• @[email protected]
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    7119 days ago

    and, overall it would cost about half what we’re paying now as a nation for health care.

    • snooggums
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      4618 days ago

      And the outcomes would be better.

      • @halcyoncmdr
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        2718 days ago

        Doctors would actually spend time with patients instead of jumping through hoops for insurance denials. Yes, their staff handles much of it, but there are insurance issues that they end up having to deal with directly, wasting their time.

        • ditty
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          1218 days ago

          Patients could get medical care early on instead of letting medical issues worsen until they become emergencies, which also results in more expensive treatments and worse outcomes

        • @GoofSchmoofer
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          1118 days ago

          At my last physical my doctor when on a short rant about insurance. Told me that the reason that there is so much burnout and a high suicide rate among medical professionals isn’t due to their primary job function, helping people become healthier, it was due to having to deal with insurance companies bullshit.

          • @[email protected]
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            818 days ago

            It must really suck to be a good hearted doctor in that system. When every incentive is to push unnecessary interventions and you must encounter patients that can’t or won’t accept your help because it would ruin them or their family financially.

        • @Chev
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          118 days ago

          Living in a country with universal health care. Doctors have limited time for each patient. Many people complain about it.

          • Doug HollandOPM
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            218 days ago

            There’s no system where doctors have unlimited time for each patient.

        • @trxxruraxvr
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          018 days ago

          Doctors would actually spend time with patients instead of jumping through hoops for insurance denials.

          If you think doctors don’t have to spend time jumping through hoops for insurance companies in countries with socialized healthcare I have some bad news for you.

    • @[email protected]
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      1319 days ago

      And that doesn’t even count the extra that people are paying for private insurance. How much the government spends per capita (of the whole country) on healthcare is double what other first world countries pay even though in the USA it only covers a third of US citizens.

    • @WhatYouNeed
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      518 days ago

      Won’t anyone think of the poor billionaire shareholders??

  • NutWrench
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    6218 days ago

    And insurance companies add nothing to healthcare. They contribute nothing. They streamline nothing. And THEY are the ones who make your health care decisions for you, NOT your doctor.

    Got a back problem that could be easily fixed by surgury? Well screw that, insurance isn’t paying for that. But they’ll be happy to put you on painkillers for the rest of your life so you’ll be stuck in a parasitic relationship where you have pay them forever to afford your pain meds.

    They only exist to transfer wealth from sick, financially vulnerable people to the billionaire class.

    • LustyArgonian
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      18 days ago

      And it’s also bad science and bad philosophy.

      Insurance works on probabilities. They pick the most likely outcome based on old population studies (not current ones - so they lag behind epidemics). This means that if you have a pet alligator, and it bit off your toe, insurance would disbelieve you and would say the accident was most likely from a vehicle or tool, and then wouldn’t treat you for salmonella or other concerns from an alligator bite because that’s unlikely to occur in the general population. Even though that’s literally what happened here.

      So the way they practice medicine is stupid and bad. It should also be illegal, because to practice medicine you’re by law suppose to have a doctor patient relationship. I’ve never met the doctors at my insurance company. So how can they prescribe (including deny) treatment for me?

      Further, I have privacy concerns with insurance companies as well. I don’t want them to have all my medical information. I don’t want them to code my information in a way that benefits their insurance system but isn’t accurate to my actual diagnosis.

      I want to go into a doctor and actually be treated by that fucking doctor.

      Remember when they said socialized healthcare stops you from seeing the doctor you want? Well our current system, in all its justice, let’s me see the doctor I want, pay her, and then I can’t get the treatments she recommends because they aren’t approved by an anonymous third doctor at my insurance I didnt choose and never met. Lol. Fml.

      • @Olgratin_Magmatoe
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        18 days ago

        I don’t want them to code my information in a way that benefits their insurance system but isn’t accurate to my actual diagnosis.

        My fiancee has been dealing with this for like 2 years. She got a relatively simple bloodwork panel done, and the NP who ordered it fucked up the code/paperwork for it by labeling it as something more expensive than it actually was, which resulted in the insurance not covering it, which resulted in a $1k bill for what should have been a $20 test.

        The bill was sent to collections, and they were told that the bill was erroneous because the NP fucked up the paperwork. They’re still calling 2 years later. They don’t seem to get the hint that my fiancee is disabled, has no wages, and no way to pay it*, and therefore they ain’t getting shit.

        * Fortunately it is within my means to pay for it for her, but she has no wages for them to garnish, they can’t mess with her credit score over it, and so they have no pathway to do any harm for failure to pay. So fuck em.

        • LustyArgonian
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          918 days ago

          I have random genetic diagnoses on my chart because my doctor lied to my insurance to get a test approved. I can’t rat her out because I did really need the test but yeah it’s a nightmare

    • @[email protected]
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      1918 days ago

      The succinct way to describe it is that every dollar earned in profit by a health insurance company is a dollar that was spent on health care for which no healthcare was delivered. Their profits are literally just inefficiency in the system, and they’re directly incentivized to maximize that inefficiency.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      618 days ago

      And insurance companies add nothing to healthcare. They contribute nothing.

      They give me a pile of paperwork and an illusion of choice. What more could I ask for?

    • @IMongoose
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      418 days ago

      I’m currently fighting a bill because insurance doesn’t like who gave the diagnosis. The diagnosis isn’t wrong, it’s actively being treated, they just think the wrong doctor gave it. Dealing with insurance is a huge pain in the ass for no reason except to enrich the insurance companies. They add no value to society.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 days ago

      This is exactly why Obamacare is absolute trash. It forces you to buy into a failed system or pay monthly penalties. For a healthy individual, it’s cheaper to pay put of pocket when necessary, than monthly dues in addition to your “deductable”.

  • EleventhHour
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    19 days ago

    I showed this to my mom, and her reply was “but that socialism!” And promptly hung up on me.

    Some people are so stupid and stubborn that they would rather be bilked by conmen than to actually get the care they need, affordably.

    That’s kind of bullshit we’re dealing with.

    • @[email protected]
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      4218 days ago

      Don’t try to explain public roads, bridges, dams, water & sewerage, police, fire brigades or the military to her… she might just have an aneurysm.

      • EleventhHour
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        2318 days ago

        She’s rich, so all of that will never affect her. But she sure as shit would rather I die and every other one of “the poors” than to pay even one penny more in taxes.

    • @halcyoncmdr
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      1618 days ago

      Insurance IS socialism. By definition. The only difference is who holds the money from the group to pay out claims. In one, it’s the government which has an incentive to keep costs low across the board. The other it is a private company trying to make as much profit as possible.

      • @Buddahriffic
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        518 days ago

        The bullshit part is how many people think socialism is wrong or evil. It’s just an approach where the people work together to provide a service where the focus is the service itself rather than anyone getting rich from the service.

    • @Chev
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      218 days ago

      Why is socialism something bad for her?

      • EleventhHour
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        18 days ago

        It’s not. She just thinks it is because she’s been told it’s a dirty word.

  • @PunnyName
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    4819 days ago

    US healthcare is extortion

  • @GoofSchmoofer
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    Think of the knock off effects of universal health care beyond paying less.

    you would not be tied to a shitty job anymore - your ability to quit and move to another company becomes easier

    You could quit your job and start your own company since now you don’t have to worry about medical bankruptcy

    Or maybe you live a minimal enough of a life that you could quit your job that you have only because of the health insurance and go do something that is fulfilling to you?

    • @neomachino
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      618 days ago

      A huge reason that I took the job I have now is because they let me start my health insurance plan asap. It was supposed to be after 3 months but I just asked nice and they didn’t hesitate to agree even without my whole spcheil. I have a wife and a son, at the time my wife was still going through some post pregnancy health issues and my son was going through some stuff that required regular visits. I turned down some cushy jobs solely because they wanted me to wait 3-6 months to be insured, which I get from a business perspective, but what the actual fuck? It took me a while to switch jobs for that reason alone. I guess it’s a good indicator of a company that has common sense/common decency.

      • @bitchkat
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        318 days ago

        I’ve had jobs where you have to wait for 401k but Healthcare has always been covered on day 1.

        • @chiliedogg
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          218 days ago

          Last several I’ve jobs had it kick in on the first business day of the next month, and end on the first business day of the month after leaving, so i think it was more of a “this is how our provider has us add and remove people” thing.

        • @neomachino
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          117 days ago

          Wait is that normal? The last 3 jobs I’ve had had a waiting period of at least a month.

          • @bitchkat
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            117 days ago

            Has been been for me.

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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        118 days ago

        Why the waiting time? What’s the risk on their part if they insure you immediately?

        • @neomachino
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          117 days ago

          I always assumed it had to with whatever cost comes with adding someone to the insurance plan + the cost they’re paying. They want to make sure the person is going to stick around. But to me that just seems like the cost of doing business.

    • LustyArgonian
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      18 days ago

      We would be able to track bad products that give us cancer more easily, could sue companies in a class action easier. As it is, you cant sue for cancer you never had diagnosed because you couldnt afford to go in. And also with lead contamination and other heavy metals, and a million other toxins.

    • @kreskin
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      918 days ago

      Really USA, how does anyone pretend this is OK?

      We pretend a LOT of things are OK.

      • School shootings comes to mind.
      • laws around what women can do with their own bodies.
      • Sacrifice of the environment for industry, all in the name of “jobs”.
      • Starvation.
      • Politicians and presidents doing obviously illegal stuff and citizens unable to do anything about it.
      • American military killing with abandon all over the world.
      • Police brutality and systematic violations of our rights, with little to no accountability.
      • Our standards for clean food being less than everyone elses.
      • Religious supremacy being tolerated, even encouraged. (Fuck your moments of silence, fuck your thoughts and prayers, fuck your pledges of allegience too while we’re at it)
      • controlled media.
      • Book banning.
      • the “war” on drugs when other methods would have been much more effective.
      • whistleblower protections dismantled.
      • violence against protesters, and the existence of “protest zones” which disallows protests entirely in most areas.
      • continual threats of violence and domestic terrorism by the political right, never with any accountability.
      • oppression of anyone who says they are anti-fascist (antifa).
      • a political system complteely captured by bribery and foreign interests, with ~1% correlation to what citizens want. There is no representation in “representitive democracy” here. Its all a big joke. We’re barely even a “republic” anymore.

      And its not all republicans doing it-- although much more them than the dems-- although the dems are sliding really far rightward pretty quickly and its hard to see how it ever will be allowed to go back left.

    • @bmdhacks
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      618 days ago

      Its not OK and we need to nationalize healthcare now. But much of that above graph is also associated with the obesity epedemic and the nutritional collapse (or caloric inflation) of the western diet. Government definitely has a role in that, but its much trickier than obliterating the medical insurance industry (which of course is also tricky).

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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        518 days ago

        All but one Western countries are in those normal countries to the left of the graph.

      • @[email protected]
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        318 days ago

        Quick Google suggests healthcare costs for obese people are <50% higher than non-obese and the US has 15-30% more obesity than these countries. So maybe 15% at most of the 100% higher cost per capita of healthcare is obesity related. The killer for me for that hypothesis is that within the set of countries with normal healthcare costs, there’s huge variation in obesity (10% in France to 30%in ireland) with limited variation in cost.

        Maybe the life expectancy side does have more to do with obesity?

  • @Rolando
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    3619 days ago

    When I was in grad school, I went to a conference in Portugal. One of the other American grad students slipped on a paving stone and bust his leg. It wasn’t that bad, but he was freaking out because he had no idea how European insurance worked and he was afraid he’d be in serious debt. Everyone at the hospital thought that was hilarious. Why would getting hurt put you in debt? They patched him up for no charge. In theory he could have gone to some office and made a modest payment, but nobody was going to actually make him do that.

  • @AlternatePersonMan
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    3218 days ago

    It’s got to end soon, or we’re well screwed.

    My insurance payment + my jobs contribution (can’t say whether or not they lie on the form about their share) is over a thousand per month. And I still have co-pays and shit that isn’t covered. I’ve had a couple of X-rays and and a sling this year. I’m probably out another $2k on top of my insurance. It would be much cheaper for me to pay out of pocket and save the difference for a rainy day.

    Fuck the entire insurance industry.

    • @[email protected]
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      1118 days ago

      And the concept of tying it to employment is not only idiotic and nonsensical, but actually pretty devious.

  • @MilitantAtheist
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    1718 days ago

    I live in Sweden, had a surgery for a back problem. From first consultation to surgery 5 weeks. Total cost: $50, that includes surgery, prescribed meds, food while admitted.

    • @[email protected]
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      418 days ago

      May I ask what the money paid for exactly? Here in Spain it’s only meds that we would pay for (and not even if you’re low income and entitled to government money), everything else is 100 % free

  • LustyArgonian
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    18 days ago

    The US Healthcare system is meant to police disability, because we live in a giant work camp. That’s its whole function.

  • @[email protected]
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    Accurate portrayal of Joe Lieberman in that pic. Didn’t feel bad when that dude died. The cherry on top would have been if he’d had tons of medical debt when he went, but I’m sure he still had million in the bank from all that lobby loot.

  • Hegar
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    819 days ago

    No copays is not necessarily true.

    Back in Australia it was a flat $35 for a PCP visit. A $35 office visit copay with 100% coverage and no deductible is functionally the same.

    Our healthcare here in the US is a brutal costly joke. It instantly disproves any claims that our leaders make to care about the welfare of US citizens.

    • emmanuel_car
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      618 days ago

      TL;DR: AU isn’t a good model to base change off. Expensive and scammy.

      Not sure what a PCP is, but before I left AU earlier this year, my GP visits were ~AU$100 with a $40 rebate. Private healthcare cannot cover the $60 gap by law, along with a host of other specialists and scans. It felt like a massive scam to have private health. Yes there are free clinics you can go to (“Bulk Billing”), but in my experience because they were always overworked and understaffed, the standard of care wasn’t as good. Plus it was hard to see the same doctor regularly, so you waste more of everyone’s time going over your medical history.

      Compare that to Germany, I decided to go with public health here, which comes directly out of my paycheque. It’s expensive, but I don’t see that money and I can go to basically any (English speaking) doctor here, pay nothing for the appointment, and prescriptions are 5 or 10€ (only had one so far, can’t remember the exact cost). Standard of care feels much more in line with the private care of AU. I know there are some scans and blood tests I may need to pay for, but nothing feels scammy so far.

    • tiredofsametab
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      118 days ago

      Japan is also 30% due at time of service, though prices are nothing like the US (that 30% also drops in retirement age). People can and often do get some kind of private insurance, usually bundled with their life insurance, to cover certain life-altering events. I imagine there’s some sort of private health insurance like US folks would think of, but I don’t know anyone who carries it. One can do certain procedures off insurance and pay (still cheaper than US prices) here as well if they want.

  • @UncleGrandPa
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    618 days ago

    In most of the world it was decide that being healthy was a human right

    Only in America has it been declared a luxury.

    If you can’t afford it, you shouldn’t have it

  • @schema
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    518 days ago

    This could probably be paid in full by lowering military budget by a tiny fraction.

    • @AngryCommieKender
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      18 days ago

      We would save about 45% of what we pay now. We could increase the military budget. Universal healthcare literally pays for itself.

      • @[email protected]
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        318 days ago

        The billionaires in the health industry don’t see it that way and guess who gets to legally bribe our politicians to keep it that way.