General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Where do our sons learn not to go to the doctors? Does that now create a social burden? [View all]HereSince1628
(36,063 posts)Everyone needs to be educated to the benefit of preventive care. Society has an interest in seeing that education done.
The comparison of men and women merely illustrates the point of where some of that education needs to go.
The presence of co-pays assists in keeping people from trivial uses of healthcare. Even the majority of V.A. priority 5 veterans (those with V.A. access due to poverty) are required to pay co-pays for that purpose.
The difference that prevail in healthcare seeking also suggests why in our society the "fairness" boogey man presents his ugly head with respect to men now sharing in the burden of women's reproductive health costs. If that difference was much smaller the boogeyman would have less traction.
Getting men to seek preventive care would help reduce that delta. Moreover, the now universal participation mandate in 'fair share' creates a society wide interest in curbing costs...including cost savings that result from participation in preventive care. Consequently it seems that there is a social role for public health education programming/campaigns to achieve those cost savings.