Posted on 05/17/2024 4:43:51 PM PDT by nickcarraway
We should all celebrate strides in healthcare
In the aftermath of a major policy change that moves a system toward inclusion, it's important to show that the sky doesn't fall.
For example, as a combat veteran in the U.S. Navy who deployed to Afghanistan, among other places, I have seen firsthand how expanding open service to LGBTQ+ people has significantly strengthened our military and received vocal, sustained support from a bipartisan array of leaders.
Now, as we celebrate the 20th anniversary of the freedom to marry for same-sex couples in parts of our country -- with May 17, 2004 markingopens in a new tab or window the first-ever state-sanctioned weddings between same-sex couples in Massachusetts -- we have another opportunity to review the evidence and see that none of the apocalyptic predictions came to pass. Instead, the opposite happened: The health of families was helped, and no one was harmed.
This week, the RAND Corporation published a new reportopens in a new tab or window presenting one of the most comprehensive evidence reviews about marriage for same-sex couples. The report analyzes nearly 100 quantitative studies from over 20 years and underlines the many positive effects of the freedom to marry -- for same-sex couples, their kids, and the general population -- with zero adverse effects.
As the president of the American Medical Association (AMA), the nation's largest and most influential association for physicians, I'm especially heartened by the impact of marriage equality on greater health outcomes.
Some of the most important changes have been related to health insurance: Expanding marriage to same-sex couples led to a spikeopens in a new tab or window in private health insurance coverage among same-sex couples. After the decision, the number of same-sex couples in which both members had private insurance coverage increased from 79% to 88%. Reliance on Medicaid coverage slightly decreased, and marriage equality contributed to children of same-sex couples having access to private insurance. The impact of this is critical: When people and families are insured, they are better able to access the services they need and take care of themselves and their loved ones.
Other benefits are also encouraging, including a reduced number of emergency department visits among young people related to sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Decreasing state-level rates of STIs generates billions of dollars in savings to the nation's healthcare system each year. Another especially powerful, affirming findingopens in a new tab or window is the potential correlation between the freedom to marry and a reduction in the proportion of high school students who attempted suicide.
Advocating for the LGBTQ+ community in the healthcare field has been one of my greatest professional accomplishments. In past and current roles, I strive each and every day to fight against inequities in healthcare access and ensure that everyone has access to the same high-quality, effective care. Ensuring that our healthcare system treats everyone fairly has long been a professional priority, and I'm committed to doing everything I can to push forward.
This topic is also deeply personal for me: 7 years ago I married my husband Judd in Nashville, Tennessee. We are now the proud parents of two young sons who are the joys of our life.
Securing the freedom to marry was so important to both of us. It felt especially important during my deployment in Afghanistan, prior to the 2015 Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges that established a national right to marry. It felt strange putting my life on the line for the freedoms that we all enjoyed, yet not having the freedom to marry the man I love. Because of this inequality, we were left out of important protections, like the ability for Judd and me to see each other in case of an emergency or a medical issue.
It is a relief to be raising our boys at a time where the freedom to marry is available to all people. It's so clear to me that allowing same-sex couples to marry has led to so many critical steps forward, contributing generally to lower stress and greater health outcomes overall for same-sex couples and their children.
Same-sex couples, their families, and society at large are better off, and healthier all around, because of the freedom to marry. On this 20th anniversary of a major breakthrough, that's something we can all celebrate.
Jesse Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH,opens in a new tab or window is the president of the American Medical Association.
Less than 1% of all U.S. adults are in a same-sex marriage LGBT Americans Married to Same-Sex Spouse Steady at 10%Meanwhile,
Related to this is that,
The risk of becoming infected with HIV during condomless anal sex is 10 to 20 times greater than condomless vaginal sex. Because the rectal lining is only one-cell thick, the virus can more easily reach immune cells to infect. (https://www.mtnstopshiv.org/news/rectal-microbicides-fact-sheet)
Also reported, "People living with HIV in Canada had eight times the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other non-AIDS-related dementia as their HIV-negative counterparts, and they were diagnosed 12.5 years earlier [which in part may be due to more medical attention], according to an analysis published in BMJ Open.
They also had higher rates of several other age-related chronic conditions....Antiretroviral treatment has been associated with kidney damage and cardiovascular disease, and viral hepatitis and alcohol use—both common among HIV-positive people—can cause liver disease." (https://www.poz.com/article/people-hiv-diagnosed-dementia-13-years-earlier)
See post above for more, by the grace of God.
Thanks for posting....we need to fight back against the establishment of sodomite culture in America.
THese old queers are running around saying they are in tip top health when most of then have prolapsed rectums, so that the can barely have a bowel movement.
Well, until I saw his picture, which is where I got the confirmation, I had no idea what he looked like. However, the moment I saw his picture I was pretty sure that I was correct. Then I saw the blurb that confirmed beyond the shadow of doubt. I saw you had already posted his picture, so I just added the confirmation piece to your post. If it wasn’t you that posted the picture, then to that person’s post.
I posted his picture ... he just looks queer.
Your research into his “marriage” confirms my suspicions.
Author, at left.
Yes, like I said I was pretty sure my suspicions were correct as soon as I saw his mug.
Check out #47, above.
Have they started raping those kids yet?
Absolute insanity when we allowed them to raise children, in my opinion. Nothing but a form of child abuse, or at least a strong possibility of that becoming the reality.
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