Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well someone has to pay for everyone who got glp1s off label.
Yup. Some people have genuine health issues that they are not responsible for. But a 5'6 woman with no diabetes weighting 145 lbs jumping on glp1 is ridiculous and we are all paying for it because she wants to be skinny. She should pay for it out of her own damn pocket.
What on earth are you on about? Anyone who is 5’6” and 145lbs isn’t getting a glp1 without paying “out of her own damn pocket” (and she probably isn’t even getting it then).
This is the real problem— extreme ignorance regarding how the healthcare system works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait till you retire or use COBRA it wil be $2400 a month. After paying into Medicare for 40 years each we then get soaked on Part B premiums adjusted by income.
Wow. That's really high.
Anonymous wrote:Our premium at work is going up by whopping 40%. So we will now pay $980 compared to $700 last year. Of course the salary stays the same.
Anyone in a similar situation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left the PPO a few years ago for Kaiser HMO. It's cheaper and no worse quality, if anything, I'm impressed by the efficiency.
We also have a high deductible plan and a HSA that we max out. We cash flow our health expenses as we will never hit the deductible, although if something does happen we can easily pay the deductible, which with Kaiser, isn't that high, about 4k per family member. This allows us to treat our HSA as a secret investment account and it's done very well. When we retire it will be worth quite a bit and we don't have to use it for health expenses. It becomes basically another Roth.
Just learn to be smart with your healthcare planning. Use it as a tool to work for you.
The HSA isn't a "secret" investment account. It is set up to be used this way so that you pay for most of your expenses out of pocket instead of tapping into insurance.
They do not retireAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are retired and pay about $5350/mo for the 4. Up from $4900 last year but down from a few years ago when it was $5500. PPO and it sucks
Wow. What percentage of your income is it as a retiree?
Now I understand why people are saying $1 million retirement is nothing.
The problem is we normalize what should be a human right as a benefit reserved for those who have "made" it.
They are very wealthy if they have minor kids and retired.
Yes, we are very wealthy. It’s still a lot of money but we can afford it.
How do people will less than a million in retirement live? Wow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This discussion is why I want the right to die. I'd rather skip all the healthcare and just die when I want, rather than be forced to stay alive when I don't want to.
+1. My mom has diabetes and has to take insulin everyday. If I had diabetes, I'd rather not take insulin everyday, but I also don't want to be blind but still alive because my other functions are taking longer to die off than my eyes. I would just rather end it.
Diabetes is treatable and not comparable to other illnesses but people die every day from it due to lack of access to insulin and supplies. Its not a joke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well someone has to pay for everyone who got glp1s off label.
Yup. Some people have genuine health issues that they are not responsible for. But a 5'6 woman with no diabetes weighting 145 lbs jumping on glp1 is ridiculous and we are all paying for it because she wants to be skinny. She should pay for it out of her own damn pocket.
Anonymous wrote:Well someone has to pay for everyone who got glp1s off label.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left the PPO a few years ago for Kaiser HMO. It's cheaper and no worse quality, if anything, I'm impressed by the efficiency.
We also have a high deductible plan and a HSA that we max out. We cash flow our health expenses as we will never hit the deductible, although if something does happen we can easily pay the deductible, which with Kaiser, isn't that high, about 4k per family member. This allows us to treat our HSA as a secret investment account and it's done very well. When we retire it will be worth quite a bit and we don't have to use it for health expenses. It becomes basically another Roth.
Just learn to be smart with your healthcare planning. Use it as a tool to work for you.
The HSA isn't a "secret" investment account. It is set up to be used this way so that you pay for most of your expenses out of pocket instead of tapping into insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Someone has to pay for the millions of elderly, demented people to be hospitalized repeatedly to cure them from pneumonia and other illnesses despite the patients having no quality of life. Someone has to pay for the 31% of the nation on government subsidized healthcare (Medicaid, Tricare, Medicare, VA care).
Anonymous wrote:For the GLP haters. I was at a public event tonight and saw two morbidly obese people. Like sooooooo seriously obese they are one step away from being gilbert grape's mom stuck at home. One had a cane. Then below that some super obese people. Of course all these people should get GLPs. I think it would be miraculous.
Just like there are people that don't want the whole world to be fed because it's not profitable (thus we have hunger even though we can feed everyone on earth) there are people who don't want to help the sick and obese because it's not profitable. It's disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Our premium at work is going up by whopping 40%. So we will now pay $980 compared to $700 last year. Of course the salary stays the same.
Anyone in a similar situation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are retired and pay about $5350/mo for the 4. Up from $4900 last year but down from a few years ago when it was $5500. PPO and it sucks
Wow. What percentage of your income is it as a retiree?
Now I understand why people are saying $1 million retirement is nothing.
The problem is we normalize what should be a human right as a benefit reserved for those who have "made" it.
They are very wealthy if they have minor kids and retired.
Yes, we are very wealthy. It’s still a lot of money but we can afford it.