LMAO. I work my butt off to pay 5 digit family insurance premiums every year. No, I am not “okay” with paying 100K for our child’s care On top of that. . |
It’s even worse now. Insurance providers now fund huge companies whose sole purpose is to deny care to policyholders. So many people lose it all because of these insurance companies. |
But the system IS what impoverishes seniors. If you can’t afford 10k/month to spend on a care facility (which most seniors can’t) then you have to lose everything — drain your bank accounts, sell your home, have nothing whatsoever to pass on to the next generation to get any care at all. You can have nothing leftover for your grandkid’s education, or for a down payment on a home, or just a bit of security. The senior might not have been wealthy but they weren’t “destitute” until they encountered this system. For the vast majority of American families, this is the real death tax. |
Agreed. But I have to admit it's a lifestyle and culture deficit contributing to diseases killing us in the US in all likelihood don't you think? Insurance/healthcare system on top certainly makes things worse.. |
Yep. Brought on by poor lifestyles. Americans have poor work-life balance, lots of stress, lack community etc., all which impact our health. |
All of this is true, and also we live in mortal bodies that are guaranteed to fail. Also people get diseases even when they do everything “right.” Other countries have mortal people who get diseases, too, but without people going bankrupt from a cancer diagnosis, and without 1 in 4 type1 diabetics rationing insulin. |
I was specifically NOT referring to doctors and nurses who actually work with patients on a daily basis. Those folks are just labor. The doctors who make money are those who own the practice or who do plastic surgery. The real money is made by higher ups in the healthcare industry (20% of the US economy!) who do not treat patients. |
Because their citizens benefit from regular, preventative medical treatment. |
Yes they do, and increasingly so. Diabetes is a huge problem in China and other countries. |
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By what metric?
In the US, the people who have access to low out of pocket cost healthcare or have significant financial means have the best healthcare in the world. It’s honestly not even close. I’ve worked with health systems all over Western Europe and the only thing they have us beat on is access. Try getting cutting edge cancer care, or top of the line joint replacement, or extremely technical neurosurgery after head trauma. Some of this is available but it’s not nearly as ubiquitous as it is in the U.S. Sure, you don’t go bankrupt over medical bills but if your metric is just overall “best” the US can’t be beat. Our costs are higher because of 1. Consumption, 2. Doctor pay, 3. Obesity |
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Corporate controlled pharma is killing us.
We need health care, not forever treatments. |
So "forever treatments" is the new talking point? Seems to be cropping up everywhere. |
Can we switch it up to, I don’t know, maybe “healing”? That’s what doctors used to focus on before big pharma took control. |
| EU hands down, i have family there. US is great if one has some very aggressive or rare cancer, great insurance, and wants to be a guinea pig for research. |
| The U.S. |