"
markdf (imported) wrote: Tue Jan 08, 2008 7:12 pm
A lot of the people posting here are 30 or 40, well-established in their careers, and in a position where they can no longer even comprehend the noti[quote="XtheUndead (i
Riven (imported) wrote: Wed Jan 09, 2008 3:07 am
mported)" time=1199792820]
on of not having $2000 in di
sposable income.
"
I was carried thr
[/quote]
ough a period when I didn't have $200 let alone $2000.
I didn't say that it's impossible to find an affordable counsellor. But they're rare. If you find a psychologist that will lower their rate below $40 (which is still too high for a lot of people with serious psych problems), you're quite lucky.
Drugs are the same way. A lot of psychotropic drugs -- particularly the ones whose side-effects aren't horrible -- are very expensive. Some people are lucky enough to get treated at a clinic where the GP or psychiatrist will give low-income patients the sampler packs that they receive from drug companies. That's how I got my drugs before British Columbia began the Fair Pharmacare program. But most people who can't afford a medication are just SOL; I was fortunate. It wouldn't be fair of me to suggest to someone that they can get $300/mo worth of norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors for free from their neighborhood clinic.