So over the weekend, I was having a really interesting discussion with a friend about health care technology in the end of life context, and particularly about what, and when, insurance should cover it. A penny for your thoughts and reactions, or at least for the ones that are non-trolling in nature.
When I think back over my lifetime, when I was young, everybody died of heart disease. Then, everybody died of cancer. Now, everybody dies of dementia-related conditions. So long term, technologies do seem to "work". But as I thought about it, when the technology is initially introduced, it may improve incremental survivability, but little if any improvement in quality of life during that incremental survivability period. Thankfully, QoL actually seems to catch up after a while, even if not "all the way".
Should insurance pay for the initial survivability without QoL, or before QoL catches up? How long? Recognize, of course, that without it, the technology probably gets abandoned.
When I think back over my lifetime, when I was young, everybody died of heart disease. Then, everybody died of cancer. Now, everybody dies of dementia-related conditions. So long term, technologies do seem to "work". But as I thought about it, when the technology is initially introduced, it may improve incremental survivability, but little if any improvement in quality of life during that incremental survivability period. Thankfully, QoL actually seems to catch up after a while, even if not "all the way".
Should insurance pay for the initial survivability without QoL, or before QoL catches up? How long? Recognize, of course, that without it, the technology probably gets abandoned.