Quote:
Originally Posted by over the mountain
At JHU right now there are doctors who read X rays. It takes about a min to read an x ray. The cost to each patient or their insurance co for the 1 min of service? over $100.
If this doctor reads 10 x rays in an hour, the hospital has billed well over $1,000 for 10 mins of work.
But yeah, lets **** the person who works and makes just enough to not be eligible for medicaid but doesnt make enough to afford priv health care.
There is a very real and large gap of this country's population that falls into this category. they are usually 20 somethings, struggling to pay off college loans, still on the low spectrum of the pay scale and cant afford to spend 200 bucks a month on health insurance. these are the good hard working people of the country.
they will eventually raise their status to a point were they can afford health care but for now and tomorrow, they have to hope they dont suffer a serious injury. if they do suffer a serious injury, they have a 12k debt that closes alil further their window of future financial stability.
They way some of you all talk and opine about things, makes me think you've been livin the good life too long and forgot what it was like to truly struggle to make ends meet. there is a segment of our population that is in a catch-22 right now. to broke to buy insurnace, but since you work a 9-5 you cant qualify for free health care.
The real poor get free everything.
The rich can afford everything.
The people who make 25-35k a year, get screwed until their broke or die trying to get rich.
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I haven't forgot. I was there
and I had a pre-existing condition. I signed up during an HMO open enrollment and paid through the nose. Had to forego
a lot of stuff (I ate Ramen noodles from about 25-30), but did what I had to do. So sorry - I hear you that it's tough. Made it through w/out requiring any (almost any) real insurance stuff but paid in the 150-200 range/mo in the 80's and early 90's. So please don't tell me I got no concept of the issue.