I wonder how many are on BP meds. Some, such as hydrochlorothiazide, can cause gout after being taken fairly long-term. BTDTGTTS.
Eating more carefully and exercising - i.e. losing weight - enabled me to go off the hydrochlorothiazide.
Edit: Since 1985 it's not impossible that I and my immediate family have cost my medical insurance plans over $200K, not counting stuff like pre-natal care & childbirth or physicals. Not a dime of that was paid by government programs; it was all by medical insurance plans that were part of my compensation for which I worked. "If I can, you can," is a bit simplistic, and definitely shopworn, but there is a lot of validity to it.
Many people in the US are government-dependent by choice (and not just a conscious choice to be a sponge or fraudster): deciding to screw around in school instead of learning; stupid "career" choices (really, for what profession does a BA in Philosophy or History prepare you?); short-sighted indulgence (e.g. having sex when you aren't prepared to undertake the responsibility of parenting - and I don't mean $$ only! - a child; buying all the latest "music" and electronic toys - especially on credit - instead of living within your means and saving. Recognizing and taking responsibility for past stupidity won't fix present problems, but denying past stupidity is an obstacle to doing what it will take to fix those problems!