Framed - movie guessing game
- Red_Dragon - May 12, 2025 - 9:42am
Wordle - daily game
- marko86 - May 12, 2025 - 9:41am
Trump
- Red_Dragon - May 12, 2025 - 9:29am
NY Times Strands
- ptooey - May 12, 2025 - 8:48am
Today in History
- islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:47am
Celebrity Face Recognition
- islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:07am
Radio Paradise Comments
- islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:02am
NYTimes Connections
- ptooey - May 12, 2025 - 7:42am
No TuneIn Stream Lately
- rgio - May 12, 2025 - 5:46am
Global Warming
- rgio - May 12, 2025 - 4:39am
New Music
- miamizsun - May 12, 2025 - 3:47am
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum
- winter - May 11, 2025 - 8:41pm
Name My Band
- GeneP59 - May 11, 2025 - 6:47pm
The Dragons' Roost
- triskele - May 11, 2025 - 5:58pm
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos
- Manbird - May 11, 2025 - 5:26pm
Bug Reports & Feature Requests
- epsteel - May 11, 2025 - 12:30pm
Ukraine
- R_P - May 11, 2025 - 11:03am
Things You Thought Today
- GeneP59 - May 11, 2025 - 9:52am
Breaking News
- Steely_D - May 10, 2025 - 8:52pm
May 2025 Photo Theme - Action
- fractalv - May 10, 2025 - 7:54pm
Republican Party
- Red_Dragon - May 10, 2025 - 3:50pm
Strips, cartoons, illustrations
- R_P - May 10, 2025 - 2:16pm
Israel
- R_P - May 10, 2025 - 1:18pm
Real Time with Bill Maher
- R_P - May 10, 2025 - 12:21pm
Artificial Intelligence
- q4Fry - May 10, 2025 - 10:01am
No Rock Mix on Alexa?
- epsteel - May 10, 2025 - 9:45am
Kodi Addon
- DaveInSaoMiguel - May 10, 2025 - 9:19am
What Makes You Laugh?
- Isabeau - May 10, 2025 - 5:53am
Upcoming concerts or shows you can't wait to see
- KurtfromLaQuinta - May 9, 2025 - 9:34pm
Immigration
- R_P - May 9, 2025 - 5:35pm
Basketball
- GeneP59 - May 9, 2025 - 4:58pm
The Obituary Page
- GeneP59 - May 9, 2025 - 4:45pm
Pink Floyd
- miamizsun - May 9, 2025 - 3:52pm
Freedom of speech?
- R_P - May 9, 2025 - 2:19pm
Questions.
- kurtster - May 8, 2025 - 11:56pm
How's the weather?
- GeneP59 - May 8, 2025 - 9:08pm
Pernicious Pious Proclivities Particularized Prodigiously
- R_P - May 8, 2025 - 7:27pm
Save NPR and PBS - SIGN THE PETITION
- R_P - May 8, 2025 - 3:32pm
How about a stream of just the metadata?
- ednazarko - May 8, 2025 - 11:22am
Baseball, anyone?
- Red_Dragon - May 8, 2025 - 9:23am
no-money fun
- islander - May 8, 2025 - 7:55am
UFO's / Aliens blah blah blah: BOO !
- dischuckin - May 8, 2025 - 7:03am
Positive Thoughts and Prayer Requests
- miamizsun - May 8, 2025 - 5:53am
Into The Wild
- Red_Dragon - May 7, 2025 - 7:34pm
Get the Money out of Politics!
- R_P - May 7, 2025 - 5:06pm
What Makes You Sad?
- Antigone - May 7, 2025 - 2:58pm
USA! USA! USA!
- R_P - May 7, 2025 - 2:33pm
The Perfect Government
- Proclivities - May 7, 2025 - 2:05pm
Musky Mythology
- R_P - May 7, 2025 - 10:13am
Living in America
- islander - May 7, 2025 - 9:38am
DQ (as in 'Daily Quote')
- JimTreadwell - May 7, 2025 - 8:08am
Pakistan
- Red_Dragon - May 6, 2025 - 2:21pm
SCOTUS
- R_P - May 6, 2025 - 1:53pm
Canada
- R_P - May 6, 2025 - 11:00am
Solar / Wind / Geothermal / Efficiency Energy
- ColdMiser - May 6, 2025 - 10:00am
Lyrics that strike a chord today...
- ColdMiser - May 6, 2025 - 8:06am
What's your mood today?
- GeneP59 - May 6, 2025 - 6:57am
China
- R_P - May 5, 2025 - 6:01pm
Trump Lies™
- R_P - May 5, 2025 - 5:50pm
Song of the Day
- rgio - May 5, 2025 - 5:33am
Love the Cinco de Mayo celebration!
- miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:53am
how do you feel right now?
- miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:49am
Mixtape Culture Club
- miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:48am
The Bucket List
- Red_Dragon - May 4, 2025 - 1:08pm
260,000 Posts in one thread?
- winter - May 4, 2025 - 9:28am
Australia
- R_P - May 3, 2025 - 11:37pm
M.A.G.A.
- R_P - May 3, 2025 - 6:52pm
Democratic Party
- Isabeau - May 3, 2025 - 5:04pm
Philly
- Proclivities - May 3, 2025 - 6:26am
Race in America
- R_P - May 2, 2025 - 12:01pm
Multi-Room AirPlay using iOS app on Mac M
- downbeat - May 2, 2025 - 8:11am
YouTube: Music-Videos
- black321 - May 1, 2025 - 6:44pm
Museum of Iconic Album Covers
- Proclivities - May 1, 2025 - 12:24pm
Regarding cats
- Isabeau - May 1, 2025 - 12:11pm
When I need a Laugh I ...
- Isabeau - May 1, 2025 - 10:37am
|
|
Index »
Regional/Local »
USA/Canada »
Health Care
|
Page: Previous 1, 2, 3 ... 266, 267, 268, 269 Next |
Alchemist

Location: San Jose, CA Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 31, 2008 - 12:06am |
|
Alt-Ctrl-Tom wrote: I'm with ya. I quit my soul-destroying corporate senior management job 20 months ago, and continued the insurance out of my pocket for 18 months. Then, while going through a budgeting exercise a few months ago to see how I could stretch my dwindling savings further and continue to avoid/postpone returning to a "career" that I had come to despise, I decided to cease being insured.
The primary reason: my monthly insurance cost me more than my mortgage. It was the single largest expense: more than shelter, more than food, more than utilities, more than transportation, more than entertainment (cable tv, DSL internet, music purchases) - more than any two of those combined. The singular ridiculousness of that fact - mostly just in case I get horrifically ill/injured - caused me to cease my insurance coverage. I only wish I had done so sooner.
So, I'm now marginally employed in a part-time job that has the beauty of an absolute lack of management responsibility, corporate bullshit, corrupt impossible and irrational executives, and dishonest self-interested ladder climbing weasels - though unfortunately it has me not making enough to cover the cost of living - and now I'm among the uninsured.
Sure, if something horrific happens, and I'll be wiped out - but if I'd continued to purchase my own health insurance to address that risk, my complete insolvency would've have been a certainty. So, I'm uninsured and fine with it. Fucking crooks.
Though if you're wiped out then you'll have free health care - rather a perverse system! I knew a guy once who was an adrenaline junkie - hang gliding, motorcycle racing, you name it. He made over $100 an hour (20 years ago) consulting but couldn't see any reason to buy health insurance - he knew the hospitals had to treat him if he darkened their doorstep. Which he had occasion to do on more than one occasion. I think of him when someone claims 47 million Americans have no "health care", rather than "health care insurance".
|
|
BlueHeronDruid

Location: Заебани сме луѓе 
|
|
Posted:
Oct 31, 2008 - 12:05am |
|
OlderThanDirt wrote: Just curious. Those started around here about 5 years or so ago, and a lot of people we know had to find new doctors. I've wondered how it is working out for the doctors that went that route. My guess is probably pretty well.
She's struggled. Had her own health issue in the midst of it. Decided to only practice what she likes about medicine. Took a few years, but the practice is growing. By no means a rich woman, nor one wanting or needing to be.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 31, 2008 - 12:01am |
|
BlueHeronDruid wrote:Nope.  Just curious. Those started around here about 5 years or so ago, and a lot of people we know had to find new doctors. I've wondered how it is working out for the doctors that went that route. My guess is probably pretty well.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 11:56pm |
|
NoEnzLefttoSplit wrote: exactly, who needs doctors?  Actually, it was in a small hospital about two blocks from where we lived, L was born in a larger hospital about 12 miles away. Her mom remembers the bill being somewhere around $50. No one we knew had health insurance in those days, so the medical providers were limited to whatever the traffic would bear. Yes, we can cut our insurance costs by choosing higher deductibles and co-payments. That usually makes a lot of sense, but many people want their insurance to pay for every little case of sniffles, every scraped knee, every bottle of medicine. That raises the costs considerably, usually more than the "nickle and dime" medical costs would warrant. Everyone needs to cost it out, choose a level of coverage that suits their needs most economically.
|
|
BlueHeronDruid

Location: Заебани сме луѓе 
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 11:56pm |
|
OlderThanDirt wrote: Does she also charge an annual "subscription" fee? The "boutique practice" I referred to earlier works as you describe, also charges an annual fee of up to $15,000, depending on the level of service desired. Hospital and prescription costs are not included.
Nope.
|
|
NoEnzLefttoSplit

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 11:33pm |
|
OlderThanDirt wrote:
(and that was one of the more expensive vets.)   exactly, who needs doctors?
|
|
NoEnzLefttoSplit

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 11:31pm |
|
Alt-Ctrl-Tom wrote: I'm with ya. I quit my soul-destroying corporate senior management job 20 months ago, and continued the insurance out of my pocket for 18 months. Then, while going through a budgeting exercise a few months ago to see how I could stretch my dwindling savings further and continue to avoid/postpone returning to a "career" that I had come to despise, I decided to cease being insured.
The primary reason: my monthly insurance cost me more than my mortgage. It was the single largest expense: more than shelter, more than food, more than utilities, more than transportation, more than entertainment (cable tv, DSL internet, music purchases) - more than any two of those combined. The singular ridiculousness of that fact - mostly just in case I get horrifically ill/injured - caused me to cease my insurance coverage. I only wish I had done so sooner.
So, I'm now marginally employed in a part-time job that has the beauty of an absolute lack of management responsibility, corporate bullshit, corrupt impossible and irrational executives, and dishonest self-interested ladder climbing weasels - though unfortunately it has me not making enough to cover the cost of living - and now I'm among the uninsured.
Sure, if something horrific happens, and I'll be wiped out - but if I'd continued to purchase my own health insurance to address that risk, my complete insolvency would've have been a certainty. So, I'm uninsured and fine with it. Fucking crooks.
 Is it possible to get health insurance with a high deductible in the States? I have to foot any bills up to a cumulative total of €800 p.a. myself before the insurance kicks in. As a result my premiums are down to €350 a month (still quite high but a lot lower than most). Lately, I've been thinking about raising that deductible. What I like about the idea is that it avoids a huge amount of paperwork for all concerned and that is what saves money.
|
|
Servo

Location: Down on the Farm Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 11:13pm |
|
Alchemist wrote:My wife is a physician, and I hear no end of the ever increasing paperwork and government mandates that interfere with her ability to help patients.
My PCP is leaving private practice for a hospital job. He is citing similar reasons. The main difference is that where you wrote "government mandates", he's saying "insurance company antagonism". The only new government mandates that I can think of from the last decade is HIPAA. In this age of personal information for sale, HIPAA is well worth the extra work. But since deregulation, insurance companies seem to serve nobody but themselves. I want assurances that Medicine is being practiced by skilled, qualified people, and not hacks and poseurs. I want insurance to be an equitable business relationship, not a hostage situation. I want my practitioners to see Medicine as a higher calling, and not as the road to riches. I know that a freshly-minted MD who isn't independently wealthy has a huge tab to pay off. Maybe that's part of the problem too. IMHO education is the single best investment that any person or nation can make. I believe that the society that makes access to knowledge proportional to one's ability to learn, and not one's ability to pay will see a return on investment that far beyond the monetary amount.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 10:31pm |
|
BlueHeronDruid wrote: This is why my physician (and friend) practices without a net. No insurance accepted. Meaning: she can spend time and attention with her patients (who can afford to pay up front) and have only an office assistant. Her practice is growing - but not among Medicare recipients, as you'd imagine. One schedules appts. with her by the quarter-hour or more. Our insurance pays a bit towards this. But her attention is priceless.
Does she also charge an annual "subscription" fee? The "boutique practice" I referred to earlier works as you describe, also charges an annual fee of up to $15,000, depending on the level of service desired. Hospital and prescription costs are not included.
|
|
BlueHeronDruid

Location: Заебани сме луѓе 
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 10:24pm |
|
Alchemist wrote:My wife is a physician, and I hear no end of the ever increasing paperwork and government mandates that interfere with her ability to help patients. She says if she had known back in college how bad things would get she would have chosen a different field (and this is from a tireless patient advocate). She read Hillary's entire health care reform screed and noted not a single clinician (a doctor who sees patients) contributed!
The government has screwed up medicine, and it will only get worse if they seize more control.
This is why my physician (and friend) practices without a net. No insurance accepted. Meaning: she can spend time and attention with her patients (who can afford to pay up front) and have only an office assistant. Her practice is growing - but not among Medicare recipients, as you'd imagine. One schedules appts. with her by the quarter-hour or more. Our insurance pays a bit towards this. But her attention is priceless.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 10:17pm |
|
Alchemist wrote:My wife is a physician, and I hear no end of the ever increasing paperwork and government mandates that interfere with her ability to help patients. She says if she had known back in college how bad things would get she would have chosen a different field (and this is from a tireless patient advocate). She read Hillary's entire health care reform screed and noted not a single clinician (a doctor who sees patients) contributed!
The government has screwed up medicine, and it will only get worse if they seize more control.
It kinda makes you long for the good old days, like 1941. My mom told me my birth cost my parents $14. (and that was one of the more expensive vets.)
|
|
Alchemist

Location: San Jose, CA Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 10:06pm |
|
My wife is a physician, and I hear no end of the ever increasing paperwork and government mandates that interfere with her ability to help patients. She says if she had known back in college how bad things would get she would have chosen a different field (and this is from a tireless patient advocate). She read Hillary's entire health care reform screed and noted not a single clinician (a doctor who sees patients) contributed!
The government has screwed up medicine, and it will only get worse if they seize more control.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 10:00pm |
|
bokey wrote: My dad pays a little under $300 a month for medicare and Aetna as a supplemental, but he was an uber geek for defense contractors during the glory days of retirement funds and has some crazy benefits, the likes of which no American will ever see again.I don't know what the same coverage would cost some guy trying to scrape up the payments out of what is left of his IRA.
That's comparable (times 2) to what we pay, and for what it's worth to us, I guess it's warranted. I think I said this before, so stop me if you've heard it - my last procedure at Stanford was an outpatient thing. Into the OR at 8am, on my way home at 1pm. I still don't know how they justified charging almost $47k for that, but it only cost me something like $213. And because of it, I get to live for a few more years. I guess I shouldn't complain.
|
|
bokey

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 9:49pm |
|
OlderThanDirt wrote: There are many doctors in our area who will not take new Medicare patients, even those with private, supplemental "Medigap" policies. L's doctor left the group with which she had practiced for several years to start her own "boutique" practice. L discovered that finding a new doctor that would take her was not easy, and practically impossible without the supplement. Our cost for the supplement plus Medicare part B is about $650 per month. Makes me wonder what all those MC deductions from our salaries are being used for.
My dad pays a little under $300 a month for medicare and Aetna as a supplemental, but he was an uber geek for defense contractors during the glory days of retirement funds and has some crazy benefits, the likes of which no American will ever see again. I don't know what the same coverage would cost some guy trying to scrape up the payments out of what is left of his IRA.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 9:43pm |
|
ScottFromWyoming wrote:
Wouldn't surprise me.
|
|
ScottFromWyoming

Location: Powell Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 9:39pm |
|
OlderThanDirt wrote: There are many doctors in our area who will not take new Medicare patients, even those with private, supplemental "Medigap" policies. L's doctor left the group with which she had practiced for several years to start her own "boutique" practice. L discovered that finding a new doctor that would take her was not easy, and practically impossible without the supplement. Our cost for the supplement plus Medicare part B is about $650 per month. Makes me wonder what all those MC deductions from our salaries are being used for.
|
|
OlderThanDirt

Location: In Transit Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 9:18pm |
|
bokey wrote: It's abused by doctors and is difficult for the elderly to understand.
It's far from perfect, but is a heck of a lot better then the VA ,IRS or SSA in my experience.
There are many doctors in our area who will not take new Medicare patients, even those with private, supplemental "Medigap" policies. L's doctor left the group with which she had practiced for several years to start her own "boutique" practice. L discovered that finding a new doctor that would take her was not easy, and practically impossible without the supplement. Our cost for the supplement plus Medicare part B is about $650 per month. Makes me wonder what all those MC deductions from our salaries are being used for.
|
|
bokey

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 9:00pm |
|
rosedraws wrote: This is so well said.
My questions:
- Isn't Medicare a totally successful program?
- Is it really not feasible to run a National Health Care that way?
- What are the current costs to the government, brought on by the uninsured?
It's abused by doctors and is difficult for the elderly to understand. It's far from perfect, but is a heck of a lot better then the VA , IRS or SSA in my experience.
|
|
rosedraws

Location: close to the edge Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Oct 30, 2008 - 8:52pm |
|
ScottN wrote: United Health Care, located here in the Minneapolis/St.Paul metro. pays it CEO about $100 Million/year. Yes, I have my zeroes correctly counted. Start there. I am a capitalist; a small business owner. I believe in a free market, generally. I believe the source of the problem here lies in the inherent contradiction of having a vendor whose interest is in minimizing costs and maximizing income and profits be the source of care. No system works everywhere, and the free market has not worked here. We have public schools, libraries, roads, bridges, and on. Health care should be available to all. Gov't can legislate proscriptions and rules to avoid abuse. The idea that a free market, and competition that comes with it, will inevitably benefit the consumer has been completely co-opted in the case of health care....and we are all paying.
This is so well said. My questions: - Isn't Medicare a totally successful program? - Is it really not feasible to run a National Health Care that way? - What are the current costs to the government, brought on by the uninsured?
|
|
cc_rider

Location: Bastrop Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Aug 4, 2008 - 11:28am |
|
sherbeari wrote:
There is very select list of generic prescription drugs that you may be able to fill at Walmart and Target for $4 each. If you have trouble paying, "needy meds" may be able to help. If you live in CA, you can also get a "California Rx card" . Just thought I would throw that out there for you. 
Thanks. My pharmacy checks for generic substitutes already. Of course none of mine are generic yet. I'm not hurting THAT bad yet, it's just one more straw, y'know? c.
|
|
Warning: pg_close(): supplied resource is not a valid PostgreSQL link resource in /var/www/html/rp3.php on line 474
|