That’s because we eat poison. Whose fault is that? |
The very fact that we are having a conversation about whether one should go to an ER with a literal broken bone is a sign of how broken our system is. We don’t have to live this way. Healthcare can exist FOR us. |
| I can’t help but compare this to someone murdering an individual who physically hurt a child or other loved one. Based on what I have read I have more sympathy for Mangione and his family and the whole insider trading stock dump definitely doesn’t help things. |
Anyone with kids goes to PM pediatrics for fractures and potential breaks, or the Orthopedist urgimed in Court Square. Once in awhile you have to go wait 2-5 hours in Children’s Hospital. The orthopedist’s by Rockledge drive can get you day off, there huge and use 20% of their slots for walk-ins. ER is used by two types: those with No insurance who don’t pay the bill; those with $200 copays who use it properly or like an urgimed. |
If these people really cared, they’d use that money to help someone pay down their medical debt but they are fools and just want to celebrate some so called folk hero. |
I think most people agree that healthcare is a human right but the rub is deciding how much healthcare and what kind of healthcare that is? |
He could have killed his own dad to make his point. But, no, he killed other kids’ dad. |
You have no idea. They have more money than you’ll ever have in 100 lifetimes. |
I didn’t catch that, what is their net worth? After you take whatever commercial properties they have and net out the leverage. I know mine, then can compare. Owning local multifam and retail is very old country. Only place it park money and make passive income in many parts of the world when less developed. |
The question is, how do we make sure those decisions are made by people for whom health care is care, rather than those for whom it is first and foremost a financial investment whose value must by definition grow? |
I’m from there. They’re well off but they’re not a tech bro or Bloomberg with a $1B+++ family office and foundation. Get a grip. The grandparents and parents parked some money long ago in land and real estate and then daisy chained properties together. Good for them. |
Not sure but imo shooting strangers in the back should play no role. |
I assume this is all the same person. I was told by an orthopedist not to do to urgent care for a ray’s because they have cheap machines and the scans won’t show all broken bones. If it’s night or a weekend we got it the ER. We have a $50 ER copay with CareFirst. |
Just like in europe/ NHS: Preventative care covered by taxpayers (income and vat) Basic procedures covered by taxpayers Critical proven care covered by taxpayers w some wait times Unproven cutting edge care not covered. Cosmetic not covered, vanity procedures not covered. Labor & delivery via midwife; no elective c sections Age dependent guidelines for high risk, costly procedures with inconsistent outcomes. If you want someone more, most white collar employers also offer private health insurance and those systems and sites are large and plentiful. So 20% per employee for NHS, split 50/50 employer and employee, and 10% if you want private insurance as well. 100% of white collar workers in London have both. Hence a FTE is very costly and growth in hiring is slow and low. |
| Americans don't want single payer and neither does the UHC killer. He is a mentally ill patient himself, he probably should have taken his prescriptions instead of going to a co-op and getting involved in QANON. |