Surviving, Thriving: Amity’s Story

By: Amity Foster

When I was 22 years old, I was diagnosed with leukemia. I was fresh out of college. I did not have a job. I did not have healthcare.

I was in that zone of not really being sure what I was going to do with my life, feeling stressed, but also feeling kind of invincible. Then I got my diagnosis over the phone: “You have acute promyelocytic leukemia. You are at extremely high risk for getting very sick, you need to come to the hospital now.”

I can absolutely tell you this: I survived because I was taken care of. And that includes the cost.

There were no questions about insurance, healthcare plans, or cost. It was very fast. I got the call on a Saturday and I was at United on Monday. I remember feeling confused, scared, and overwhelmed. But I don’t remember being worried about how I was going to pay for everything. I remember a hospital staffer, maybe she was a social worker, coming to talk to me. She helped me fill out a ton of forms.

And that was it.

No bills, ever.

There were points in my treatment where I almost died. The fear and loneliness of having cancer is awful enough. I can’t even process what that feels like topped with the stress of paying thousands of dollars of medical bills. Later I found out that my time in the hospital, with all the treatments, was more than $100,000.

I can absolutely tell you this: I survived because I was taken care of. And that includes the cost.

I survived, and now I am thriving. Everyone in Minnesota should have that same right. Expand MinnesotaCare.

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We all have a health care story, because health care is a basic, fundamental need. This is part of a weekly series during Minnesota’s legislative session where we share the health care stories of Minnesotans like you. Share your story here.