Does Your Income Affect Your Health?
Our level of
income directly affects our health. Did
you know that? How much money you make
helps to determine how healthy you will be.
Doesn’t really make sense, if you don’t’ look at the broader
picture. In the big picture, however,
here is the view: you are educated, have a degree, and are exposed to tons of
information during your college years.
You are exposed to health classes, athletes, and all sorts of
professional people who already understand the importance of health in your
life.
You
graduate college, your income levels are quite nice, and you have the
opportunity to purchase magazines, health and fitness of course. Can you see how your education and
intelligence levels affect your health now?
This is a generalization that has proven itself time and again. All you have to do is observe your developed
countries versus the third world, underdeveloped countries. Standard of living and health are directly
related. Past the consideration of intelligence development, our level of
education and income plays a tremendous role in our ability to educate
ourselves about the health options we should exercise. Affordable fitness
centers are one of the nicer privileges of higher income. Most fitness centers provide their customers
with individualized weight and exercise programs that further advance the
customer’s health.
Having
higher income levels provides us with access to fitness centers, better choices
for our eating patterns, and better medical care.
It
is in the final section of the previous sentence that there is found a real
benefit of higher income, in direct relation to our health. Higher levels of education and income almost
always have access to better medical care. The availability of better care, whether
it is through better company paid insurance, life in a metropolitan area versus
rural area, or simply being able to afford a more specialized doctor when the
situation warrants.
In most cases, higher income families live in more populated areas, with access to better doctors and larger medical facilities. Often their employers have nurses or doctors that are retained, if not on staff, as emergencies warrant.
It
is sad indeed, that many of the people who are in the greatest need are not
able to get that need met. Socialized
medicine as been studied as a possible solution to our some of our health
problems, but when studied in detail, socialized medicine really does not improve
the level of health for the population, it just makes medical care free and
generally of less quality.
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