.Anonymous wrote:Pittsburgh, in a new condo with elevator along the river and walking distance to everything you need. Major teaching hospital nearby and decent airport.
Too many “where should I retire?” ppl deeply discount the guaranteed need for top notch healthcare. Even just PT when you inevitably trip on the stairs. Let alone being 5 minutes from a certified stroke center— and that’s the difference between living another 15 good, ambulatory years post stroke and pissing/drooling on yourself in a nursing home for a year until you succumb to an infected bedsore.
— in healthcare
Anonymous wrote:Everyone seems pretty obsessed with MAGAs and healthcare on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was speaking to someone about Lexington, Virginia yesterday and they ended up disliking the town. Reason being they felt the healthcare system and infrastructure wasn’t supportive of elderly health issues.
What other towns would you consider college towns that you would retire to .. that are not outrageously far from the DMV?
I think this is one of those things that people idealize but in reality it would truly suck to retire to a college town.
FFS why don’t you move to Baltimore so you can hang out at Johns Hopkins waiting to get sick?
That's what I think, too. All these posts with their healthcare. It's about quality of life for me, not longevity. Live in Pittsburgh for the healthcare? No thank you. I'd rather waste away in my excrement at the age of 73 then die old in Pittsburgh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was speaking to someone about Lexington, Virginia yesterday and they ended up disliking the town. Reason being they felt the healthcare system and infrastructure wasn’t supportive of elderly health issues.
What other towns would you consider college towns that you would retire to .. that are not outrageously far from the DMV?
I think this is one of those things that people idealize but in reality it would truly suck to retire to a college town.
FFS why don’t you move to Baltimore so you can hang out at Johns Hopkins waiting to get sick?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blacksburg/Roanoke. Virginia Tech has a medical school and a huge research campus building up in Roanoke. New hospital tower being built, too. Cost of living is 13 percent lower than in the rest of Virginia. You're in the Blue Ridge Mountains. 3.5 hour drive from NOVA. Quality of life is good. You can get a mansion for $500,000.
Roanoke and Blacksburg aren't exactly the same, though. It takes about an hour, oftentimes more, to get from one to the other.
Waaaay too many MAGAs around there.
Anonymous wrote:Can't imagine choosing to live in a state that's more than 90% white. Very non-diverse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Charlottesville
And if you are willing to travel, Bloomington IN?
I wouldn’t say Charlottesville. It’s incredibly difficult to get established as a patient with PCPs, dentists, and wait for specialists are insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blacksburg/Roanoke. Virginia Tech has a medical school and a huge research campus building up in Roanoke. New hospital tower being built, too. Cost of living is 13 percent lower than in the rest of Virginia. You're in the Blue Ridge Mountains. 3.5 hour drive from NOVA. Quality of life is good. You can get a mansion for $500,000.
Roanoke and Blacksburg aren't exactly the same, though. It takes about an hour, oftentimes more, to get from one to the other.