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| quote: | Originally posted by Shakka
How much of that 10K are you paying out because so many other people couldn't pay their bills and leave you subsidizing them through your own high bills? |
I paid the 100 ER copay (and 3 bucks for a few weeks worth of percocets). Thank god for my company insurance.
EDIT: If i didn't have insurance there would have been little chance i would have went to the ER, even though i had external manifestations of internal bleeding (if you catch my drift). Likely, I would have waited until either (i) the pain was intense (which it never was), or (ii) I became overly tired suggesting a loss of too much blood. Neither happened, but the prudent move is to go to the doctor because, apparently, my injury could have been life threatening (so said the harvard educated ER physician - although i think doctors tend to be a bit dramatic sometimes).
| quote: | Originally posted by Shakka
Also, I agree about people not being able to afford cancer treatment (hell, probably only a handful of people could actually absorb such a cost burden), however socializing/nationalizing/whatever you want to call doing it to healthcare will not automatically make such treatment accessible to everyone. Rather it will mean the government rations out such treatments to those deemed most likely to benefit from it while turning a cold shoulder to those that it determines will not benefit enough from the treatment to justify it. I don't know about you, but I don't want my government being the determinor of what my life is worth, let alone making me wait for weeks or months to see a physician and receive proper treatment. |
instead of having the government do that, we currently have private companies doing it. Our system implicitly provides that the lives of people with high paying jobs are worth more than people with low paying jobs. Shit, despite the popular believe that government employees have good health care benefits, the reality is that belief is a load of shit. There are so many restrictions on the doctors they can see and the procedures for which they are approved. Most of those people get their insurance under HMO plans, which suck gigantic balls (from experience under my mother's HMO when i was a kid). My insurance plan from a giant corporate employer provides almost no restrictions to access any doctor for almost any purpose (i have to pay a little bit extra for this plan - about 400 more a year over the 600 base cost). We won't even discuss the people who can't get health insurance because their employer doesn't offer a plan, or the plan their employer offers is woefully inadequate (e.g., the > 1 million walmart associates).
Last edited by jerZ07002 on Apr-20-2009 at 16:10
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