Zeb_Carter
.-- - ..-.
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2006
- Posts
- 20,584
A questioned was raised by a poster about them not deserving good health care…
I in fact propose that they deserve and get excellent health care, the best in the world as a matter of fact and that they have chronicled that fact right here on this very board. Without the health care they have available to them, a loved one may not be living today. If what had happened to that loved one had occurred…let us say…in Mexico…they would most likely have died. Even if it occurred in Canada they may not have survived.
Now they do have some expenses to pay for obtaining the best health care in the world but, what other kind of insurance allows you to pay premiums and only pay small co-pay amounts for routine maintenance? What other insurance do you have that allows you to have inspections done at almost no charge? What other insurance limits you liability on costs, including those maintenance and inspection items?
When your car breaks down, say a water pump goes out, do you place a claim with your auto insurance? No. If the transmission fails? No. If the engine seizes up? No. The only time you make a claim is for a catastrophic event such as an accident…when your car strikes another or another strikes you or you care strikes something else.
If your roof needs replacing due to normal wear and tear, do you make a claim on your home owners insurance? No. You want to remodel you kitchen? No. You make a claim if a storm blows out all your windows? Yes. And what’s your deductable? $500, $5,000, $10,000?
But with health insurance you expect to have things paid by them for all you health care needs. You expect to be able to see the doctor an unlimited number of times a year. You expect to have visits to the emergency room paid for. You expect those drugs the doctor prescribed for you to be paid for. All for a low monthly premium that you can afford and a low, low co-pay?
I’d love that too! But to be realistic what you get here in America is the best heath care in the world. What you are all looking for is ‘free’ health care, not insured health care.
An old adage once changed my outlook on life…You get what you pay for.
You don’t pay for anything…you get what you pay for…nothing.
Everything has a price…even health care. The price the health provider charges is not what you actually pay anyway. That evil insurer has negotiated a price with the provider. They pay the providers negotiated fee less the co-pay less the deductible. The co-pay is calculated on the negotiated fee not the charged fee.
And as the OP in the original thread stated the providers bills started to roll in soon after discharge and she was shocked at the costs involved. I was too, when I was in the almost the same situation six years ago. My total out of pocket costs for my excellent health care $1,200. Why? The policy I had back then had an upper limit on what I would have to pay in co-pay charges. It was an excellent policy. I also paid a lot, pre-tax, in premium, well my employer paid most of it because they had a stake in keeping me healthy.
Now the policy I currently have does have a higher out of pocket and a different co-pay percentage so my personnel costs will rise for my healthcare.
There is not a policy out there, nor can the government provide, no cost health care. If you think it’s free you’re fooling yourself. If the government says it’s free, they are lying to you. Insurance, real insurance, doesn’t pay for everything. Check all those auto insurance, home owners’ insurance, life insurance policies you have, do they cover everything associated with what they cover?
Does life insurance cover everything pertaining to your life? Nope, only your death.
Does auto insurance cover the health of your vehicle(s)? Of course not.
Does home owners insurance cover the health of your home? Only if you have purchased those options that do cover things like mold, mildew and the like.
You say you want affordable health insurance? What now passes for health insurance is not really insurance. Insurance is purchased to cover catastrophic events, not normal maintenance. Getting a cold and going to see the doctor is not a catastrophic event, yet you want your health insurance to pay for it. How is that insurance? It’s not, it’s a bill payment plan. And that is going to cost you.
You want affordable Health insurance look into an HSA or a plan that doesn’t pay a cent until you have accrued $5,000 or $10,000 out of pocket in a year. Then you’ll see affordable insurance, real insurance.
You want affordable health care? Don’t look to the government. Take care of that yourself. Shop around for the best price for a check up. I know a place that will only charge you $75 for a self pay checkup. Good doctors there too.
If the government truly wanted to make a difference in the health care industry, the only change would be the way the insurers looked at the population of the US.
Change one…
You want health insurance, you first have to apply, then you have a physical. The doctor reports their findings to the insurance company. The insurance company, based on the physical and the questionnaire you filled out and experience propose a premium for the plan and the plan options you selected. If you like it you pay it and your insured. If you don’t you go to another insurance company. The insurance company pays for the physical, it’s a cost of doing business.
Change two…
Would result in change due to change one, there would now be competition and the prices for coverage would now be based on experience. Just like life insurance, auto insurance and annuities. Prices for insurance would most likely go down. But, looking at the health of most Americans they might just go up.
So is it good health care you want? Or is it free health care? There is a difference, a big difference.
You get what you pay for.
Another change is to have the medical industry, and it is an industry, look at preventative instead of curative medicine. Fix it before it becomes a problem, but until Americans take charge of their own health that will never happen, even though it’s easier to fix a problem before it occurs than it is to cure the problem once it’s there.
You get what you pay for.
Yeah, yeah and please don’t quote the old Rolling Stones song…it would just show your lack of intelligence.
I in fact propose that they deserve and get excellent health care, the best in the world as a matter of fact and that they have chronicled that fact right here on this very board. Without the health care they have available to them, a loved one may not be living today. If what had happened to that loved one had occurred…let us say…in Mexico…they would most likely have died. Even if it occurred in Canada they may not have survived.
Now they do have some expenses to pay for obtaining the best health care in the world but, what other kind of insurance allows you to pay premiums and only pay small co-pay amounts for routine maintenance? What other insurance do you have that allows you to have inspections done at almost no charge? What other insurance limits you liability on costs, including those maintenance and inspection items?
When your car breaks down, say a water pump goes out, do you place a claim with your auto insurance? No. If the transmission fails? No. If the engine seizes up? No. The only time you make a claim is for a catastrophic event such as an accident…when your car strikes another or another strikes you or you care strikes something else.
If your roof needs replacing due to normal wear and tear, do you make a claim on your home owners insurance? No. You want to remodel you kitchen? No. You make a claim if a storm blows out all your windows? Yes. And what’s your deductable? $500, $5,000, $10,000?
But with health insurance you expect to have things paid by them for all you health care needs. You expect to be able to see the doctor an unlimited number of times a year. You expect to have visits to the emergency room paid for. You expect those drugs the doctor prescribed for you to be paid for. All for a low monthly premium that you can afford and a low, low co-pay?
I’d love that too! But to be realistic what you get here in America is the best heath care in the world. What you are all looking for is ‘free’ health care, not insured health care.
An old adage once changed my outlook on life…You get what you pay for.
You don’t pay for anything…you get what you pay for…nothing.
Everything has a price…even health care. The price the health provider charges is not what you actually pay anyway. That evil insurer has negotiated a price with the provider. They pay the providers negotiated fee less the co-pay less the deductible. The co-pay is calculated on the negotiated fee not the charged fee.
And as the OP in the original thread stated the providers bills started to roll in soon after discharge and she was shocked at the costs involved. I was too, when I was in the almost the same situation six years ago. My total out of pocket costs for my excellent health care $1,200. Why? The policy I had back then had an upper limit on what I would have to pay in co-pay charges. It was an excellent policy. I also paid a lot, pre-tax, in premium, well my employer paid most of it because they had a stake in keeping me healthy.
Now the policy I currently have does have a higher out of pocket and a different co-pay percentage so my personnel costs will rise for my healthcare.
There is not a policy out there, nor can the government provide, no cost health care. If you think it’s free you’re fooling yourself. If the government says it’s free, they are lying to you. Insurance, real insurance, doesn’t pay for everything. Check all those auto insurance, home owners’ insurance, life insurance policies you have, do they cover everything associated with what they cover?
Does life insurance cover everything pertaining to your life? Nope, only your death.
Does auto insurance cover the health of your vehicle(s)? Of course not.
Does home owners insurance cover the health of your home? Only if you have purchased those options that do cover things like mold, mildew and the like.
You say you want affordable health insurance? What now passes for health insurance is not really insurance. Insurance is purchased to cover catastrophic events, not normal maintenance. Getting a cold and going to see the doctor is not a catastrophic event, yet you want your health insurance to pay for it. How is that insurance? It’s not, it’s a bill payment plan. And that is going to cost you.
You want affordable Health insurance look into an HSA or a plan that doesn’t pay a cent until you have accrued $5,000 or $10,000 out of pocket in a year. Then you’ll see affordable insurance, real insurance.
You want affordable health care? Don’t look to the government. Take care of that yourself. Shop around for the best price for a check up. I know a place that will only charge you $75 for a self pay checkup. Good doctors there too.
If the government truly wanted to make a difference in the health care industry, the only change would be the way the insurers looked at the population of the US.
Change one…
You want health insurance, you first have to apply, then you have a physical. The doctor reports their findings to the insurance company. The insurance company, based on the physical and the questionnaire you filled out and experience propose a premium for the plan and the plan options you selected. If you like it you pay it and your insured. If you don’t you go to another insurance company. The insurance company pays for the physical, it’s a cost of doing business.
Change two…
Would result in change due to change one, there would now be competition and the prices for coverage would now be based on experience. Just like life insurance, auto insurance and annuities. Prices for insurance would most likely go down. But, looking at the health of most Americans they might just go up.
So is it good health care you want? Or is it free health care? There is a difference, a big difference.
You get what you pay for.
Another change is to have the medical industry, and it is an industry, look at preventative instead of curative medicine. Fix it before it becomes a problem, but until Americans take charge of their own health that will never happen, even though it’s easier to fix a problem before it occurs than it is to cure the problem once it’s there.
You get what you pay for.
Yeah, yeah and please don’t quote the old Rolling Stones song…it would just show your lack of intelligence.