Amazon.com Widgets

Archive for the 'health' Category

Feb 15 2008

Day 167: Stupid Tax, Co-Pay, more Underwear, & Chocolate Milk

Published by Suburban Wife under health, clothing, food, Daily $$'s

Doctor Co-Pay — $25.00
The Daughter left me a novel-length note this morning before she left for school.  The gist was that she’s feeling yucky and wanted me to make a doctor appointment to make sure she doesn’t have mono.  I knew she was being alarmist but since we’re getting ready to leave town for a week and I know she’d got some kind of bug, I figured I’d take her in really quick and make sure she doesn’t have strep.  The quick strep test came back negative.  The doctor and I both guess she just has a cold.  While there we went ahead and got her set up with the third and final Gardasil shot.

Library — $13.20
The Daughter’s late fees.  It was about a year’s worth of slowly building, minor one- or two-day fines but they eventually added up to an ugly Stupid Tax.  I’ve been on the fence about who should pay these fines.  Part of me thinks she should have to pay them herself.  But in all honesty, most of the fault is mine.  She still can’t drive and often she’ll give me a book to take back and it will take me and extra day or two to get it done.  She’ll have her license in another month — that’s when she’ll definitely have to start taking responsiblity for these herself.

Target — $30.97

  • 3 pack of Eclipse gum — $1.50
  • wall calendar — $9.99
  • 2 cartons Horizon chocolate milk — $3.99/ea.
  • a 5-pack of Hanes men’s briefs — $9.49

No responses yet

Feb 14 2008

Day 166: Colonics, Underwear, Groceries, Bedding, and Speech Therapy

Published by Suburban Wife under health, clothing, food, Daily $$'s

How’s that for a interesting collection of expenses?  It certainly was a full day.  Here we go with my today’s daily dollar diary entry:

Alternative Care & Supplements — $106.57
I started the morning with a colonic session ($70) and bought a bottle of herbal supplements specifically formulated to give relief for some of my IBS symptoms (most of which are doing much better since starting the lavage treatments).

Wild Oats — $36.87

  • 4 large organic boneless, skinless chicken breast halves — $21.25 (we had plenty of leftovers for lunch tomorrow)
  • asparagus — $4.71
  • organic sliced roast beef — $4.99
  • organic sliced smoked turkey — $4.99

I’d hoped to pick up a box or two of Kashi cereal (either Cinnamon Harvest or Autumn Wheat) but Wild Oats (now officially Whole Foods) just raised the price to $4.29 per box.  They’d raised the price and then put it on sale for a very generous $3.69.  Excuse me, but just how stupid do they think we are!!?!  Their sale price is the same as the regular price at Kroger and Vitamin Cottage.  I told the clerk in no uncertain terms that I didn’t like having my intelligence insulted like that and I fully intended to go up the street to the Super Target for my Kashi cereal.  Which I did….

Target — $20.83

  • 3 boxes of Kashi Cinnamon Harvest — $3.29/box
  • 3 boxes of Kashi Autumn Wheat — $3.29/box

Target — $6.93
It wasn’t until I was in the checkout line that it occurred to me that I should check Target’s offerings in men’s underwear.  With my reusable nylon Chico bags stuffed with Kashi cereal in tow, I wandered back to the men’s department where I found a package of men’s Hane’s briefs in the clearance section.  The package was supposed to contain 5 pair of briefs but someone had opened the package and the 5th pair had either been lost, misplaced, or taken.  So this package of 4 was on sale for a reduced price.

Would you believe that the Great Underwear Search of ‘08 might well be over!?  I kid you not!  It looks like these Hanes briefs might be the proverbial glass slipper.  I’m not going to count my chickens just yet but I am poised to go back to Target and stock up on full-priced packages of briefs if and when The Son gives me the thumbs up.  First he has to thoroughly test them which involves wearing them all day long under his normal street clothes on a busy day away from home.  If they can pass that test, then by golly I think we’ll have a winner.

I’ll tell you what — I never imagined that that elusive brand and style of briefs was sitting under my nose this whole time in Target!  This should really be a lesson to me about my subconscious snobbish ways.

Medical Co-Pay — $25.00
I had to take The Son in for a blood draw so they could re-test his thyroid levels.  Two months ago, during blood tests for a different concern, we discovered that The Son’s thyroid levels were a bit elevated.  His doctor’s office sent a reminder card the other day to bring him in for a re-check.  Hopefully they’ll call back in a few days with news that his thyroid level is perfectly fine — but I’m not holding my breath.  Every single member of both my family and The Husband’s has thyroid problems.  There is no way my kids are going to escape that one.  I hate to see it start so young in The Son.  If this test comes out high they’ll refer us to a specialist.

The Company Store — $104.93
I know I said I was going to wait a year on new flannel sheets for our bed but, well, I guess I lied.   So sue me  ;-)

I got an email this morning from The Company Store telling me I could save an additional 15% off all clearance items.  The thought of having two sets of flannel sheets and two winter-weight duvet covers was just too enticing.  I ordered a flannel duvet cover in a fall leaf pattern along with two matching pillow cases (no shams this time).  I also ordered a solid colored queen fitted sheet and two pillow cases in the same solid color.  I’m hoping that the fitted sheet will look good with the duvet cover (I didn’t bother dealing with their customer service rep this time) and that they both look good with my linen-blend bedskirt because that’s the plan.  If everything doesn’t coordinate I’ll have some tough decisions to make.

Speech Therapist — $60.00
Another 45-minute session for The Son with his speech therapist.  I can tell that she likes him and that he feels pretty comfortable with her.  I’m going to have to pull back to every other week before too long but I’m hoping to establish a really good working relationship between them and some sense of ownership in him regarding his assignments before pulling back.  This next week will be a good test since I’ll be out of town and he’ll have to be disciplined if he’s going to have his homework done for his next session.

No responses yet

Jan 24 2008

Day 145: more Health Care

Published by Suburban Wife under health, Daily $$'s

Alternative Care & Supplements — $140.46
Another Lavage session (aka colon hydrotherapy, aka colonic).  My IBS is flaring; I’m in a bad insomnia cycle; my fibro pain is increasing.  I’m trying to take care of myself, as best I can.  I’m hoping that these additional supplements will produce some good results.

Speech Therapy — $60.00
Another speech therapy session for The Son.  We’ve moved forward on an idea I hatched a few months ago to have The Son blog.  I might not be the most objective person on this subject, but The Son is a very good writer; very witty and clever.  Today he “turned in” his first blog post.  If he keeps it up and posts on any sort of regular basis, I’ll share a link so my readers can check it out.

Qwest — $210.21
I’m still trying to figure out what happened with this bill.  I’m guessing that somehow I went over my minutes but the bill is complicated and I’m not feeling well (even less well after seeing the bill!).  It’s been a long time since I went over on my minutes — and when it does happen it always coincides with some big family drama.  Family dramas are such a P in the A and major causes of stress — and these awful, massive phones bills feel like someone kicking me while I’m down.

And one last charge I made last week but forgot to report:

Weleda Pharmacy — $79.20
Four remedies for The Son as prescribed earlier this month by our doctor.

No responses yet

Jan 11 2008

Day 132: Flannel Sheets, Alternative Care, and Emergencies

Published by Suburban Wife under health, home, Daily $$'s

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I derive a great deal of pleasure from a high-quality product.  Anyone who has ever experienced high-quality cotton flannel will understand how difficult it is to put up with cheap, pilled flannel.

Three years ago I purchased flannel fitted sheets and pillowcases for our three beds — our queen plus the kids’ twins — from The Company Store.  I was so sick of the cheap flannels I’d purchased several years earlier at Linens ‘N Things that it took a real force of will to bring myself to put them on our beds.  Before buying any new linens, I’d talked to the two people I knew whose opinion I valued and were the most likely to have shelled out big bucks for quality flannel:  my mom and my youngest sister.  One or the other mentioned The Company Store.  As luck would have it, TCS was having a sale just about that time so I took the plunge and ordered a set (fitted sheet and pillow cases) for each bed.  I can’t remember what I spent but it wasn’t much because I hit a great sale.  And those sheets were worth every last penny.  Three years later, those same sheets and cases are as thick and smooth and soft and warm as the day I first put them on our beds.

Since that first purchase, I’ve been watching the TCS website waiting for the right sale on the right linens at the right time for my budget.  I’m a patient woman.  I waited three years.  Three times over this past week I’ve added items to my cart only to start second-guessing myself and abandon the order.  Today, however, I took the plunge.  I’m confident that I’m going to be as pleased with this order as I was the last.

For the sum total of $111.89 (including nearly $15 in shipping — flannel is heavy, after all), I purchased two twin-sized fitted flannel sheets, two sets of 2 standard-sized pillow cases, one standard pillow sham in a cute penguin print, and one twin-sized matching duvet cover.  The full price of the merchandise alone was $174.00.  All items are in their soft 5oz cotton flannel.

I’m very much hoping — fingers crossed — that the color I chose for The Daughter’s room matches with her existing Eddie Bauer Home cotton flannel duvet cover.  This is from the old, original Eddie Bauer Home collection actually sold by EB — not the new, lower quality stuff sold at J.C. Penney.  Anyway, if everything matches and everyone approves of the colors, this will give The Daughter two full sets of flannel linens — two fitted sheets, two duvet covers, and all necessary matching pillow cases.  The Son will be equally set for sheets — two full sets of flannel linens including pillow cases and duvet covers.

Once everything arrives and the colors and prints are officially approved, I intend to forever rid my linen closet of those dreaded Linens ‘N Things flannels.  ARC, get ready for your next pick-up, please.

I’d rather not have to wait another three years before purchasing a TCS flannel duvet cover for our bed (remember, we do have their flannel fitted sheets and pillow cases) but if that’s what it takes to find the right thing at the right price, so be it.  As I said, I’m a patient woman.

[I was shopping on-line and had all my selections made but called The Company Store’s 800 number to ask about matching the penguin print with a solid color.  The customer service rep was more than friendly and helpful and I ended up actually placing the order on-line.  Everything went well until just before that last “enter key” stroke on the rep’s part when she went into a hard-sell bit about a Buyer’s Edge program.  I politely listened to the plug and then politely declined; again and again I declined.  She nearly pushed me too far but did eventually back off and accept my “no” just before I got really PO’d.  The interruption to our transaction was annoying and offensive.  I’d buy from them again and I’d even call their customer service line again but I’ll know better and make all of my final purchases on-line from now on.]

This afternoon, The Son and I had to drive into town for his appointment with our out-of-network alternative-medicine doctor.  He’s a full PhD medical doctor who practices a form of medicine similar to but quite beyond homeopathy.  I’ve felt we were off track with The Son’s remedies and also wanted to see what we could do to strengthen the boy’s liver.  I feel good about the visit and the resulting prescriptions.

The pharmacy is on the east coast so it was too late to call and pay for the remedies today.  I’ll have to make sure I get that done on Monday morning.  This doctor’s last bill for The Daughter’s appointment in spring ‘07 went awry (thanks to our inconsistent mail carrier) so I decided to just write a check to cover today’s $95.00 fee on the spot.  He didn’t complain ;-)

At this point I was home and had no further plans for the evening beyond dinner and a movie with The Husband and The Son.  Not to be.  Just before dinner, while The Husband napped, the phone rang.  It was The Daughter.  She was at the Emergency Room of the hospital near the gym where her team was practicing.  She had badly jammed or possibly broken the pinky on her right hand.  She insisted that I was not to come down there — all she needed was to know whether or not she should go ahead and have it x-rayed.  Naturally, I said yes.  That is, after all, why we have health insurance.  I should have gone down there.  I knew better than to listen to her.  After all, she’s just a smart aleck 15 year old.  She finally called back.  It wasn’t broken but the tendons badly torn.  She’ll definitely be out for the rest of the season.  She needs to see a hand specialist on Monday and will most likely have to do some physical therapy.  Of course, she is right-handed.  And has a 20- to 25-page research paper due in three weeks.  I’m glad she’s okay.  But I should have gone down there.  I know the reason she resisted was because she was afraid I’d cancel her weekend sleepover plans with the rest of her team.  I wouldn’t have though.  That would have been unfair to The Husband and The Son who do so look forward to these moments of respite from The Princess.

Anyway, to the monetary consequences of tonight’s emergency.  Our insurance card states a $200 ER co-pay — though I’m thoroughly puzzled because the ER employee I spoke with only took my name, address, and phone number.  No insurance info was exchanged.  I guess we’ll get the entire bill, including the charges for the cool splint, the cute ice bag, and the ibuprofen they gave her and we’ll have to submit to our insurance company ourselves.  Yuck.

Then there will be the hand specialist (our co-pay for specialists is $50) and the physical therapy — I have no idea how that works with the insurance.  It’s certainly looking like January is going to be a bit of a strain on our medical bills budget.   I can’t even imagine the stress that an event like this would cause in a family without health insurance.

No responses yet

Jan 10 2008

Day 131: Speech Therapy and Gospel Music

Published by Suburban Wife under health, Daily $$'s

Today was crammed with appointments for me and The Son.  I started out the day with a morning appointment at my doctor’s office for a blood draw for a thyroid test.  Painful and annoying but no copay necessary — the insurance company should pick up the whole tab.

The next appointment was for The Son to see the speech therapist.  He and I had an appointment last week where we met the therapist to discuss The Son’s communication issues/difficulties and evaluate whether or not speech therapy would offer any help.  We’ve subsequently agreed to try weekly 45-minute sessions for the next month and then re-evaluate.  Our insurance will not cover any of this work as his need falls into the “developmental” category and not “rehabilitative.”  Today I paid for both the initial session and today’s session — $140.00.

The third and final appointment was for The Son to visit the dentist.  We all just had our 6-month cleanings but The Son needed to go back to sealings applied to his molars.  This appointment, like the morning’s blood draw, should be covered by our insurance.  If they don’t cover 100%, I’m sure I’ll hear about it soon enough  ;-)

Tonight, after dinner, while The Daughter went off to work on a 20-page compare-and-contrast research paper and her trig homework, The Husband, The Son, and I watched the Tom Hanks remake of The Ladykillers*.  The Husband and I both loved the opening credits gospel song, Come, Let Us Go Back To Godby Sam Cooke & The Soul Stirrers.  Those two $15 iTunes gift cards I received for Christmas have been burning a hole in my pocket so I bought that tune along with Under The Milky Way* by The Church.  Each song cost me $1.06 (including tax) but my out-of-pocket cost was $0.00  :-)

No responses yet

Jan 07 2008

Day 128: Co-pay, Groceries, and Comfort Food

Published by Suburban Wife under health, food, Daily $$'s

The Son and I made our trek across the entire metro area to the hospital’s liver clinic this morning.  Not only did the morning rush-hour commute turn out to be fairly easy (we got there about 20 minutes early), but even better, the doctor assured me that The Son’s elevated bilirubin level is caused by something called Gilbert’s Syndrome and is essentially benign.  Wow, that’s a weight lifted.  The visit cost me a $50 co-pay but parking was free  ;-)

The Son didn’t feel well enough to eat breakfast at 7:30 am this morning but he sure was ready to eat at 11:00 am when we finally left the hospital.  He practically begged me to feed him on the way home.  Being the softy that I am, and so relieved at the diagnosis, I gave in pretty quickly to his request with my only condition being that I didn’t want to feed him junk.  So we stopped at Wild Oats where he wolfed down a slice of pizza and a house-brand soda (so much for the “no junk” position, huh?) — $3.82.  I figured that he’d surely been through as much of an ordeal as I had and, thus, deserved a little comfort food.

And my acts of kindness didn’t stop there — we stopped quickly in Barnes & Noble where we used a gift card to purchase a new Terry Pratchett book, Small Gods – $0.00 out of pocket.  It was my own gift card but the deal is that I buy any gift cards he receives for Christmas that he won’t use — I think the only one he got this year was for Gap.

This afternoon I made a dash to the grocery store (Kroger) in a short-lived but nasty snowstorm.  The storm really was, if not a blizzard, at least really close to it and I had no idea of how long it would last or how much snow it would produce.  So, naturally, I stocked up.  Part of the loading of the cart was in anticipation of a doozy of a blizzard and part of it was avoidance of the inevitable — having to go back out into it in order to get home.

My purchases, less applied coupons, came to $105.21 but my out-of-pocket expense was only $80.21 because I had five Kroger checks for $5 each that I applied to the purchase.  We’d received the checks, and the $1.50 worth of coupons I used, in the mail as part of our rewards/incentives of our Kroger 1-2-3 Rewards credit card that I use for all food purchases.

  • 2 boxes of Kashi Cinnamon Harvest cereal — $3.00/box (saved $0.69/ea plus a $0.75 Kroger coupon)
  • box of Kroger Raisin Bran — $1.89
  • 11 Pria energy bars — $0.89/ea (saved $0.10/ea)
  • 2 ProMax energy bars — $1.59/ea
  • Applegate sliced turkey — $4.99
  • dozen brown Nest Fresh eggs — $4.39
  • loose carrots — $0.80
  • celery — $2.09
  • broccoli crowns — $1.83
  • green onions — $0.89
  • cucumber — $1.29
  • bartlett pears — $2.43
  • Idaho potatoes — $2.18
  • organic Granny Smith apples — $5.58 (the organic apples were exactly the same price as the conventional)
  • 3 bananas — $0.51
  • box of Clementines — $4.99 (saved $2.00)
  • NaturePath toaster pastries — $3.49
  • 2 packages Bounty 8-roll — $7.00/pkg (saved $3.69/pkg)
  • Gladware containers (small round; for school lunches) — $2.50 (saved $0.59)
  • Amy’s cheese pizza snacks — $3.29
  • Amy’s pocketful pizza pocket — $2.29
  • 2 lbs Horizon butter — $3.33/lb (saved $2.16/lb)
  • 1/2 gallon Horizon chocolate milk — $3.29 (saved $0.20)
  • Rudi’s organic Country Morning White bread — $4.59
  • Cascadian Farm blackberry fruit spread — $3.19
  • Cascadian Farm grape fruit spread — $3.19
  • Hillshire Farm smoked ham lunch meat — $3.99
  • 3 bag credits — ($0.15)

My pre-total Kroger reward card savings was $18.46 or 15% of my total.  The two $0.75 coupons were generic coupons issued by Kroger — one for $0.75 off any $2.00 spent on ready-to-eat cereal and the other $0.75 off any $2.00 packaged meat.  The five $5.00 checks are issued as our “cash back” incentives for using my Kroger MasterCard.  The value of the incentives is based on how much I charge at Kroger and how much I charge on the card in general.  Naturally, as with all of our credit card purchases, the bill is paid in full every single month.  Twenty-five bucks to be applied to Kroger purchases just for using their card – that’s a deal I don’t have any trouble accepting.

In a separate transaction but the same trip to Kroger, I picked up my synthroid prescription to the tune of $10.00.

No responses yet

Jan 02 2008

Day 123: Groceries and Alternative Health Care

Published by Suburban Wife under health, hba, food, Daily $$'s

Today was a lousy day.  I slept poorly.  My mom slipped on the ice a few houses away and really got banged up.  The Daughter was in rare teenage form — can they get any more annoying?  I got up early for an appointment but her heat wasn’t working and there was no hot water so I had to go back again this afternoon.  Just another day in paradise the ‘burbs.

As bad as it was, it was a lot better than my neighbor’s day.  Her 53-yo husband died of a massive heart attack three days ago.  There but for the grace of God….

Alternative Care & Supplements — $136.65

I had a Lavage treatment (colonic) — $70.  It’s been a few months since the last one.  It’s the one thing that has helped my debilitating IBS symptoms but I went just a little too long between treatments.  I also bought 2 month’s worth of a product called ColonMax (contains magnesium and other things) and a bottle of probiotic capsules — $66.65 total.

Whole Foods — $46.16

I still hate Whole Foods but I do like their chicken better than that available at Wild Oats.  And with what I’d been through today, the thought of going to more than one grocery store was unbearable.  So I bit the bullet and paid Whole Foods’ jacked-up prices for the items I needed for dinner or within the next 24 hours.

  • 2 full boneless, skinless chicken breasts — $16.66
  • 3 whole chicken legs — $4.96
  • 1/2 gallon Horizon chocolate milk — $3.99
  • 1# Horizon salted butter — $5.49
  • 2 bottles Odwalls Superfood — $2.50/ea (for my mom)
  • organic red cabbage — $2.76
  • red bell pepper — $1.72
  • organic radish bunch — $1.99
  • avocado — $1.99
  • bag credits — ($0.20)

No responses yet

Dec 12 2007

Day 102: Co-pay, Quicksilver, and iTunes

Published by Suburban Wife under health, clothing, food, Daily $$'s

Another busy day spending money.

Doctor — $25.00
Had to take The Son in to the doctor today.  I’m concerned that he looked jaundiced; he ripped his big toenail bad during last night’s game; and I wanted a referral for whomever the Dr. would suggest we see next in our search for a diagnosis for our quirky boy.  The toe will heal, it’ll take a few days for the blood results to come back, and the Dr. suggested we start with a speech therapist since his learning difficulties seem to center around communication — written and verbal.

Wendy’s — $3.86
Being a creature of habit, The Son chose Wendy’s for his dinner tonight after his lesson.  He munched down on two Jr. Bacon Cheeseburgers and a small vanilla frosty.

Vitamin Cottage — $2.59
I’m just as much a creature of habit as The Son ;-)  I snacked on an Odwalla Strawberry C Monster juice while The Son did his thing at orchestra rehearsal.

Marshalls — ($18.36)
I returned the scotty-dog nightgown I’d purchased for The Daughter — I purchased last week and learned a lesson with shortly afterward.

Marshalls — $78.30
I am so very sick of the stupid clicking noise that I have to listen to every time we play my iPod Nano in The Tank.  Neither of our vehicles has an MP3 port.  The Husband’s Subaru doesn’t even have a cassette player.  But The Tank does.  And I got tired of the kids arguing about which station we should listen to so I bought one of those cassette to MP3 adaptors.  It works fine but it clicks annoyingly.  And the clicking seems to be even louder lately.  So tonight I finally broke down and bought one of those charger/holder/broadcast-through-the-radio things ($39.99).  I’ve been told by Apple employees that these radio things don’t sound any better than cassette adaptors and since the adaptors are cheaper, I went that way.  But the clicking noise is just too much to bear any longer.

I also found a cool Quicksilver t-shirt ($12.99) for my nephew whose birthday is later this month; a nice “valet grooming kit” from Nautica in a fancy wooden box ($16.99) that will make a great stocking stuffer for The Son; and a four pack of Christmas-themed gift card pouches ($2.49).

Target — $29.82
Here I picked up a $25 iTunes gift card (for the same nephew mentioned above); a Matchbox car ($0.79) for The Daughter — I’ll explain tomorrow; and a package of 3M cord organizer hooks $3.49.

Costco — $31.66
I picked up:

  • Goldfish crackers I forgot to get yesterday ($6.49);
  • two cartons of 18ct. Nest Fresh eggs ($2.99/ea);
  • and two bags of Lindt milk chocolates ($8.99/ea).

3 responses so far

Dec 06 2007

Day 96: Co-Pays, Admission Fees, and a Target Stop

Published by Suburban Wife under health, Daily $$'s

I spent the entire morning at the doctor’s office and paid a $25.00 co-pay for the privilege.  It had been a couple of years since I had a full physical and I was feeling like it was time to get a full check-up again.  Gotta just love getting those paps, huh?

Then this evening I went to see The Daughter’s first game.  The Husband got in for free because he’s a senior but they socked it to me for a whole $5.00.  Sometimes those seniors get all the breaks. ;-)

The Daughter asked if we could stop by Target on the way home.  Apparently all of the high school students drew the name of another kid in their own class for a Secret Santa exchange.  They give each other a present tomorrow and the following two Fridays — two smaller gifts and one larger one.  The Daughter chose a cute red plastic stemware-type goblet ($1.99) and a bag of assorted tiny-sized candy bars ($2.00) to fill it with.  We also picked up two bottles of sparking grape juice to spice up her coming presentation on the history of wine for her geography class ($2.99/ea).

No responses yet

Nov 19 2007

Day 79: Doctors and Birthday Gifts

Published by Suburban Wife under health, Daily $$'s

Doctor — $25.00
Co-pay at my internist’s office.  I’ve been trying to get my Clarinex prescription refilled for almost two months now — first I didn’t have current insurance cards and then, when the cards finally came, my prescription had expired [see post].  So they gave me make an appointment for this morning, I go in and wait an hour so I can spend 5 minutes with the doctor before they’d renew.  I couldn’t believe they didn’t require a full physical.  It’s been a couple of years since I had a complete physical so I made an appointment for next month.  I might as well get everything check before I go in for surgery, huh?

Aeropostale — $26.95
I finally decided on a pair of PJ’s for my sister; made the purchase on-line tonight — they were 50% off. 

No responses yet

« Prev - Next »