• Sabre363@sh.itjust.works
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    13 days ago

    Because most of us can’t afford to get ANY care and our doctors never listen, or when they do listen, they aren’t allowed to provide care unless it makes someone a bunch of money. They make this all a game with our literal lives as the pawns.

    • tmyakal@lemm.ee
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      13 days ago

      I haven’t been to a doctor in over twenty years now. For most of that time, either I didn’t have insurance or my insurance was so laughably bad and my wages so low that I couldn’t afford to use it. Now I’ve got a decent job and decent insurance, but the nearest doctor accepting patients is over 50 miles away.

      Guess all I can do is cross my fingers and hope whatever kills me does it quick.

    • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      Also because our health is already predisposed to being garbage compared to other countries thanks to our obesity crisis. Of course while that should be treated at the source like the UK is doing by e.g. not allowing junk food companies to advertize directly to kids, the healthcare system has a huge role to play in that too.

      Need physical therapy? Get fucked. Can’t exercise because of a chronic, unhealed injury? Fucked. Mental health disorder keeping you from being active and eating well? Mega fucked. Eating disorder? Fucked. Quality of life destroyed by treatable obesity complications? Fucked. Can’t afford a variety of healthy foods because you’re trapped in medical debt? Fucked. Need medical intervention for weight loss? Fucked. Have a GI disorder and need to see a dietitian to plan a diet? Fucked.

      Treating it at the source is absolutely crucial, but for people already caught in the whirlpool of obesity, privatized healthcare is categorically failing them.

      • MelodiousFunk@slrpnk.net
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        13 days ago

        Need physical therapy? Get fucked. Can’t exercise because of a chronic, unhealed injury? Fucked. Mental health disorder keeping you from being active and eating well? Mega fucked.

        I’m in this comment multiple times and it’s as depressing as it sounds.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        Also because our health is already predisposed to being garbage compared to other countries thanks to our obesity crisis. Of course while that should be treated at the source like the UK is doing by e.g. not allowing junk food companies to advertize directly to kids

        The real source is car-dependency – i.e., bad zoning policy.

        See also:

        https://youtu.be/KPUlgSRn6e0

        https://youtu.be/4ZxzBcxB7Zc?t=666

    • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Or when they do listen all they do is treat symptoms instead of understanding or going after the underlying cause.

      Because treating the symptom will get you out of the office quicker so their employer can make more money off of an overworked doctor providing subpar care.

      20 minute chat with my doctor, that led to effectively nothing. $430. The system is fucked.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    I know that, like a lot of my fellow 'Muricans, I will try to avoid seeing a health care provider until I absolutely have to. Random inexplicable pain? Hopefully it gets better on its own in a few days.

    Which I know is not at all smart, but 1. there are not enough doctors to go around and 2. the ones we do have are understandably burned out AF and 3. the insurance bullshit is brutal.

    The insurance carriers make it very clear that you have done something wrong if you go see a health care provider.

    “Insurance is for collecting premiums only”. They are the “no take, only throw” dog meme in real life.

  • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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    13 days ago

    I have reasonable insurance and the reason people “spend more time living with disease” is that the annual cost of not doing that is a couple of thousand.

    The minute I hit a doctor for anything other than a cold, I expect it to cost me $1000, and if it turns out to be serious, I expect to spend out-of-pocket maxes, or $3000-5000.

    So basically, the cost of ‘going to the doctor’ needs to be assumed to be at least $3000.

    So uh, I don’t go for any actual issues unless I’m prepared to spend that much.

    This system is fucking stupid and designed to both discourage you from visiting and when you finally break down and go, to empty your pockets.

    …but hey, if you can find cooperative doctors, they’ll happily refer you to endless specialists and such so you can at least maximize the thousands of dollars you’ve spent? (This is still stupid.)

    • tomkatt@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      This, for sure. Last year I had to get some x-rays and because they weren’t sure insurance would cover it, I saw something like $1600 USD out of pocket. Eventually I got $900 or so back, but it was months later. And this was on top of lab/blood work that only has limited coverage under preventative care, and often costs additional out of pocket to the tune of hundreds of dollars.

      Oh and dental coverage being entirely separate, without full coverage, so I pay every few years between $600 and $800 for deep cleaning (periodontal disease, and that cost is with insurance).

      And my CPAP stuff being terribly covered only through DMEs that upcharge for hardware and mask equipment to the point since 2017 I’ve paid out of pocket cash or via HSA to get what I need online because that’s cheaper and less hassle.

      I can afford it these days and do the needful, but all this stuff is way more complicated and expensive than most can deal with.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      So basically, the cost of ‘going to the doctor’ needs to be assumed to be at least $3000.

      And that’s after you’ve already paid multiple thousands of dollars per year in premiums (remember: you pay for the whole premium, including the “employer portion” which would’ve been extra salary if the employer didn’t have to pay it on your behalf).

      • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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        12 days ago

        While I agree, I wouldn’t expect my salary to grow to include the health insurance costs; that’d totally end up just being rolled into taxes to pay for the/a universal option and not be money I suddenly got paid.

        But yes, it’s $3000 after the ~$6000 for the insurance, so let’s say the cost of being insured with insurance that covers anything at all in the US is, basically, $10,000 a year.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          that’d totally end up just being rolled into taxes

          That’d partially get rolled into your taxes. Without the need to extract profit – and even more importantly, without the ridiculous inefficiency of having all the insurance middlemen – the taxes needed to provide the same quality of service would be vastly cheaper than what we’re paying now.

          • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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            11 days ago

            I’m certainly not an economist, a politician, or in healthcare but I’d be surprised if you could actually build a working healthcare system for less than we spend now even if you took out the profit motive.

            You need to rebuild rural hospitals, hire more doctors and nurses, build clinics and staff them in underserved (read: poor) areas, and basically spend an awful lot of time and money to fix the broken mess that the insurance companies have caused.

            I mean you COULD just change who pays the people and places that exist now, but that’s not really… fixing anything.

            Perhaps it’s me, but I’d be fine paying what I’m paying similar amounts for an actually funded and working healthcare system, if it covers everyone. Just need to tap into the AMERICA #1 bullshit somehow, and get the uh, poorly informed, on board and do it. Again not a politician or political strategist so that’s someone else’s problem, but I won’t complain about paying for it.

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              11 days ago

              I’d be surprised if you could actually build a working healthcare system for less than we spend now even if you took out the profit motive.

              It’s so hard that only every other first-world country has managed it.

        • Ilovemyirishtemper@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          At a minimum $10,000 a year. The COBRA option I was given to continue my health insurance after leaving my previous employer, was $1,500 per month, so $18,000 per year, and that was on the low cost end for relatively crappy coverage. I’ve seen them cost $2k-$3k per month. Of course, that’s just to have the insurance and doesn’t include copays, deductibles, or out of pocket costs.

          I’m not disagreeing with you at all; I’m just always astounded by how much we have to pay to receive so little.

    • granolabar@kbin.melroy.org
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      13 days ago

      They know how these porcesses work and they design each one to fuck us.

      This is business 101, health insurance is just a tip of the iceberg.

      At what point is it gonna be enough? Now or in 25 years?

      Parasite jhave gotten away with this shot for at least a generation if not two… They are getting brazen.

      The adjuster reminded us all that we are docile dogs according status quo.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    You can get penicillin from the pet and feed stores. Just sayin’. Because I’m American and have to.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    13 days ago

    The USA suffers from historic levels of metabolic syndrome.

    Processed foods, industrial engineered foods, sugar, and high levels of insulin… Are the modern plague

    Sadly this disease is spreading

  • SelfProgrammed@lemmy.today
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    13 days ago

    Somebody (not on Lemmy) once tried to argue with me that the right to see a doctor is slavery of the doctor. It wasn’t a straw man argument as much as a stick lying in a field.

    • Tyfud@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Nobody knows if that fund is legit. Who is the december 4th commission?

      There’ve been a ton of scams popping up around Luigi.

      Until it can be properly verified, I would suggest people not donate to this fund for now.