is part of an effort to privatize as much as possible. And, like
most efforts to privatize, actually costs more. And we all, as taxpayers, pay
for it.
This is not a benign process, for Medicare, for drugs, for
devices. They are selling us very expensive stuff and making a huge profit,
while millions of Americans have no health insurance and millions more are
grossly underinsured. Discussions about national health insurance proposals
often focus on cost, but the stuff being sold in these commercials is part of
the structure that causes amazingly inflated costs, making our health system
the most expensive (2-3x as much per capita as other industrialized countries)
while maintaining among the worst health outcomes of that group of nations. And
the burden is not spread equally; those most in need, those who are the poorest,
disproportionately minority group members, are the hardest hit. It is
inequitable, discriminatory, and immoral.
The bottom line is that all of these commercials propagate a
system that is not only vastly inequitable, but is medically inappropriate. A system
in which the goal is not to maximize the health of the population, in any
fashion but certainly not an equitable one, but rather to maximize the profit for the
companies that are advertising, to take money from the rest of the economy and
accrue it to themselves. This, of course, is the nature of modern capitalism,
but that doesn’t make it good. You have to decide if your health, and the
health of your friends, family, community and nation are a core public benefit
or a product to be sold, caveat emptor.
The bottom line for the individual is the same as it is for
all commercials. They are NOT about YOU. They are about MAKING MONEY for the
company sponsoring the commercial. That is all. You are nothing but the
vehicle, or perhaps more technically, “sucker”, who will channel that money their
way. If you read the fine print it is scary, and that is only the stuff that
they are legally required to tell you. Anything that they are not legally
required to tell you will not be there. Do not trust them at all. Do not watch
them. They are dangerous.
Although I am going to look at see how Consumer Reports rates the NuWave Bravo…
1 comment:
Something had to take the place of all the old cigarette tv advertising income, i guess. Imagine if all those resources were used for healing instead of selling. another thing that bugs me is how everyone on tv is smoking and drinking alcohol, it seems. not a good example for our society. i thought that showing this on tv was banned years ago along with advertising, but somehow those bastards brought it back. bill g
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