California Author Uses Dark Humor — And a Bear — To Highlight Flawed Health System

Published on January 31, 2023

In the world of graphic medicine, author Kathleen Founds uses anthropomorphic animals to depict the struggles of navigating America’s dysfunctional health system. Her novel, “Bipolar Bear and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Health Insurance,” follows Theodore, an angst-ridden bear with manic-depressive illness, as he interacts with a corrupt insurance company. The emerging genre of graphic medicine sheds light on health inequities in an ironic and funny way. The book not only addresses the complexities of the labyrinthine health insurance system but also highlights the impact of high costs and hidden fees that prevent Americans from accessing medical care. Founds draws inspiration from her own experience with mental illness, turning struggles into darkly humorous fables. Graphic medicine offers a unique platform to explore personal stories and promote dialogue about health care delivery and well-being. By using humor as a powerful weapon against despair, Founds adds a creative twist to the genre, employing characters like overeducated owls and bomb-sniffing dogs suffering from PTSD. Inspired by real-life experiences, these narratives encourage readers to explore the larger context of health inequities and advocate for change.

Mother-to-be Kathleen Founds made a routine doctor’s appointment to discuss the risks of antidepressants in pregnancy. After the visit, Founds, who relies on medication to quell the manic highs and despondent lows of bipolar disorder, learned the physician was out of network.

She received a surprise bill for $650, launching her into a maze of claim forms and hours on the phone being routed from one office to the next to dispute the charges — insurance red tape that so many Americans have encountered. A decade later, Founds captured her experience in a graphic novel, “Bipolar Bear and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Health Insurance,” a richly illustrated, darkly funny fable for adults about the country’s dysfunctional health system.

The book, published in November, follows Theodore, an intelligent but angst-ridden bear, on his quest for treatment for his own manic-depressive illness. But first he must navigate the demands of the WeCare company, a shady outfit run by cigar-smoking felines who profit unfairly from a lopsided economy and a corrupt justice system, among other things. His fellow outcasts include such characters as an overeducated owl drowning in student debt and a bomb-sniffing puppy suffering from PTSD.

America is internationally known for high-quality care, for those who can afford it. A new Gallup Poll shows that a record-high proportion of Americans — 38% — postponed medical care because of high costs in 2022. Federal and state “no surprise” laws of the past few years seek to protect consumers from unexpected medical bills. But they don’t prevent expenses like high deductibles or fees hidden in the fine print of their insurance policies.

“Bipolar Bear” joins other recent works to shine a light on health inequities — part of the emerging genre of graphic medicine. It includes seminal illness narratives such as “Mom’s Cancer” by Brian Fies and nurse MK Czerwiek’s “Taking Turns: Stories from the HIV/AIDS Care Unit 371” as well as “Rx,” Rachel Lindsay’s memoirs about taking a job at a pharmaceutical company to secure insurance to cover treatment for bipolar disorder.

Descended from the underground comics of the 1960s, graphic medicine has grown into a new field of scholarship on the medium’s role in the study and delivery of health care, said Ian Williams, the Welsh physician who coined the term back in 2007. “It’s ideal for exploring subjects having to do with one’s life and well-being in an ironic and funny way,” he said.

As Founds puts it, humor is a powerful weapon against despair.

The 40-year-old mother of two teaches English at a community college in Santa Cruz County on California’s central coast. She has never taken an art class and didn’t set out to write a graphic novel. The book began as a doodle in the margins of her notebook while studying for a master’s degree in fiction writing at Syracuse University in New York. Her 2014 novel in short stories, “When Mystical Creatures Attack,” is about a teacher who suffers a nervous breakdown and communicates with her students from a psychiatric hospital.

KHN contributing reporter Rachel Scheier spoke to Founds about bringing Theodore to life. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: How did you come to write a book about a bear with bipolar disorder?

I’d been making children’s books for my little brother. They were all about angst-ridden animals: a lonely giant squid, a possum with social anxiety disorder who falls asleep whenever he’s in an awkward situation, a burro who wants to be a unicorn. My goal was to write a novel. But whenever I was too depressed to string a sentence together, I’d draw bears. Then I realized that anyone dealing with a mental health issue in this country is going to have to deal with the labyrinth of health insurance. And I thought it would be fun to depict it as an actual labyrinth with trapdoors and man-eating flowers. Once I went in that direction, it was no longer a children’s book.

Q: Was the book based on your own experience with mental illness?

Yes. I had my first major depressive episode at the end of high school, but I didn’t seek out professional help. I just sort of muddled through it. Then, when I was a sophomore at Stanford, I had my first manic episode. I had a series of realizations about the nature of the universe, and I didn’t sleep or eat very much. Then, in graduate school, I went to a clinic because I was going through a depression, and the psychiatrist asked me questions like “Was there ever a time when you had a lot of energy and didn’t feel a need to sleep?” And I said, “Oh, sure, but that was a spiritual awakening.” So, I had to reframe my life story a bit after that.

Q: But religion still has a role in your life?

I’m a Quaker. It’s something I came to through my interest in nonviolent social change. When I am severely depressed, I feel like life has no purpose. So, following a code that says life does have meaning, that we are all connected by a force of love that undergirds the universe, is something that has helped me a lot.

Q: Why animals?

People are hard to draw! Cartoon animals are a lot easier. I wasn’t interested in art in school — actually, when I started drawing was during that first manic episode. I do not recommend writing a 200-page graphic novel with no artistic training. I mean, it took 13 years, but I did finish it.

Q: Why did it take so long?

I worked on it off and on while I was writing essays and working on the beginnings of several other novels. When I finally finished it, I was so excited. I was ready to see it on bookshelves within a year. I sent it to my agent, and she wrote me a very nice email which said, “I love this. It’s very creative. But there’s no way I can sell it.” Most graphic novels for grownups are memoir — there wasn’t a clear genre. Then another agent I reached out to said, “I can’t take this on, but you should try Graphic Mundi, which had published several novels in the field of graphic medicine.”

Q: What made you want to write about health insurance?

Our system is actually killing people. We have a high suicide rate in this country, and people are not able to access mental health care. And then, when they do get help, it’s not necessarily the psychiatrist who determines the course of care; it’s the insurance company. If you go into a room of 10 Americans, five can tell you a health insurance nightmare story.

But I also wanted to explore what it means to develop a healthy lifestyle and grow a strong community and go through all this growth and healing that Bipolar Bear goes through in the story, only to have the depression come back again. What is the meaning of my journey if I find myself right back where I was before? Ultimately, there’s no answer to that question, but there is a right thing to do, which is to ask for help. We’re all saved by each other.

This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.
KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.USE OUR CONTENTThis story can be republished for free (details).

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