• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I’m glad she found a solution that worked for her.

    However, and you may say I’m a dreamer, I hope we get to to a world where people do not have to resort to sex work to save their own lives.

    • TheEmpireStrikesDak
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      71 year ago

      Sex work? Any work at all. That a story where someone raises enough money to pay for life saving treatment is seen as a feel-good story is really sad.

      Meanwhile, even in our crumbling NHS, I don’t have to worry about going into debt to pay for cancer treatment.

      • @camelCaseGuy
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        71 year ago

        I live in Spain, and in spite of paying a shitton of money in taxes, I can’t fathom changing that for a system like the US. Man, my SO is in dialysis, the amount of money we would need to spend for something like this in the US it would put us on the street right away.

    • @kromem
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      1 year ago

      Hypatia, a female philosopher in Alexandria, upset some Christians who mobbed up and carved out her eyes with seashells.

      Even if it’s a shitty timeline, there’s certainly been worse periods along that timeline to have been in.

  • @[email protected]
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    321 year ago

    What is happening in north America? North of the border you also have people asking to stay in prison because they have no hope of getting somewhere to live, and now this?

      • @Madison420
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        11 year ago

        Yeah. Simply put both bi partisan attempts to keep people stupid and distracted worked really well with us post WW2.

    • Semperverus
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      11 year ago

      Did they offer you a free M.A.I.D. too?

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        No, mine was before MAID came in to effect I think, and not terminal if they cured it. I do know someone who had terminal situation and they took the MAID option to avoid 6 weeks of pain and degradation

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      It would probably be cheaper for me to drive up to White Rock or Abbotsford BC then go see a doctor in Seattle even with my insurance. But when you get sick it’s kind of hard to shop around.

  • Iron Lynx
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    1 year ago

    Meanwhile, a Brit would post a picture of the NHS logo, set to the background tune of Rule Britannia

  • @DrCake
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    1 year ago

    Maybe the meme community isn’t the best place to ask but would cancer treatment not be covered by your health insurance in the US?

    I keep seeing posts that people with long-term health issues have to pay for it themselves and that just feels like something you’d have the insurance for.

    • @[email protected]
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      271 year ago

      I have a very, very limited understanding of the subject, so take this with a lethal dose of salt, but I’m under the impression that the US healthcare system is an absolute minefield, and not everyone has equal access to it, even via insurance, in the ways you might otherwise typically expect.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 year ago

        That is correct. Let’s say me and my dad get cancer. We both have health insurance provided by our employers.

        Dad: Initial deductible (cost before insurance kicks in): $10,000

        Max out of pocket (in network): $20,000

        They cover initial treatment but the anesthesiologist is “out of network.” That charge goes to the separate deductible for out of network costs, dad pays $30k total, of a $500k “sticker price.”

        Me: Deductible: $4,200 Max out of pocket: $4,200

        Initial treatment is covered by insurance, no provider listed as out of network. Total cost to me: $4,200 out of a $500k bill.

        Every insurance is different, each hospital will do different things to get extra money, and you have no way of knowing what 1 piece of the treatment is out of network until after you’ve already had the treatment. Our system sucks

    • @MufinMcFlufin
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      101 year ago

      Not everyone in the US has health insurance or (more importantly) the same quality of health insurance. Insurers here have the final say on whether they’ll cover certain treatments, medicines, procedures, doctors, practices, etc. as well as how much they’ll cover, how much they’ll charge the patient, or how much any use of the insurance will affect the price of said insurance going forward. Insurance often prefers you work with doctors, practices, facilities, etc. within their own list of approved doctors, practices, etc. and going outside of that list for any reason may cause you to have to pay for any goods or services out of pocket. Then lastly you have to remember that both health insurance as well as hospitals and clinics are generally for profit businesses trying to maximize profit and minimize costs.

      And the little cherry on top of the whole situation is we’re in a political landscape where even having universal access to healthcare is labeled as communist/socialist by many in a derogatory way.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      Hard to hold down a job to pay for rent/mortgage, car payments, food, utilities, etc. While battling cancer. Your medical expenses may be covered to a small extent but you don’t live for free when you are sick.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 year ago

        Hold on a minute. Does this mean health insurance in the States is linked to employment? So you lose your job, you lose your health insurance?

        That’s rather rude, and frankly, uncivilised.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          For the most part Americans get their health insurance from their job (or spouse’s job). Typically you’ll get a few different options for plans to choose from. How expensive those plans are, and what they cover will depend on what insurance company your employer has selected.

          You can select your own health insurance, and some people do for various reasons (like being self employed) but that tends to be SIGNIFICANTLY more expensive.

          Additionally, even when you have insurance, there’s always another fee or copay that you have to pay. If you have a somewhat complicated medication condition doctor visits, tests, procedures and medication can all add up to a lot, even with good insurance.

          There’s dozens of long videos detailing how it all works, because the whole system is pretty byzantine.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            I have a friend with cancer that just lost his insurance since he’s not old enough for Medicare and makes too much money from his retirement benefits (it’s barely enough to pays his mortgage and eat here in Seattle). He’s going try to wait 6 months until he can get Medicare but I don’t think he will make it and he’s only worried about losing his house. I think it will cost around 60K to get back on his meds and keep going to his weekly medical appointment (probably way more) for the next 6 months. He was so sick before he started going to the doctor and seemed to be responding really well to treatment. Was going to try do a Gofundme.com me page for him. It’s so derepressing. damn just thought about if he’s going to even afford his pain meds…I think he has that covered but yeah it really sucks. Medicare will even take your home if you spend past a certain life time maximum while your dying. Most people don’t really know just how bad it is until you have to deal with it and it’s purposely super confusing and the the Insurance company’s make insane amounts of money and so they spend a lot of money to keep it this way. Personally, I’m looking at trying to move to an other country that has even a basic medical system that is affordable just so I’m not so discouraged from even going to the doctor because it’s so expense even with insurance.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      The powers that be decided to tie good health insurance to your job, which as a catch 22 is incredibly hard to keep if you have something serious that you would actually need the insurance for like cancer.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      A lot of americans dont have insurances and those that do often have bad insurance where they have to cover most of the expenses themselves.

  • @Chev
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    131 year ago

    Instead one could also move to a country with universal health care. If you do this when you are still healthy, you could prevent this with regular check ups. Of course sometimes can be missed something and waiting times can be quiet long but that is not exclusive to universal healthcare.

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      Many of those countries won’t accept “I need to live here for the free health care” on a citizenship application. They expect you to bring something to the table, some kind of skill for which they have a need.

      • @Chev
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        11 year ago

        You don’t need the citizenship to live somewhere forever. At least not in Austria. And you neither need something to bring to the table. It’s enough if you want to live there.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    I may be having a degenerate moment, but could someone please explain the Walter white angle here? It’s gone right over my puny smoothbrain