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@shaderaven
Wouldnât leave my mind sorry
you are grounded, for til cock
FOR TIL COCK????????
A message pig approaches your door displaying the message âwe are under attackâ, calmly followed by a second similar pig with a more frantic font which reads âsend reinforcementsâ
Such timing.
Goes to show the insurance companies don't need the money.
Blogging this tweet because this explains SO MUCH about the mindset of pretty much all the folks Iâve known whoâre against single-payer, itâs not even funnyâŠ
ThisâŠ.
This never occurred to me. Not once. That Americans are against Health Care because they think it actually costs tens of thousands of dollars for a broken arm, hundreds of thousands for a complicated birth, millions for cancer treatment.
Because theyâve never known anything different. The idea that a broken arm is only a couple hundred bucks; a complicated birth a couple thousand; cancer treatment only tens of thousands; all easily covered by existing tax structures.
This explains a lot. Â And itâs a good example of what I was talking about in my post on scarcity being used to prop up ableism â always question the idea that a resource is genuinely scarce. Â Even if it seems obvious that it is, quite often thatâs the result of careful manipulation and misconceptions that youâre not even aware of. Â
And never think youâre too smart to be fooled by that kind of thing, it doesnât work like that. Â Similarly, donât think people who are fooled by something are stupid. Â Nobody can have all the information about everything, and nobody has the time and energy to investigate and put together conscious conclusions about every piece of information theyâre given. Â It doesnât take being stupid, or even just gullible, to believe something like this.
I currently live in a country without free medical care and still, itâs enormously cheap compared to the USA. An American expat wrote a piece for our English language paper about how she paid more for parking at the hospital than giving birth to her baby thatâs pretty interesting:
https://grapevine.is/mag/articles/2016/01/06/healthcare-in-iceland-vs-the-us-weve-got-it-so-good/
Yesterday I had to go to the hospital cause I injured my eye, Iâm frankly dreading what the bill is going to be, but what made me balk was being told in the pharmacy that my insurance was denied for the antibiotic eye drops and itâd be over $100 out of pocket. So I didnât get my eyedrops.
Iâve had these same drops before living in the UK. They cost me seven GBP.
Itâs the exact same drug, same steroid, same strain of antibiotic. But somehow the US gets away with charging $100 for a generic non brand version of a drug which is easy to create and widely used. Itâs downright robbery, but also a form of eugenics through poverty and class warfare. You keep the poor poor by making sure basic necessities remain unattainable and then you make it seem like the norm so no one fights it.
The rest of the world is not like this.
Eat the rich. Resist.
When I was travelling in Germany once, I seriously hurt my ankle. In a few hours, it had swollen to twice its size, and I went to a little ER in a tiny town. I spoke no German and only one nurse spoke English. They ran an X-ray and an MRI to determine what had happened (turned out I had bruised my peroneus brevis muscle and pulled the tendon), gave me a ton of very regulated meds for the pain and swelling, including some supports so I could walkâŠand my poor little 22-year-old ass was sat there, knowing all of this would cost thousands, if not tens of thousands, back in the US. I was shaking.
Iâm in the exam room, post diagnosis and with pill bottles in hand, and in walks the one nurse Iâve been able to speak to the entire time. She pats my hand and tells me (and this is verbatimâI will never forget this conversation as long as I live), âIâm so sorry. We had to run those tests, and they are expensive. You donât have insurance so you will have to cover the full cost.â
I start crying.
She continues, softly, as if telling me someone has died, âItâs going to be three hundred.â
I start sobbing, certain Iâve misheard, certain that I would be absolutely fucked, broke and going into debt in a foreign country. âThousand?â I clarify.
Her entire demeanor changed, and she looked at me as if I had sprouted four extra heads. âNo,â she says, âeuros.â
That moment radicalised me.
The thing is, from the US perspective, if youâve never experienced healthcare outside of this country, these sound like fairy tales.
Theyâre so completely, utterly ludicrous, that you dismiss them. These are the stories of people whisked to the fae realms and healed by magic.
In America, the costs are in thousands of dollars. And they trick in, week after week. You get charged a few hundred here, another few hundred there. A $1300 consulting fee for a radiologist you never saw, $200 for that pill they brought you while you were waiting to see if that pain in your side was a heart attack or a pulled muscle. Informed consent is a joke. No one wants to talk to you about the cost, none of the staff knows. Youâll just be billed later, is all.
And then weâre told âI was in London when I broke my ankle and they charged me for parking.â and it just sounds like weâre being made fun of. That these American bumpkins donât understand that of course medical care costs money, and they need to quit whining. Itâs all so ridiculous, it has no connection to the world we experience.
And of course weâre so very afraid of the medical field, of the bills and bills and bills, and being sent to specialist after specialist without once being listened to and finally after the cost of a car giving up because this is just our life now - so gods, it must be So Much Worse if youâre a foreigner, we would never dare go to a hospital in France or Japan, we could never afford it.
Itâs easy to believe this is just how it has to be.
Not only is healthcare in America expensive, itâs also bad! Dollar for dollar, Americans get the worst return on investment for healthcare of just about any country that isnât an active war zone. And this is ENTIRELY due to the insurance industry.
My dad worked in administration in one hospital in the US for 20+ years. When he left in the late 90s, it was entirely because of how disgusted he was by the American healthcare insurance industry. He went on to get his PhD in healthcare consultation and wrote his thesis on how lack of affordable primary care increases healthcare costs overall, and results in poorer outcomes for patients. Essentially, this man changed careers at 45 in order to spend 15 years getting a terminal degree so that he can criticize the US healthcare system PROFESSIONALLY.
I give you his main talking points:
Because US healthcare is so expensive, people do not or cannot regularly go in for basic annual physicals. This means that:
1) diseases like cancer are missed until they are passed the treatable point
2) physicians are unable to effectively educate and work with their patients on manageable chronic conditions like diabetes. Itâs not just being able to afford the medications - itâs knowing how and when to take them and understanding what signs and symptoms to look out for.
3) even if you do get to see a primary care physician, you might only get 15 minutes of time with a stressed out, distracted doctor who doesnât seem to know your name, much less your medical history. You can thank insurance companies for pushing doctors to spend as little time talking with patients as possible - talking doesnât bring in money
4) people are forced to rely on emergency visits for things that can and should be treated/managed by their primary care physician. If, for example, a person has what they need in terms of medication, patient education, and support from their healthcare team to manage their diabetes, the actual cost is in the cents per week or something ridiculously low like that. If they canât get these, and regularly end up in the emergency room because they passed out or suffered other secondary complications, thatâs way more expensive even if the insurance companies billed fairly (which they do not). This is the fault of the insurance company, not the patient
5) a more advanced progression of any medical condition often requires a specialist. Specialists are more expensive. Again, true even if the companies billed fairly. Again, the need for so many specialist visits is still the fault of the insurance companies, not the patients.
Additionally, the mere existence of the insurance companies makes medical treatment more expensive. You know how doctors donât know how much your visit will cost? Itâs because it takes an entire billing department to parse through the codes of each plan of each insurance company and figure out the final bill. For some hospitals, more than 1/3 of the staff are just there to figure out billing. The cost of all those salaries gets rolled into your bill.
And because billing is so complicated, small offices and practices just canât afford to stay open or hire the staff for billing. So you know what companies like UHC do? They swoop in and buy up smaller practices and use their power to push doctors to spend less time with patients, make more specialist referrals, and limit options for treatments. And then many truly excellent medical professionals leave their field because of the mental toll of working with these insurance sleezebags.
Just to top it all off, you get insurance companies and the right wing blaming it on you: YOU didnât go to the doctor at the first sign of illness (because you couldnât afford to take time off from work just to pay $100 for something that could be nothing), YOU didnât take your insulin (because you couldnât afford it, or because you didnât understand the instructions given in the 10 minutes of actual face-to-face time you had with your physician), YOU waited until it was an emergency to get treatment (because it was your only option).
All this to have the 42nd highest life expectancy in the world!
online posting is like military combat and im the brave general and you are all the footsoldiers fighting in the tranches
Tranch
Tranch
im sending you both on a mission into enemy territory and i dont expect either of you to return
@ gaurav