So using discipline to remain healthy has no positive benefits based on healthcare costs in the last year of life? I think I'm missing something here? Or maybe my self discipline to stay physically in shape is actually causing dementia to set in?
I knew I should have listened when people say watching your weight isn't worth it
I think you
are missing something.
Unless you plan to get hit by a truck or struck by lightening, chances are good that you will be sick during the last year of your life. You will most likely have heart disease, cancer, or strokes.
These things will, by definition, be very severe because you will die from them.
You will probably be hospitalized for weeks at a time, require very expensive drugs, and have treatments like chemotherapy or surgery. All these things cost far more money than trips to the doctor for cold medicine. That is why most people, no matter what type of lifestyle they have lived, will spend more money during their final year than during any other year of their lives.
Example: My brother was slim, never smoked, barely drank alcohol, ate expensive fruit, vegetables (loved kale) and seafood in fine restaurants in San Francisco, was a gourmet cook who made great healthy meals at home, and played tennis or golf almost every single day of his life. He almost never, ever needed to go to the doctor. He never even had a dental cavity.
Then, in his 79th year, while on the golf course he passed out and was diagnosed with cancer. He died 13 months later. During that year he had dozens of chemo infusions, 6 radiation treatments, weekly visits to the hospital and his final month inside the hospital. I expect his last year was close to 75% of his lifetime total of medical costs.
I'm not arguing that obese people tend to have higher medical costs on any given year than thin people. I've already said I agree with all the points Horseless Carriage made and Tazx repeated. I just said that the
final year is expensive for everyone. Whatever your final disease is, it is fatal and that usually means hospital stays and that is very expensive.
Slim people
do tend to live longer so your exercise and eating habits might give you a few more years. During those years you will be using resources that cost money. I'll be dead so I wont be using any taxpayer's money at all.
Feel free to gloat over my grave but remember that "using discipline to stay healthy," is not really possible. I'm all for exercise, I do it myself and I eat better and am not as fat as you might think from the position I've taken here, but so much of our health is beyond our control, we have genetics and luck to deal with, too. My other brother and I both smoked two packs a day for over 25 years, but we are in good health now and it was the non-smoker who got cancer.
My husband has 11 brothers and sisters, all grew up with good food and exercise, all remained thin and worked out, none smoked or drank heavily. Eleven of the 12 kids are now in their seventies to eighties. One sister died at age 58 of cancer for no known reason.