I refuse to call it a "healthcare system" anymore. It's a "medical industry". It's not about caring for a patient's health, it's about making money from medical conditions.
@@bidmcms3 yeah and the doctors are working FOR the insurance companies to make this decisions... hmmm conflict of interest much? and No they aren't paying, the patient pay THEM money. So by that logic the patient gets to decide?
@@bidmcms3 Even if there wasn't a conflict of interest in doctors working for the insurance company there's still a lot of problems with it. Remember when everyone was getting all upset over "death panels" with Obamacare- that happens every day in health insurance. Doctors provide consultation, but they don't make the ultimate decision of what the company will cover or not cover. They may say these 5 treatments are life saving and essential and the insurance company will say yeah but we're only going to cover 4 (and likely non-medical professionals will make the decision which ones they are going to cover based off of the doctors report and finances). Also insurance companies don't hire that many doctors to consult. They're asking doctors to know the ins and outs of multiple specialties, e.g. when is this necessary to live vs just a quality of life thing, and keep up with the latest treatments in those fields. It's messed up
@@danielyuen8691 I don't get it, I thought the problem was that they had _no_ doctors making coverage decisions. Are you suggesting only medical professionals should own insurance companies?
I finished a program in medical coding with a little medical billing component. I learned enough about how medical billing works (or doesn't) to know I never wanted to do it as a job!
@@1bootliz yeah I went to school for medical coding too thought I’d go into billing but went into collections instead (collecting from insurance companies on claims) but I ended up in the specialty I wanted which was substance abuse. I wanted to make a difference but…. These insurance companies have broken my spirit.
@@nickimorelli9991 most humans in the US don’t have to literally argue with insurance companies day in and day out to get these covered and see the wide scale of the system in a way people with my job do.
When I was 14 I had a 16-hour surgery done on my stomach for various reasons, about 5.5hours in the doctor was told to stop and sew me up, I was being transferred to another hospital to finish the surgery. when he asked why they told him bc insurance said they won't pay for this hospital. The doctor outright refused saying if I close her up now her survival chance drops significantly, he proceeded to tell them him he'd figure it out afterward and if it came down to it he'd pay for the surgery. Needless to say, he finished, I survived, and he came thru for me. An amazing doctor. Sadly, it's the way insurance works here in the United States.
Yeh I’ve had health issues my whole life and Insurance has been a real pain in the butt... My parents had to switch multiple times when I was a kid because of pre-existing conditions. Then on my own insurance(Anthem Blue Cross) I was denied coverage for many things including MRIs despite having colon issues, damaged spine(football accident), and so on... It’s ridiculous...
@@sicsempertyrannis4613 I am so sorry! Nobody should have to deal with these issues. My daughter lost her foot when she was 3 months old ( a dog attack) but from the day my husband got custody we had to pay cash for her prosthetics. My husband now suffers from something called Ankylosing Spondylitis and he cannot get medical coverage without paying an absolutely insane amount. Good luck to you!
That. Is. Insane. They claim to care about the patient and always have the patient's best interest in mind, yeah, bullshit! 🐂💩! They ONLY care about the bottom line, the +/-'s, and their shareholders. So sad. 🤦🏼♀️ I'm glad you had one of the good doctors who actually make their patients a priority and genuinely care. 😊🙏 ✌️❤️😊🙏
@@sicsempertyrannis4613 Oh fuck, I have Anthem and need MRIs/CT done to help see what's causing my nerve pains and GI-related issues... Also need a non-urgent surgery... Not to mention they keep bouncing my scrips despite me having been on each of them for over a year (had to call my doctors for prior auth issues three times)... now I'm MORE worried
We have one private Dr. here that refuses ALL insurance. He charges a fair fee and if an injection is needed, he charges slightly more than what he paid for the medication. He's consistently booked full.
Insurance companies are so corrupt. It costs individuals and healthcare providers a ton to do business w them. It blew my mind when Obama signed a bill to force us to do business w insurance companies. Honestly, our best bet is to ditch insurance completely and have businesses offer HSAs and match our contributions much like they do w retirement plans. Then each of us have the opportunity to shop around for services and determine cheaper and better care, which would force healthcare providers to compete w prices and would bring down costs. Even cancer treatment would come down significantly. I have tons of health issues. I grew up in and out of the hospital. I’m also a financial coach and nerd out on numbers. Every scenario I’ve done detailed run throughs proves this to be the most efficient way to operate
Also, there were a couple of hospitals in the southern Midwest (I think one in Kansas but I can’t remember the other) that decided to operate not accepting insurance. Very well run hospitals and it was far cheaper for people to go there than it was to go w their insurance elsewhere. Plus, pharmacies are not allowed to disclose that a medication is only $6 out of pocket if the patient has insurance w a $10 copay
@@joyfulhomemaker8053 except youre not factoring in the greed of healtcare professionals. Costs would largely stay unchanged. But I agree, Healthcare is corrupt. Our government is corrupt. Doctors are corrupt. We have a morally flawed society at large. They value money more than people.
@@An_AttemptMany conveniences you enjoy, as well as infrastructure are paid thru taxes.... Get a grip. The system ain't perfect, but calling all taxes extortion is just pure retardation, period.
@kaiudall2583 Our taxes, like a normal country does. And the price of medicine could finally be regulated. Instead of $100 for an advil we can cut them out and get it to normal levels.
I also love that its a law in some states to have health insurance, you pay a premium, an amount the insurance compamy makes up, and then can just decide not to cover your procedure, you know, the entire reason for their existence.
@@pianogal853you don't know anything about healthcare for people that cannot get it thru their jobs. You don't seem to understand that employer health plans are impossible to use and afford to get any actual health care. You don't seem to understand how the laws were changed for people with pre existing conditions like asthma and diabetes to actually get coverage for those ailments with their insurance no matter who it's thru. So yes, THANK YOU Obama for getting some semblance of universal healthcare started. We pay enough taxes, we should be able to get help when we need it like other countries who have their shit together.
@@joostine3720 it was worse, because people could be denied insurance coverage for any preexisting condition. If you had type I diabetes, denied; MS, denied; mental health, denied; c-section delivery, denied. Do you see the problem? Thanks to the ACA insurance carriers can no longer deny for ANY preexisting condition, nor can they put life time caps on coverage. So yeah, THANKS OBAMA!! Because thanks to him my daughter who had thyroid cancer at age 18 can not be denied health insurance. Nor can I for having two c-sections.
@joostine3720 Absolutely, but O'bummercare put several 'tools' in the insurance companies' pocket that made it almost impossible for smaller independent doctors to practice as they see fit.
Yet another example of how the U.S. healthcare system works. Two examples in my own life- my aunt (who raised me) was literally kicked out of a hospital against the will of her doctors, because the insurance company decided they were not going to pay any more on that particular stay. Luckily she did not die. In my own case, I had chemo for 13 months, and my chemo nurse was calling the ACCOUNTING dept. before each session, NOT my oncologist, to see if I could have my infusion.
@@__MPires__ Thanks! I have recovered pretty well, but it seems like maybe 5% to 10% of systemic weakness remains, which I kind of think is there for life. Better than the alternative, tho.
Not nearly as bad as you have it, but I remember calling around to get a teeth cleaning in Missouri and NO dentists would take me. I'm like, "I have no insurance, I don't need any x-rays, fillings, none of that. I need a simple, easy, routine teeth cleaning and I have $200 cash that I will hand you." "we are sorry sir, but we legally can not give you a cleaning." So I went to Mexico and got my teeth cleaned for $10. And Dr. Fernandez did a great job.
Keep in mind your doctor likey puts in a lot of extra time battling the insurance that you don't know about. My doctor is a bit transparent about it. Nothing gets approved until it gets submitted, insurance will "tell you" but still deny a certain procedure or doctor or med. A good doctor will let you know of insurance issues or potential insurance issues if they are familiar. Insurance is not your friend and the clinic the doctor works at is not either. There are a lot of burnt out doctors from the system which can mean care is not good. If you find a good doctor make sure you let them know how much you appreciate them. ❤
We need a not for profit type of insurance that defers to Medical professionals and we need up front pricing for all medical procedures and treatments.
@@jas6of7 That's called single payer insurance, aka medicare for all. The government already does this with the VA and Tri-Care, they can't be any worse than the money grubbers running insurance companies.
@@human_brian oh trust me they can be. If you think the insurance companies have no incentive to do a good job you’re in for a rude awakening when it comes to the federal government.
It’s almost as if insurance companies have had to cut corners to compete with endless government funding that only resulted in MORE EXPENSIVE PREMIUMS. Seriously. Insurance companies did their job prior to Obamacare. Most of the time (if not all of the time) there was no “out of network”. You were the one they covered, not the hospital. Same with ambulance trips. This was because they didn’t have to compete with public healthcare (which was already crappy compared to the private plans, but it was cheaper, for a time.) when private industries try to compete with government programs, everyone suffers. When the government is the only option left, it is tyrannical.
@@thatcarguydom266 You are working backwards from your conclusion. If I asked how private insurance is cheaper than public you would probably say something something competition, but now it increases costs? Looking at a global scale, we are the only 1st-world country without universal coverage and as a result spend easily the most on our system, have among the worst healthcare results, is utterly convoluted and confusing, and have millions forced to file medical bankruptcy every year... which isn't a thing in other countries. HALF of Americans have some form of medical debt. That is a broken system and has always been around, Obamacare(which is a conservative system designed to keep private insurance IN PLACE) only threw a tiny blanket on the fire. By all practical standards, a universal system is more effective and ethical.
@@thatcarguydom266 That's a lie. Deductibles still existed, you still were limited at what doctor you could see, premiums were still high. People still went bankrupt or even died. You don't know what you're talking about. You pulled that out your as*
@@austinhernandez2716 and look how many fools liked it hahaha more idiots who repeat what they hear but cant do any Research themselves hahah idiots….idiots everywhere.
lets not forget that said insurance company almost certainly gets tax breaks and subsidies as well as bail outs if they need it, all from our taxes. ngl, they've got a solid racket going.
And they use those subsidies to cut company provided insurances meaning it's unviable to buy insurance direct. Allowing the to negotiate co pay and coverage not with the person who would use the insurance. Aka removing the free market from the free market.
Or if I pay for years and never use the insurance and then switch companies. We don't get that money back I paid to the other company and they still can't pay for anything
Health insurance is a racket, 100%. The "charges" on your hospital bill are all made up so they can make it look like they are saving you a bunch of money when they, in fact, are spending very little.
@@simonhenry7867 the “free market” is what private insurance companies are taking advantage of when they refuse to cover “pre-existing conditions” and “high risk patients”, and barely cover anyone else - AKA pretty much all human beings who need help insurance. It’s not the “free market”, it’s a market built to the advantage of the big buy and at the direct expense of the little guy. If “free” means “less than 30% of people can afford to participate and the rest can just go die or whatever”, I don’t want free 🤷🏽♀️
Medical decisions are made by either the business student or the government bureaucrat, not the doctor and patient because the customer is almost never the patient - it is either the government or the businessperson who pays the bill. All of this is because we all pay premiums (or we paid Medicare taxes or we all pay taxes to pay for Medicaid patients) to hand over this to the third party payer.
@@drmadjdsadjadi if we are being technical the one paying is always the patient it's just in a roundabout way (they pay the Gov and they pay for insurance)
@@TSH425 actually, you are completely wrong because some patients end up paying more than they spend and others pay less - this is literally how insurance works :). Thus the insurer or the government as the collective payer is the sole payer when it comes to any insurance scheme. Individuals can only be the payer if they pay the entire bill, no more and no less,
In Australia if we need urgent hospital care it's immediate and there's no bill. If it's not urgent we may have to wait some months, sometimes more, but there's no bill. If we choose to pay for private health insurance we can and the federal government subsidises it. Private hospitals may be quicker (but not better) and the private health insurance usually covers most of the cost. The system could be better but it covers most needs.
Australia's health care system is Utopia compared with the USA. It isn't perfect but no-one will be bankrupt by health costs and Australians are much healthier than the US
As a nurse of 47 years I have had to do prior authorization for medical and procedures. It has always astounded me that insurance companies can make the decisions to pay or not pay for a service. They don't know your patient or what they need so the patient suffers needlessly because they get /o "play doctor". Love this portrayal. It is so true!
in my country, the doctor has to approve that the patient needs the treatment so the insurance will pay a huge percentage of it, it doesnt cover everything but it does help a lot, hospital becomes expensive without insurance but still not 1k per visit like americans..
It boggled my mind 10 years ago when a Texan colleague told me his insurance doesn't cover the whole medical bill. I live in a third world country and I don't have to pay out of pocket for anything. I'm not even talking about universal healthcare here, I'm talking about my employer-provided HMO.
And that's over and above the required PREPAYs that the practitioners demand. And wait til ya find out about the dreaded retrospective denials of prior-authorizations, where insurance companies initially say "OK" and patients get the procedure and insurance companies then say "UMMM.. NO" So the patient has to pay for all of it.
@@romxxii when you get healthy care through your employer here you still pay for it, usually a lot but less than it would be without your employer and you still have to out of pocket for whatever your insurance doesn't want to cover
@@brandyc9645 Nope, that's only in the US. In my country I do not pay out of pocket except for prescription medicines, which I can then reimburse in full. I live in a third world country.
I saw a thing about a lady once who had to get brain surgery, and the insurance company said that putting back the wedge of skull they removed to get to her brain was an optional cosmetic surgery. So she just lived with a hole in the side of her head for several months until she and her mother could afford to get it taken care of out of pocket. Her SKULL.
@@haileybalmer9722. Did I mention that those insurance folks are inhumane? I thought that was obvious once I figured out how the American system works.
Not only this but, I'm a nurse, and most people have absolutely no idea that hospitals are not run by Drs or nurses. ALL the policies at a hospital are decided by MBA's. Business people decide what the Drs and Nurses are allowed to do and not do, not the Drs. They also decide what products and resources we have access to, not Drs.
Pharmacies are similar in my experience - corporate administration with zero experience with pharmacy, or anything healthcare related for that matter, setting policies because it looks good on paper. Who cares whether or not it's better for the patients or the employees who are trying to take care of them?
@@Edwahlq administration everywhere tends to be a joke. When your job is contingent upon the output of others you open up the door to lots of unethical behavior. The "best" managers are manipulaters that are good at people pleasing. Actual good management views their role as a coach or mentor instead and asks and discusses with everyone in the corporate hierarchy/totem pole before implementing policies or procedures
I do billing for a private practice. The amount of BS the insurance companies do to get out of paying even when we are IN network is astounding. They’ll ask us for the notes from the appointment, I’ll send them, and then the insurance company just says they never got the records, and deny the claim. Then I have to appeal the claim, resend the notes, and then wait months for them to respond.
@@alejandrochataing5341 it’s been a long time but I did see it. Your comment makes me want to watch it now that I’ve been behind the scenes. When I watched it before I’d only been to the emergency room once on my parents insurance lol I was so naive to how shit works
Wrong, it is the governments involvement that increased prices as well as advancement in technology. My private insurance was $150 a month before Obamacare. The same policy is now $765 a month. No preexisting conditions or medical problems. If you want the same medical device that was available in 1960, it is more than likely the same price with the inflation added (if it is still available). However, if you want the carbon fiber, titanium, microprocessor version, it will cost substantially more.
@@marshall4759 You have been lied to by somebody. I suggest you stop listening to them and start thinking for yourself. Your premiums went up because the insurance company needed to generate more profit for shareholders. "Obamacare" was the insurance companies grifting the American taxpayers. People didnt get health care from the government, they got INSURANCE PLANS...
@@marshall4759Obama care or the individual mandate was thought up by Richard Nixon. It's a right wing Healthcare plan that only works for insurance companies and no one else. In some blue states Obama care only cost people around $40 a month. Still shit. And then obviously where ever you lived was charging you a lot more, immoral, wrong. Who knew right wing Healthcare plan made by the crook himself would've been bad? Wow 🤦♂️
@@marshall4759also, in what world do you live in where this issue started with Obamacare? This started with the insurance companies going wild and then the government backed their decision to go wild instead of using our trillion dollars in taxes a year to give that American people what they need, health care. The government subsidizes insurance companies, with our tax money, the insurance companies take that money and give us a deductible that covers nothing and then they ask us for more money on top of that and they give us nothing. It's always been that way and it's always been shit. You think your $150 insurance before obamacare would've covered major surgery? Thats a laugh. I remember way before obamacare/nixoncare people still complained about insurance and health care and said it was one of the nation's biggest problems.
Guess what happens if the patient doesn’t have insurance? The patient pays. Meaning Mr. big bad private surgeon sets the rates. So don’t blame insurance for you jackin up the price.
@@_pandart6435 Haha, the usa places dead last in life expectancy among first worrld countries even behind many 3rd world countries, but sure, whatever helps that boot stay tasty 😆
@@1objection because people choose to be huge, blobs of diabetic induced heart attacks...point being? If that's ur correlation to health insurance, then practice telling those fat-bodies that their insurance will be less if they decide to be healthier 🤷♂️
Ok quick breakdown for non Americans and Americans who don’t know. In America you pay for insurance, the more you pay the more hospitals you get access to in case of an emergency. But you also pay taxes, a lot of which go to the government for subsidies, which subsidies the healthcare industry. So for the ability to access the doctor without paying out of pocket, you not only pay a tax to the government that goes to the private healthcare sector, you also pay insurance which can be very limiting. But don’t worry, it gives us more freedom Edit: Hospitals in America mainly charge so much for tax reasons as well. Say they lose $300 for a session of your treatment. They will charge your insurance company maybe $2000 for the treatment. The company knows this is bs and will only pay out the $300 or maybe a bit more. What they don’t pay the hospital can write down and report to the government as a loss and get reimbursed by the government. As well the rest of that initial bill is footed to you so they profit from subsidies you pay for with taxes, direct reimbursement from the government, and whatever your insurance won’t cover assuming you have a bad plan for the wrong procedure
And the kicker is, those taxes could easily fund most of the healthcare system if the healthcare system in America was structured remotely like other countries.
@@tybahza5643Since when was it legal to criticize a foreign government in Germany? Since when was it legal to burn a foreign flag in Denmark? Since when was it legal to have an abortion in Ireland without going through pages of bureaucracy?
@aycc-nbh7289 you don't think there are weeks of beauracracy in the states for an abortion? Where is the right to sue your insurance provider in the states? The right to easily participate in democracy? The right to go to the hospital and receive treatment rather than to perish and not make your family inherit unplayable debt?
My dad was a surgeon and had his own practice. I remember when managed health care became a thing. He lost so much control over his standard of care and ability to practice most effectively
If you’re diabetic with bad insurance it’s likely that the insurance company will only pay for a certain amount of insulin, even if it’s not enough. God bless American Healthcare
Yea I worked with a diabetic guy barely making minimum wage and his insurance company wouldn't pay for his insulin because they claimed he made too much money or something I don't know or understand the full details. I just know there were a few weeks he'd come to work without taking any insulin because he couldn't afford it and he literally looked like he'd drop dead at any moment while working, it was crazy.
@@joshualipsonhips4640 It literally kills you when you don't have insulin! If you don't have Insulin your blood sugar rises until you die thanks to a hyperglycemic coma. Treatment like that is insane! He didn't just "look as if he might drop dead", he was rather close to _actually_ dropping dead.
I agree. I have a parent who is an endocrinologist and my cousin has diabetes. I remember my parent always coming home upset after dealing with an insurance company that refused to pay for the medication that they recommended. At the start of the pandemic, my parent gave higher doses of medication to their patients and told them to cut them in half because of the uncertainty of the next time they could get their medication. It really sucks to see this happening from an outside perspective and I wish I could do something to help.
@@fcasias7 Define "good insurance". I live in Germany and while it's not perfect and takes quite a chunk of the salaries so far I never had a problem with it. And I depend a lot on it due to epilepsy. Since over 10 years. While I don't die without medication it still makes sense to take it for obvious reasons. While I don't have diabetes I know some who do and those don't have any problems with the insurance. But that's just anecdotical. A special type of companies which are not aiming for the highest profit, but do compete, seems to be the way to go.
Until 2019, it was mandatory federally. If you didn't have insurance at some point during the year, you would have to pay a fine. Health insurance is the worst in the US. Literally destroys people's lives.
Yep. This is why we need Medicare for All. Under MfA, *_every_* doctor and *_every_* hospital would be in *_everyone's_* network. And none of that "preapproval" nonsense where you can't get treatment unless and until the bean counters at the insurance company decide to authorize it. (Medicare doesn't do that.) And because Medicare would be the only insurance company (i.e., a "single payer"), it would be in a powerful position to dramatically lower medical costs. And administrative costs as well.
"Medical Industrial complex!" A guy came up with the idea in 1980, Insurance companies owning hospitals and medical services, even retirement homes! Some have 50-70,000 employees! (Google it!)
Oh man, your ability to sum up these complex topics in really simple, yet funny and largely accurate snippets is Amazing! Sure everything is more complex, but I don't think I could describe it any more accurately in under 5 minutes, let alone 1! Keep it up!
@@sheet-son there is a different between uneducated and idiots, uneducated know they're stupid but want to learn, like him, idiots think they're smarter than everyone else who think they can understand more complex things than everyone else but they actually don't, like you, but alas you doesn't really said in your comment that you're also an idiot or not, so i might be wrong
@@ferdinandb.s8975 you typed all that to say that he used the term idiot correctly. If you think you can convey any unbiased solid information on the healthcare system in a 60 second clip then sadly you are a useful idiot.
@@Later_Dooberas president? Probably not for a while, no. The presidential race isn't the only race happening, though! Your representatives in the federal and state legislatures are super important in making these changes, and your vote is so important in determining who gets elected to those positions!
Yes I saw that with my $52K bill from the hospital outpatient surgery center for basal cell surgery on my face under general anesthesia. Insurance paid about $2500.
Priceless truth. Some insurance companies also retain the right to drop doctors from their plan at their discretion; so basically same as right to fire, just like an employer employee situation. Hospitals are already complaining about abuses within the alternative insurance programs offered instead of traditional Medicare, at a time baby boomers are moving into retirement: they are creating monolpolies using the heath care system, so that any heath care workers that don’t align with them have difficulty working independently from them, while also forcing patients to use doctors they have under contracts. Would be interesting what would happen if someone started sounding this alarm and asking Congress to investigate how this is beneficial to the people, over the way things have been pre COVID. Also who actually owns these companies covertly taking over Americans healthcare choices?, as another form of control of freedom of choice. Great video. God’s Blessings 🙏🏼
My brother had cancer and needed chemotherapy and 2 surgeries. He was sent to the hospital after diagnosis, went into surgery after a 90 minute wait, was placed on chemo after, had someone sent to drive him to and from his chemo sessions, had a follow up surgery after chemo, and is now cancer free. He paid a total of $35 for parking. We live in Canada Another story: My girlfriend's mom had COVID and was placed on life support for 3 days, needed a ventilator for weeks after, was given a private room, and ended up spending about 2 months in hospital. They paid nothing out of pocket
Canada is nice along with many other countries. I wish the US was like that. I have major back and neck pain. I just got done getting a shot in the neck for pain only for it not to work. We set another go to try a new location and insurance deined the request stating I need to do a bunch of things to which I was already doing. Anyways they fixed it and was approved. My medication is another one thing that pisses me off. They give me 2 of them for 90 days and then the 3rd one is 30 days ( 4 1 gram pills ) and they will not fill it because it cost like 400 dollars for the month because its 120 pills worth. I have a bunch of stories as to how dealing with medical care and insurance. My Doctor and her staff are far better than my former doctor in getting things approved.
@@kozmikmercu but... We don't. I have friends that work for ReMax who buy and sell homes, hell I own property and nothing was given to us or taken from us. We have the option to choose what doctors we use, I can go to any walk in clinic I want, I can change my family doctor if I don't like them. I think you have an skewed idea of what political system Canada uses. Outside of the fact that there isn't any true _communist_ country that exists, we are nowhere close to countries that identify as "communist". If we're talking _socialism_ , then Canada is more socialist than America, but only when it really comes to healthcare... I mean, how do you pay your teachers, firefighters, and police? You have a welfare system right? You have transit systems, public roads, public schools, and garbage workers, right? That's all paid for through taxes, they're SOCIALized programs (socialist programs)
Absolute truth, and the fact that we have allowed insurance companies to run the medicine show makes me crazier than a long tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs.
@@lowkeylokii4205 I think the phrase is "more nervous than a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs" but people kindof mess up the phrases sometimes either because they haven't heard them enough, or heard them wrong their whole lives lol
I’m in the UK, it really scares me (and others) that our NHS (which we love dearly) is slowly being privatised. We see and hear how it can be in places like the US if you can’t afford it and it’s just mind blowing that adequate health care isn’t treated as a basic right for all, no matter if they have money, insurance or whatever. Yes we all automatically pay a small (you don’t even notice it) amount out of your wages each month towards it but even if you don’t work or have never worked you still have access to medical care without any costs or worry.
Right?? Conservatives are trying to do that in Canada too. Why?! You think you ain't gonna get sick or hurt ever?! The politicians strip more and more out of the provincial healthcare budgets, and then when, SURPRISE, they start to struggle to meet everyone's needs, the politicians go, "Oh, dear, it's looks like there public healthcare system just can't actually handle things. What a shame. Perhaps we should let those who can afford it go to private doctors, you know, ease the burden on the public system some?" 😠😠😠 The Premier of Ontario gave the provincial system like $1.3 BILLION less than they had budgeted last year, ends up! DURING A PANDEMIC!! What kind of a jerk even does that?!
The problem is that we have technologies that are so expensive to produce and administer that we would quickly bankrupt ourselves (as in, the global economy) if we covered every procedure that was optimal for the patient. So someone has to decide who is treated and what they're treated with. Doctors are going to advocate for their patients to have the best, especially if the patient and dr are not paying. Someone has to advocate for the economic side. That's either a government, a hospital, or an ins. company The problem isn't privatization, it's corruption (money bleeding out when companies "take profits"). I personally agree with publicized healthcare but I can understand how somewhere like Russia that would actually be way way way way way worse
@@seeker296 This is actually incorrect in that, our "administrative overhead" (read, insurance company and pharmaceutical company profits) now take huge amounts of money out. If we went to a system where the government just paid for care, where we all paid for our medical care through our taxes, and pharmaceutical prices were capped, we could still get all our procedures, AND... *we would actually all save money.* Really. The insurance and the pharma companies are gobbling up THAT MUCH MONEY. We would also get better care. We would not have to fight an insurance company to get care. We could just go to the doctor. It would be free at the point of service, because it already came out of our taxes. ...People die every day because they can't afford treatment or medication.😠
@@seeker296 As for the argument that capping pharmaceutical prices will limit medical research money? Big pharma collectively spends more on advertising than on pharmaceutical research. The commercials the pharmaceutical industry puts out on the subject are...well...🙄
It is. What country are you talking about? Only in countries with socialized medicine are you denied based on government programs and quotas. In the US they just Bill You Later.
@@shannonbarber6161 did you not see the video? At the start it literally says US healthcare system then proceeds to say the person was denied something simply due to insurance reasons that's what I'm talking about. The fact that someone loses the right to something potentially life saving simply due to insurance
Healthcare is a business not a right! If you want it PAY for it! This is why I quit working in healthcare! You entitled people expect I should not get paid to save your life! God Forbid I can get paid so I can have a place to live or buy food! You do not deserve healthcare! Get a job and pay for it like a normal person! The solutions is eliminate Terrible socialized healthcare. Force Insurance, Hospitals and Pharmacies to pulically list prices so you can shop X-rays, MRI's and pay actual cost of services. That would drop the price for the patient to 1/20th of current costs. Insurance companies can legally steal from you under Socialized healthcare and charge you for other people's care. You want better health care eliminate Socialism and make it cost competitive so hospitals have to lower costs to compete for patients. Socialism let's the insurance companies decide your level of care. Capitalism let's you decide YOUR OWN LEVEL OF CARE!
@@wolfbrother9025 Good job, you caught the lie. This is literally not how this would play out ever. But it's a nice fantasy people who just want to hate the system like to play out in their heads.
@Cdaragorn why is it a lie? If you're in an HMO and the doctor is out of network, this is exactly what could happen. It's up to the patient to ask whether or not a doctor is in-network, and if the patient forgets to ask and the doctor is out of network, it could end up being a very costly mistake. As for insurance denials unrelated to this video though, yes, they do happen, and don't try to pretend that they don't.
This is precisely why providers (doctors) are banding together to negotiate with or cut out insurance companies. It’s also why hospital systems are merging and why insurers like Optum (United Healthcare) are flat out buying up and hiring providers. It’s a battle to determine which healthcare services are rendered for an acceptable cost. And all at the expense of patients.
Yup. That's 100% true. I worked in medical care for 40 years. It's tough not being able to treat the patients without the insurance company interference. 😪
While I totally agree, what's gonna happen? The insurance companies will magically develop a conscience? Or will the lawmakers who are paid atrocious amounts of money by said insurance companies will do...what..? Fluff the pillows under the insurance ceos feet? Give them their choice of hookers with tiniest, softest hands for hand jobs?
@Alex first and foremost, healthcare in the USA is not the best, it is one of the worst, but it is the first in terms of costs. Second, a medical school debt of 400,000 is really a lot, you probably won't spend more than 100,000 (usually 40-60,000). The reason US healthcare is expensive is not that doctors get paid so much, (most of them don't) but that insurance companies want to make money (and no, an increase in the number of insurance companies would not drive prices down). third, it is not true that more people die in the UK from poor health care, in fact life expectancy in the US is lower than in the UK. (U can verify evrything with a quick google research) It seems to me that your political outlook affects your idea of health care, the fact that the rich have access to the best care does not make health care good in the United States.
@Alessandro Zatelli holy shit please tell me where you were able to get a 12 year Doctorate/Doctorin Degree for 40,000 to 60,000 because I had no idea!! Lmfao gtfoh dumbass literally 1 year is 45 to 60 thousand a year so more like 500,000 in debt once in the medical practice field is more realistic, and go back to your google searches for more than a quick second and gain some real knowledge and insight and not just some bullshit article that merely fits your mediocre blurts of misinformation 🤣🤣🤣
@Alex Dude, what's the data for you to say that "USA healthcare is better"? Longer waiting is nothing compared to being able to be cured no matter your financial history. Free healthcare isn't socialist, is just common sense. As being paid for a job isn't capitalist, is again, common sense.
Insurance companies, assuming they should exist at all, should be owned by the customers. They should not be allowed to exist to merely generate the highest possible profit for shareholders at the expense of the healthcare industry.
For the people who complain about taxes for free healthcare, put it this way. With taxes, you pay an amount of money towards a group every month/year in exchange for getting healthcare when you eventually need it. With insurance, you pay an amount of money towards a group every month/year in exchange for getting healthcare when you eventually need it- if they decide you can get it. Sometimes they say you don’t need it and you just get ripped off
ikr. Americans spend more money per capita in the world for healthcare, yet their health outcomes haven't been improving for several decades now? I come from a small European country, which is by no means perfect, but at least there is no such thing as "copay" "in network" "deductible" or even "hospital bill". Yes we pay for it in taxes, but it't better than this...
Agreed and they charge you more as it's a profit driven business. Public Healthcare tax would likely be less or same as it would remove the profit margins. And you never have to worry about getting covered or not. In network out of network or overpaying or underpaying as all hospitals would need to agree to accept it. Government can negotiate prices and keep costs down eliminating profit factor. Government can pay doctors a fair fee. And adding free education system would eliminate the debt that doctors and specialists often have to combat for first few years of their lives keeping the entire system effectively fair.
The amount of times a specialist said I wasn’t in their network confused the crap out of me, as someone who lived in Toronto, Canada. American health care has given me so much anxiety, I am so glad I’m a dual citizen. Definitely leaving America when I’m older and need more health care. Living in the US is so overrated.
It’s frustrating, especially when you're paying more in premiums. Health insurance networks have been shrinking for a while now. I think it’s tied to the rising costs of care and the pressure on insurance companies to control expenses.
Exactly. And if you have any medical needs that go beyond the basic, you’re almost guaranteed to pay out-of-pocket. I’ve been thinking about switching plans, but with all the changes, it’s hard to know what's the best option.
That’s where I think managing your overall portfolio comes into play. Health insurance is just one piece of the puzzle. You’ve got to balance it with other aspects, like your investments, savings, and even retirement planning. All of it ties together when it comes to long-term financial security
Absolutely. I mean, think about it-if you get hit with a big medical expense and your insurance doesn’t cover it, it could drain your investments quickly. That's why I started looking at ways to balance everything, not just my insurance but also how my investments could cover any gaps
That’s smart. I’ve been doing the same. I actually had a free consultation with Joseph Nick Cahill, a CFP I heard about. He helped me see how my health insurance choices fit into my broader financial plan.
Oh, I’ve heard of Joseph. He’s got a solid reputation, doesn’t he? I’ve been meaning to talk to someone like that. It’s tough navigating all these different areas-insurance, investments, retirement-and making sure they work together
LOL, I'm an insurance broker and I have had this same conversation with 6 family friends who are doctors. 2 of them are my age. Thank you for speaking truth.
Please explain why it costs 500 dollars with no insurance for a basic check up? Sine insurance is the bad guy and “sets the price” why is it so high when you have 0 insurance? Shouldn’t the private doctor lower the price?
@@AG-yc7vt it is dependent 9n the doctor and if they have a private practice or are part of a Medical Group. If they are a part of a medical group, then restrictions will be put in place for their billing and it would be best if you did have insurance, because they would have pretty much made a deal with the insurance company to charge anyone a higher price, if they do not have insurance. This is legal in all 50 U.S. States. It is kind of the same question as, why do all cell phone companies seem to get along?
I don't know but it really should be. I don't even live in the US and I've had to deal with health insurance taking control of my health. I have a mole like thing on my leg that doctors warn could be cancerous. But insurance won't pay for the removal because it's "cosmetic". Yes Karen my cancer is cosmetic 🙂
If that's true, then the fault most likely lies with the private health company for signing a shitty contract. I don't think there should be laws to restrict scamming potential. It's up to both sides to make sure they're not agreeing to one. If you do sign a contract (as long as you're under no external threat), then it should be your problem alone 🤷♂️. Don't blame the scammer for scamming an idiot, blame the idiot for not hiring a competent lawyer.
For the same reason a lot of shady shit that big corporations do isn't illegal - because they pay immense amounts of money to lobby the government and when said lobbyists retire they join the very government departments they were lobbying to begin with. In other words, the US is actually controlled by the very monopolies that its laws should have prevented forming in the first place (gotta love unchecked, unfettered capitalism).
It's not broken, it's working as designed. That's the problem. Can't fix something that's not broken. It needs to be replaced. That applies to medicine and education and probably a bunch of other things.
@@Rutabega_NG i feel like a lot of the major issues the US faces is like a massive tangled knot of wires that are impossible to work through. it feels like voting alone often isnt enough to incite any reasonable change
*HEALTHCARE IS A RIGHT* funny but I can’t find it in the constitution anywhere. The founders must have left that one out. What I do find is the 2A. And yet I never hear leftists clamoring that gun ownership is a right and that other tax payers have to buy me any. Yah, I don’t hear that about bibles or laptops either. It’s only their sacred cow they clamor about. How bizarre…
@funinthechamber4252 you really think someone who is further right is going to fix the healthcare system? they are the ones keeping it broken because the insurance companies are funding them.
They also tell doctors what medications to prescribe and the doctor has to go through steps of testing of course the cheapest, even if the doctor wants to go straight to the test that gives the most answers.
@@kennethmasters9329 Not really feasible for a lot of people at the prices insurance companies charge, also, chances are you're still paying it. It's just over time so it is disguised to you.
And this is why having a rare medical disease or condition sucks so much. Finding a doctor who knows how to treat you and is able to accept your insurance is like looking for the short piece of straw in a haystack.
I know I'm making a large assumption here..but since I'd assume your American. You were given the opportunity to have nationwide free healthcare a few years ago remember? I thought most of you thought it was a terrible idea and would "bankrupt" you even though multiple other countries have a universal free system payed for by everyone which all work just because they made access to healthcare a basic human right?
@@FuzzzehOG Obama didn't try to install single payer since he understood that the overhaul would destroy the American Healthcare system. And also, it's not free, stop claiming it is free because that's dishonest framing, because you pay for it in taxes, in fact in most places with single payer, like Canada, 25% of your taxes go into it, which considering their tax rate is outrageous. And in the US Healthcare is a human right, because we have Medicare, medicaid, and emergency insurance which along with the main privatized system, which does have issues, but aren't nearly as bad as most other nation's(the spark notes version of the issue is that FDR prevented wages from rising leading to companies offering health insurance and to make their deals sweeter they colluded with hospitals to make their nominal prices outrageous to make the insurance seem better). Since the US's are due to regulation preventing competitive drug prices, while places like Canada's are due to them treating people like they're cars leading to surgeries, such as hip replacements, taking about 41 weeks to get done after diagnosis and scheduling, which can take another 10 weeks (and these are the generous numbers since scheduling can take up to 30 weeks) in a good year, with that number growing by 3x under covid.
@@nope929 your just wrong though in every way. As demonstrated by the multiple countries that transitioned away from health insurance, it was far fucking easier than regularly hauling large insurance companies to congress to give them a good old telling off...which results in 0 action. Yes the healthcare is not necessarily free, I'll agree on that..but what I won't entertain is the idea that bankrupting entire families because of preventable diseases and big pharma saying they'll lose profits. Good! They should lose profits for being heartless money making machines that use people's misery solely to gain. That is the real reason the US didn't switch, it had nothing to do with the cost. Just to point out. To have full medicare cover you spend around $150 a month. I live in the UK, my contribution is far...far less and I won't have to pay into this my entire life as once I retire I won't be earning to pay in any further but guess what...I'll still be covered for all range of medical issues until my dying day. This is because instead of allowing for profit organisations to have their say on a system which they put nothing into we force companies to adhere to sane pricing laws for the benefit of the British population, not investors pockets. They're also held to higher standards might I add. Also using the point that paying for healthcare means you get surgery faster makes no sense, its damn obvious that if you pay for something that is usually free your generally gonna get served quicker. For all surgery there is a waiting list meaning whoever pays most gets served first..implying the system is broken and again serves only those most who can afford it.
And that's if you even have a diagnosis. If you don't, when you make an appointment and try to explain your uncommon symptoms there's a 90% chance the doctor or nurse practitioner will try to gaslight you into thinking it's not as bad as it is.
@@FuzzzehOG listen if you want to understand America, understand that there really isn't a most. Everything is divided in half. 50% believed what ever Trump and Fox News said, even if it was to their own detriment. Lots of his supporters claiming they didn't want it, didn't realize they already had it because the assumed the official name was Obamacare. I live in California more of a 65-35 split for "liberal stuff," like affordable health insurance and medical care and taxing Billionaires. People don't agree, they don't want to meet in the middle, and "Don't Look Up." Is a clear summation of American insanity.
That slowly dawning realisation of "yes, I do actually work for the insurance company..." Makes the NZ health care look a lot less broken in comparison.
@@TD32333 yeah, the only ones that are worse are in broken impoverished countries where they just can't do much better with the resources they have....and hell, some of _Them_ are beating us. It's a barbaric disgrace.
Well do take care. These vampire companies don’t stop at anything. My country has mostly free healthcare but lo and behold they bribe their way into the system and now the corrupt govt has announced plans to shift the whole country’s health system to the oh so good American Health insurance company based model of health deliverance. Sadly our people are so blind to see it, no one is challenging it.
I'm so happy to see this channel! I've been trying to tell people for at least the past decade that those who really run this country are none other than the infamous insurance companies. They make decisions that we don't have a choice in and many aspects of our day-to-day life. So if you want to make it change oh, it's not only the politicians but the people that purchased the politicians as well be aware that it is your insurance companies
My therapist of 4 years is not in network with my new insurance company, so I get to decide if I want to pay a huge amount to continue my therapy with the same person I've been seeing for years, or if I want to completely start over with a different person who doesn't know me or my psychological history... I also work with insurance at a healthcare provider office and I see out of network issues all the time This whole video was too real and I want to cry a lil bit
Currently loosing my current health insurance because I can't work there with a current mental health issue I'm having. My ability to continue getting mental health treatment is currently up in the air because of the mental health issue I'm being treated for, and I don't even have it the worst. Hell, this isn't even the worst _I've_ had it. The people who've set up this system need to be institutionalized. I'm not even joking. They're clearly a danger to society. A padded room, one with bars, or one with dirt on 6 sides are the only places any of them belong.
@@blades. anything related to childhood trauma typically take significantly longer than the standard 6 months to a year. If you think you can manage sexual abuse, physical abuse, psychological abuse, and how those issues manifest in your life over the course of a few years you completely have no idea how trauma and therapy work
@@blades. I had a professor in my counseling masters program who had clients that came to see her for 25 years. The stories she heard from those clients would turn your stomach with how depraved humans can act towards each other. Trauma sucks man,
That's why you're being ripped off for insurance. Insurance isn't the problem, predatory hospitals shacking down insurance companies is the problem. And the problem will only get worse with universal healthcare.
@@Caroline1261 I guess the woman who lost both legs to an infection that could been fixed because it took so long to see a specialist didn't have a problem.
There was a very good quote on another video, I can’t remember who posted it though, it went something like this “The American healthcare system works fine, it’s just not designed to benefit the patient”
Well, insurance is generally a good thing. Getting a good policy is an important part of financial planning. It’s just the healthcare system in America is totally fucked up.
Insurance technically is cool; Statistically, one in a 100 people will break a leg this year. Me and other 99 guys will each put 1/100 of the medical expenses into a pool and whoever breaks a leg gets that money. Really good if organized well.
@@creengton8594 except you don't get to choose and pay for the supplier. Your employer does. He then sells it onto you in exchange for man hours. Which means if they can sign things like co pay and minimum charges etc into the agreement the insurance company will offer it to them for less. The one size fits all fight to the buttom approach is why American healthcare sucks.
Thats why i say to everyone with permanent health problems to come here to germany. We welcome everyone willing to work and integrate. Our country is not perfekt by far but ive got several surgerys and never saw a bill for them. Well ok once because i ordered a pizza. And thats all.
We're paying more to get worse outcomes, patients and practitioners hate the system and yet so many people bristle at the thought of adopting ideas from systems that work. Only in America.
@@MrDekuchan how do I move there sincerely I have chronic health issues and I need a masters in psychology or social work but then I am good to go as a mental health professional i am also married we are pretty poor I am willing to work through school remotely i just need to get out of the USA it's getting scary here with all the facism looming in the air.
Yep. A lot of Americans argue that this is better than Universal because "we don't have to wait long time for appointments." So, I was raised in a country with a Universal HC system, but im also American, and I've been living here for almost a decade. Yes, the equivalent to "PCP" appointments are booked for up to 8 months (sometimes. I've heard others with longer waits), and specialists take less time. We also have emergency rooms where you can walk in if you're very ill and need ASAP assistance, and we won't charge a $100+ copay and $25 tylenol😒😒 plua other fees. The wait times are long because people go for even a cold, flu, cough, or headache (abusing free healthcare or low-cost healthcare). Here, we pay hundreds for health insurance, we still pay copay, and we still pay for meds. Sorry, but I still have to wait 3 months+ for an appointment with my PCP and with specialists, it's worst. Called OB/GYN, and they said at least 7 months. I was like, WHAT?! Doctors can't treat patients accordingly because everything is subject to insurance approval or how much the insurance allows us to spend. The ER is expensive, wait times are LOOOOONG, and we think thrice before going to the ER because it is tedious and costs a lot. Doctors and nurses are not nice to people because they are bound to insurance policies and they have to abide because people have this misconception that they have money because theh make "good money", in reality, they have a sh!t ton of debt from student loans. So their hands are bound by policies, patients are frustrated with them, and they deliver poor services out of frustration as well. It is a complete chaos and sh!t show. So, do I rather have it free or low-cost and wait for tbe next appointment to be in 8 months? Yeah. I still have the opportunity to go to a private clinic or hospital if I want to be seen faster, but it's my choice and I know that doctors have the freedom to say, "here, we need to do these test and we'll do it asap. It'll cost this much or nothing at all." But getting surprise bills after getting treated, man? Lawyers and insurance companies have screwed up the whole system. Lawyers help insurance companies get away with lawsuits and sh!t. "We the People" are here to only get the scraps and get indoctrinated to believe we have the best. So sad.
So very, very true. I grew up in Toronto and live near NYC now. I just saw my PCP for an annual checkup and it took THREE MONTHS to get an appointment. I never had to wait that long to see a GP in Toronto. Two, three weeks, max. Americans always like to criticize socialized medicine, saying how bad it is for the government to dictate the kind of care you get, but they don't realize that they actually have it worse, because their healthcare is dictated by insurance companies, which are driven by corporate greed. And they still have co-pays and co-insurance on top of the hundreds or thousands of dollars in premiums they are already paying. The great irony is that health insurance companies don't care about the patient's health so much as their own botton line.
He's not in movies for the same reason movies like the death wish remake are about imaginary rape gangs instead of a dude using violence to get even with the insurance execs that rape our wallets every paycheck and still have the gall to deny lifesaving treatment.
If only there were laws we could repeal that would allow people to take their insurance anywhere. I don't remember not being able to buy a car because my dealership was "out of network."
If only out of touch red state idiots didn't force those laws to be put in that health care act that protected insurance companies instead of making them more or less obsolete as was the original intent of said health care act.
@@magoo9279 but you would prefer those tax dollars to get funneled into some pharmaceutical CEO or Defense Contractor's off shore bank account right? Instead of using it for infrastructure which should include education and healthcare by design anyway?
I’ll never forget being on a bed in the middle of the procedure at UConn, and the admin walked in all upset because she didn’t think I had insurance. I was so embarrassed! Heathcare is such a nightmare.
@ngf5077 And in those "first world" socialized medicine countries, wait 6 to 12 months for a surgery... but die before you get it. Oh and get taxed a minimum of 40% of your income. Yeah, so much better.
I will never understand the mentality that prefers for everybody to fight against each other, clawing over each other to reach the top of the pile of bodies. There are many examples of countries where higher taxes (properly managed, so higher incomes genuinely pay more tax) is used for genuine common good. Even if you are a rich fat idiot with your own house, car and private health insurance and all that crap, how could you even sleep comfortably in your bed knowing that your selfishness was the cause of the majority not being able to live a decent quality life, because your country has no adequate social healthcare, housing, transport etc? I mean, how could you live your life happily, knowing that? Most people should be able to answer this, I think, because most people do seem to be selfish arseholes, as far as I can see. The only mystery to me is how any countries actually have made so much progress in this direction. Maybe the example of the USA shows those other countries the warning of what they could turn into if they don't look after their citizens. I mean, if a country doesn't exist for the benefit of its citizens and residents, then what's the point?
We should abolish the health insurance industry and send all the highest ranking employees of those companies to an island to star in a survivor style reality show for the rest of their lives.
You think a bunch of government bureaucrats would do better? The number of administrators in the medical system has risen about 3000% since passing the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare. If you wonder why health care costs rise much higher than the rate of inflation those high paid administrators are probably the reason.
@@CherryBotV2 You think there are many hospital administrators who make under 100k? I think there is a medical industrial complex in this country that includes the greedy insurance companies. I know a bit since I work for it.
Excellent explanation! 👊🏾 The insurance companies have realized that a healthcare provider is more concerned about getting paid than how much they are paid.
My wife and I have finally found good doctors who we trust and will actually listen to us. The insurance company won't compromise on the new contract and we're probably going to lose our doctors.
I actually never had this problem until I moved back to Oregon. When I lived in Arkansas and Idaho, every doctor, specialist and quack with in 100 miles was in-network for my healthcare (and it cost me far less for my premium AND my deductible was super low). When I moved back to Oregon I could only buy a PPO. And these seem to be predominantly based on specific "private" networks (Legacy, Providence or Kiaser). This sucks because my GP is in-network and my OBGYN is out of network because she's in private practice. Even though she has privileges at my in-network facilities I still have to pay out-of-network prices because she is not an actual part of the network. It's absurd.
Insurance companies hire people that can do coding in order to determine whether or not certain procedures will or won't be covered according to their coverage. The people themselves more than likely have not worked in the healthcare field. Higher ups, that have more training in how billing has to be done according to rules, mandates or laws still have to deal with government deciding how much to give them, on top of what tax payers pay out in premiums every month. Insurance is one heck of a racket though, because they do make money hand over fist either way.
Yeh I've paid £2500 in national insurance since April alone (9 months) and I haven't been to the hospital in many years. Yeh it saves paying out a big lump sum for anything but knowing there is some overweight jobless benefit scrounging leech out there who I'm paying for does not sit well with me. I'd rather pay insurance to cover just me not those who aren't willing to get up off their asses
The part about this that’s honestly the most screwed up (in my experience) is how much power insurance companies have over letting you in and out of residential care/detox/etc. I checked myself into resi voluntarily for the first time when I was 18, in a misguided attempt to “man up” lol - but I definitely needed to be there. I’d needed blood transfusions to even meet the minimum criteria to get in. The first 2 weeks they wouldn’t let me walk because I was so bradychardic. But on day 30, my insurance saw I had gained exactly 5lbs, and determined I didn’t need that level of care. Which meant I had to physically leave the premises by midnight. I was in Utah, in January! Again, l was 18, didn’t know anything about insurance, but I knew that they’d screwed up. (Cut to three months later, me laying in the ICU with metabolic acidosis.) I’m no longer a teenager and no longer fighting with insurance companies, but it still makes me really angry they have that kind of power, instead of, ya know, *doctors* making *medical assessments.*
Abolish health insurance honestly, they caused the huge spike in medical prices. Go to a full retail system and instead of employers having to pay for employees insurance have employers provide HSA accounts that they deposit into as well as their employees
@@KenderGuy Yeah I know a few people who had to get either chemo or cancer related surgeries pushed back when the hospitals were all at overflow. It’s an awful situation bc yeah no shit don’t wanna leave cancer unchecked, but sending an immunocompromised patient to a hospital full of covid patients would also put them at risk. I definitely think the patients should get to decide which risk they wanna take though. Just a shit situation all around.
Okay but this was also super educational for me! I was just wondering why I struggling to find a new dentists office that took my insurance and basically said "why do they all take different insurers instead of all of them?" So thanks for the explanation lol
"Health insurance" used to be a thing to prevent you from being bankrupted by sudden expensive treatments. Now it's a weird credit system to pay for day to day care, and you still pay an arm and a leg for big treatments. Even with insurance, hospital births can go well into five figures out pocket.
Work in Healthcare and this frustrates us all the time. I deal with cancer pts and sometimes we have to delay scans and treatments because insurance companies sometimes take forever to approve a scan or they require a peer to peer consultation. Very frustrating
😒😩 that's an absolute disgrace and those insurance company's should be barred from practicing,but unlikely to ever happen as wherever there is big money there is big corruption and no doubt in my mind political parties are getting their wallets fattened to keep it the way it is 🤔
My uncle had soft tissue sarcoma and his temperate went through the roof and he passed out and stopped breathing a few times and had to be brought back. Insurance didn’t cover the hospital bill because they said it had nothing to do with his cancer. He unfortunately passed away last month
This is so true. Started working in the healthcare system last year and I have to turn away so many people for being “out of network”. Some of these people were in network in 2021 then when 2022 came it changed and some people have to find all new doctors. It’s so crazy
It amazes me that people don't want national health care because they "don't want the government to decide if you get medical care" but they don't mind if for-profit insurance companies decide if you will get medical care.
If you have a private practice and dont want insurance overlords then just charge your patients an affordable ammount so they can pay for the service out of pocket. Bet you'd have more patients than you could shake a stick at.
Okay - maybe and quite possibly the “affordable”!amount is too low to support his business- that’s why we are in this problem in the first place- eliminate the Federal Reserve private central banking model and get money out of politics would be a real solution - don’t worry people will miss the mark and support your argument which just creates an endless loop of suffering because your argument not focus on the heart of the problem - who controls money!!!!
@@WeJamWorld the federal reserve and private banking are what make these things affordable lol. sorry bro but without the federal reserve u wouldn't be a bitcoin billionaire 😂
Whatever you are doing is very brave of you. I have seen a very few man of intellect to stand for themselves. Just be safe, insurance company might not like this. If you can stand strong, trust me you are capable enough to bring a revolution in the health sector of the world.
That's not even the worst of it. Wait till you find out that after paying hundreds of dollars in premiums every month, you still have to meet an annual deductible before the insurance will start paying and even then, you still have to pay co-pays and co-insurance (meaning you must pay your 20% of the cost before the insurance will pay their 80% share).
@@dream-ui2gp if you ever need anything no. Let's say just a surgery like appendectomy the most common surgery can cost anywhere from 10,000-35,000. Now you'd assume you would have an ambulance bill if it was an emergency and that can be around 1200, and the cost of the ER, imaging, test etc. Or let's say you go to the doctor that can cost 300-600 and then again imaging, test, etc. So at the low end and everything goes perfect it's 11k, but probably be a lot more. That's just for a basic surgery, now if you cancer or anything complicated get ready to be fucked. Insurance is very much needed sadly.
@@bobhanson1037 Thanks for explaining clearly. So is insurance a middle man between patients and doctors? If someone is healthy and does not usually need healthcare wouldn't this just be a waste of money? Like the only person profiting off this trade is the insurance people?
@@dream-ui2gp if you go look at what US hospitals charge for random shit like aspirin, you'll see a big problem there. Every part of the system above the people actually providing the care to the patients is absolutely broken beyond comprehension. We'd honestly probably be better off scrapping the entire system and just treating it like disaster relief where we just try our best to get supplies to the people doing the work at the ground level and trusting them to act in good faith while we put a more functional system in place while they deal with keeping people alive.
Have you all heard about concierge functional medicine Healthcare system or your patient pays $150 a month and you don't have to deal with insurance companies anymore they mail out the claim and you get to actually help your patient not deal with a bunch of insurance companies. Just saying....
@@yesitsme1642 its like a therapist, they wouldn’t be there unless you paid them, I don’t blame them though, if I wasted half my life in school just getting ready for a job then I would only care about it for the pay as well.
Meanwhile in the UK the state owns all of the hospitals and pays all of the doctors directly. If I get ill… I go to get treated, get the help I need, and leave. Private treatment is available and it is cheaper thanks to the NHS being available for everyone from homeless people to billionaires and being used by 80% of the population. But when the system was created doctors didn’t want it because they said it would give the state too much control and the British medical association fiercely protested it so the minister for health at the time bribed them and said the famous quote… “I stuffed their mouths with gold”. Since 1948 when it was created as the worlds first fully universal and free at the point of delivery healthcare service people have always loved the principles on which it provides care to us, it’s just the lack of funding which we all hate.
The NHS is failing terribly, 17 months to see a specialist for urgent care, ambulances backed up outside of A&E for hours, patients on corridors having to urinate in front of everyone and their visitors, no mental health care for the most seriously ill and 2yr wait for the rest. Worlds a mess
I'll never deny the system here in the US is busted, but here it's illegal to deny emergency care even to someone without insurance, and you can generally get care in a timeframe of hours and days versus weeks and months. My opinion is that much of the mess in our system is caused by bureaucratic bloat(both corporate and governmental) as well as corporate greed. Personally I believe health care should be completely privatized or under the purview of the Church, with only very limited governmental interference(i.e. the aforementioned law where emergency care cannot be denied.) Basically corporations and the Government butt out.
It's like when my mom needed emergency major surgery on her ankle. The only available combination of doctors and hospitals they'd pay for had her getting orthopedic surgery at the heart hospital by an orthopedic surgeon who doesn't work there
This is why we need Medicare for All. Under MfA, *_every_* doctor and *_every_* hospital would be in *_everyone's_* network. And none of that "preapproval" nonsense where you can't get treatment unless and until the insurance company decides to pay. (Medicare doesn't do that.) And because Medicare would be the only insurance company (i.e., a "single payer"), it would be in a powerful position to dramatically lower medical costs. And administrative costs as well.
The US doesn't have a healthcare system, we have a health insurance system.
Good
Bingo. The sooner we can stop conflating the two, the better.
I refuse to call it a "healthcare system" anymore. It's a "medical industry". It's not about caring for a patient's health, it's about making money from medical conditions.
There isn't much the American people can do about it, since no political party is willing to do anything about it.
@@brokeboy87 Why are we relying on known corrupt liars to fix our problems? Why would they fix it?
Insurance companies need to be sued for practicing medicine without a license.
The licenses were half of how it got that way.
They have doctors with licenses deciding to approve it deny claims
@@danielshannon167 That insurance doctor didn't examine the patient.
@@danielshannon167You mean the doctors that work for the insurance companies? Would you trust the car salesman that worked for the dealership?
Insurance is legal theft
Gotta love non-medical professionals holding weird absurd amounts of power over the functions of the healthcare system.
They don’t. Insurance companies have doctors making coverage decisions. Also, whoever is paying should decide
Welcome to Capitalism! Brought to you by literal loan sharks and a staggering amount of war crimes!
@@bidmcms3 yeah and the doctors are working FOR the insurance companies to make this decisions... hmmm conflict of interest much? and No they aren't paying, the patient pay THEM money. So by that logic the patient gets to decide?
@@bidmcms3 Even if there wasn't a conflict of interest in doctors working for the insurance company there's still a lot of problems with it. Remember when everyone was getting all upset over "death panels" with Obamacare- that happens every day in health insurance. Doctors provide consultation, but they don't make the ultimate decision of what the company will cover or not cover. They may say these 5 treatments are life saving and essential and the insurance company will say yeah but we're only going to cover 4 (and likely non-medical professionals will make the decision which ones they are going to cover based off of the doctors report and finances). Also insurance companies don't hire that many doctors to consult. They're asking doctors to know the ins and outs of multiple specialties, e.g. when is this necessary to live vs just a quality of life thing, and keep up with the latest treatments in those fields.
It's messed up
@@danielyuen8691 I don't get it, I thought the problem was that they had _no_ doctors making coverage decisions. Are you suggesting only medical professionals should own insurance companies?
As a medical biller, this is dystopian and super accurate.
I finished a program in medical coding with a little medical billing component. I learned enough about how medical billing works (or doesn't) to know I never wanted to do it as a job!
Any human in the U.S. knows this is "super accurate".
And yet too many are willing to play that ... game
@@1bootliz yeah I went to school for medical coding too thought I’d go into billing but went into collections instead (collecting from insurance companies on claims) but I ended up in the specialty I wanted which was substance abuse. I wanted to make a difference but…. These insurance companies have broken my spirit.
@@nickimorelli9991 most humans in the US don’t have to literally argue with insurance companies day in and day out to get these covered and see the wide scale of the system in a way people with my job do.
When I was 14 I had a 16-hour surgery done on my stomach for various reasons, about 5.5hours in the doctor was told to stop and sew me up, I was being transferred to another hospital to finish the surgery. when he asked why they told him bc insurance said they won't pay for this hospital. The doctor outright refused saying if I close her up now her survival chance drops significantly, he proceeded to tell them him he'd figure it out afterward and if it came down to it he'd pay for the surgery. Needless to say, he finished, I survived, and he came thru for me. An amazing doctor. Sadly, it's the way insurance works here in the United States.
Yeh I’ve had health issues my whole life and Insurance has been a real pain in the butt...
My parents had to switch multiple times when I was a kid because of pre-existing conditions. Then on my own insurance(Anthem Blue Cross) I was denied coverage for many things including MRIs despite having colon issues, damaged spine(football accident), and so on... It’s ridiculous...
@@sicsempertyrannis4613 I am so sorry! Nobody should have to deal with these issues. My daughter lost her foot when she was 3 months old ( a dog attack) but from the day my husband got custody we had to pay cash for her prosthetics. My husband now suffers from something called Ankylosing Spondylitis and he cannot get medical coverage without paying an absolutely insane amount. Good luck to you!
Speechless 😶
That. Is. Insane. They claim to care about the patient and always have the patient's best interest in mind, yeah, bullshit! 🐂💩! They ONLY care about the bottom line, the +/-'s, and their shareholders. So sad. 🤦🏼♀️
I'm glad you had one of the good doctors who actually make their patients a priority and genuinely care. 😊🙏
✌️❤️😊🙏
@@sicsempertyrannis4613 Oh fuck, I have Anthem and need MRIs/CT done to help see what's causing my nerve pains and GI-related issues... Also need a non-urgent surgery... Not to mention they keep bouncing my scrips despite me having been on each of them for over a year (had to call my doctors for prior auth issues three times)... now I'm MORE worried
We have one private Dr. here that refuses ALL insurance. He charges a fair fee and if an injection is needed, he charges slightly more than what he paid for the medication. He's consistently booked full.
What, who, where?
Insurance companies are so corrupt. It costs individuals and healthcare providers a ton to do business w them.
It blew my mind when Obama signed a bill to force us to do business w insurance companies.
Honestly, our best bet is to ditch insurance completely and have businesses offer HSAs and match our contributions much like they do w retirement plans.
Then each of us have the opportunity to shop around for services and determine cheaper and better care, which would force healthcare providers to compete w prices and would bring down costs. Even cancer treatment would come down significantly.
I have tons of health issues. I grew up in and out of the hospital. I’m also a financial coach and nerd out on numbers. Every scenario I’ve done detailed run throughs proves this to be the most efficient way to operate
Also, there were a couple of hospitals in the southern Midwest (I think one in Kansas but I can’t remember the other) that decided to operate not accepting insurance. Very well run hospitals and it was far cheaper for people to go there than it was to go w their insurance elsewhere.
Plus, pharmacies are not allowed to disclose that a medication is only $6 out of pocket if the patient has insurance w a $10 copay
@@joyfulhomemaker8053 except youre not factoring in the greed of healtcare professionals. Costs would largely stay unchanged.
But I agree, Healthcare is corrupt. Our government is corrupt. Doctors are corrupt. We have a morally flawed society at large. They value money more than people.
@@joyfulhomemaker8053Every institution in the US is a scam or a scam in the making.
Health insurance is not just a scam, it’s an extortion racket.
If insurance is extortion so are taxes. keep trying.
@@99EKjohn Yes, your logic is flawless. Indeed, both are extortion.
@@99EKjohn yes
@@An_AttemptMany conveniences you enjoy, as well as infrastructure are paid thru taxes.... Get a grip. The system ain't perfect, but calling all taxes extortion is just pure retardation, period.
@@99EKjohnyou must love getting plowed in your keister
My mom has MS and is quite literally waiting to die because we can’t afford the treatments….thank you so much for constant awareness
So sorry for your mother and your family.
Talking to survivors is more important than talking to doctors.
Healthcare in the U.S. is criminal. Sorry bout mom, bummer.
Wishing your mom love and healing 💕 ❤ 💗
Me to.
We NEED THIS CONVERSATION
Insurance companies need to GET OUT of the game and let physicians do their job
I wish we could broadcast this loudly to a wider audience
who would pay then?
@@kaiudall2583 the people with the taxes
@@kaiudall2583Taxes
@kaiudall2583 Our taxes, like a normal country does. And the price of medicine could finally be regulated. Instead of $100 for an advil we can cut them out and get it to normal levels.
I also love that its a law in some states to have health insurance, you pay a premium, an amount the insurance compamy makes up, and then can just decide not to cover your procedure, you know, the entire reason for their existence.
Federal law, not state law - thanks O'bummercare
@@pianogal853you don't know anything about healthcare for people that cannot get it thru their jobs. You don't seem to understand that employer health plans are impossible to use and afford to get any actual health care. You don't seem to understand how the laws were changed for people with pre existing conditions like asthma and diabetes to actually get coverage for those ailments with their insurance no matter who it's thru. So yes, THANK YOU Obama for getting some semblance of universal healthcare started. We pay enough taxes, we should be able to get help when we need it like other countries who have their shit together.
@@pianogal853wasn’t the system already messed up before then? i’m not saying what you said is wrong, mind you
@@joostine3720 it was worse, because people could be denied insurance coverage for any preexisting condition. If you had type I diabetes, denied; MS, denied; mental health, denied; c-section delivery, denied. Do you see the problem?
Thanks to the ACA insurance carriers can no longer deny for ANY preexisting condition, nor can they put life time caps on coverage.
So yeah, THANKS OBAMA!! Because thanks to him my daughter who had thyroid cancer at age 18 can not be denied health insurance. Nor can I for having two c-sections.
@joostine3720 Absolutely, but O'bummercare put several 'tools' in the insurance companies' pocket that made it almost impossible for smaller independent doctors to practice as they see fit.
Yet another example of how the U.S. healthcare system works. Two examples in my own life- my aunt (who raised me) was literally kicked out of a hospital against the will of her doctors, because the insurance company decided they were not going to pay any more on that particular stay. Luckily she did not die. In my own case, I had chemo for 13 months, and my chemo nurse was calling the ACCOUNTING dept. before each session, NOT my oncologist, to see if I could have my infusion.
Hope you recovered well from the chemo sessions.
@@__MPires__ Thanks! I have recovered pretty well, but it seems like maybe 5% to 10% of systemic weakness remains, which I kind of think is there for life. Better than the alternative, tho.
Let all politicians receive the same health care benefits regardless of their wealth and status n watch how fast it changes lol😊
@@raymondomit6386 Same thing I have said for years.
Not nearly as bad as you have it, but I remember calling around to get a teeth cleaning in Missouri and NO dentists would take me. I'm like, "I have no insurance, I don't need any x-rays, fillings, none of that. I need a simple, easy, routine teeth cleaning and I have $200 cash that I will hand you."
"we are sorry sir, but we legally can not give you a cleaning."
So I went to Mexico and got my teeth cleaned for $10. And Dr. Fernandez did a great job.
Keep in mind your doctor likey puts in a lot of extra time battling the insurance that you don't know about. My doctor is a bit transparent about it. Nothing gets approved until it gets submitted, insurance will "tell you" but still deny a certain procedure or doctor or med. A good doctor will let you know of insurance issues or potential insurance issues if they are familiar. Insurance is not your friend and the clinic the doctor works at is not either. There are a lot of burnt out doctors from the system which can mean care is not good. If you find a good doctor make sure you let them know how much you appreciate them. ❤
We need a not for profit type of insurance that defers to Medical professionals and we need up front pricing for all medical procedures and treatments.
Mine doesn't because I don't have insurance.
@@jas6of7 That's called single payer insurance, aka medicare for all. The government already does this with the VA and Tri-Care, they can't be any worse than the money grubbers running insurance companies.
@@human_brian oh trust me they can be. If you think the insurance companies have no incentive to do a good job you’re in for a rude awakening when it comes to the federal government.
It's almost as if having a profit-driven middleman is a bad idea in a Healthcare system!
It’s almost as if insurance companies have had to cut corners to compete with endless government funding that only resulted in MORE EXPENSIVE PREMIUMS.
Seriously. Insurance companies did their job prior to Obamacare. Most of the time (if not all of the time) there was no “out of network”. You were the one they covered, not the hospital. Same with ambulance trips.
This was because they didn’t have to compete with public healthcare (which was already crappy compared to the private plans, but it was cheaper, for a time.) when private industries try to compete with government programs, everyone suffers.
When the government is the only option left, it is tyrannical.
@@thatcarguydom266 You are working backwards from your conclusion. If I asked how private insurance is cheaper than public you would probably say something something competition, but now it increases costs? Looking at a global scale, we are the only 1st-world country without universal coverage and as a result spend easily the most on our system, have among the worst healthcare results, is utterly convoluted and confusing, and have millions forced to file medical bankruptcy every year... which isn't a thing in other countries. HALF of Americans have some form of medical debt.
That is a broken system and has always been around, Obamacare(which is a conservative system designed to keep private insurance IN PLACE) only threw a tiny blanket on the fire. By all practical standards, a universal system is more effective and ethical.
@@thatcarguydom266 That's a lie. Deductibles still existed, you still were limited at what doctor you could see, premiums were still high. People still went bankrupt or even died. You don't know what you're talking about. You pulled that out your as*
Yeah but we can't have affordable healthcare because that would literally be communism /s
@@austinhernandez2716 and look how many fools liked it hahaha more idiots who repeat what they hear but cant do any Research themselves hahah idiots….idiots everywhere.
lets not forget that said insurance company almost certainly gets tax breaks and subsidies as well as bail outs if they need it, all from our taxes. ngl, they've got a solid racket going.
And they use those subsidies to cut company provided insurances meaning it's unviable to buy insurance direct.
Allowing the to negotiate co pay and coverage not with the person who would use the insurance.
Aka removing the free market from the free market.
Or if I pay for years and never use the insurance and then switch companies. We don't get that money back I paid to the other company and they still can't pay for anything
Health insurance is a racket, 100%. The "charges" on your hospital bill are all made up so they can make it look like they are saving you a bunch of money when they, in fact, are spending very little.
@@simonhenry7867 the “free market” is what private insurance companies are taking advantage of when they refuse to cover “pre-existing conditions” and “high risk patients”, and barely cover anyone else - AKA pretty much all human beings who need help insurance. It’s not the “free market”, it’s a market built to the advantage of the big buy and at the direct expense of the little guy. If “free” means “less than 30% of people can afford to participate and the rest can just go die or whatever”, I don’t want free 🤷🏽♀️
And the weird thing is there are people who don't want to move from that model
When the business student gets to make medical decisions.
“I’m somewhat of a doctor myself.”
Bill gates be like
@@randomcommenter395 bill gates makes medical decisions?
Medical decisions are made by either the business student or the government bureaucrat, not the doctor and patient because the customer is almost never the patient - it is either the government or the businessperson who pays the bill. All of this is because we all pay premiums (or we paid Medicare taxes or we all pay taxes to pay for Medicaid patients) to hand over this to the third party payer.
@@drmadjdsadjadi if we are being technical the one paying is always the patient it's just in a roundabout way (they pay the Gov and they pay for insurance)
@@TSH425 actually, you are completely wrong because some patients end up paying more than they spend and others pay less - this is literally how insurance works :). Thus the insurer or the government as the collective payer is the sole payer when it comes to any insurance scheme. Individuals can only be the payer if they pay the entire bill, no more and no less,
In Australia if we need urgent hospital care it's immediate and there's no bill. If it's not urgent we may have to wait some months, sometimes more, but there's no bill. If we choose to pay for private health insurance we can and the federal government subsidises it. Private hospitals may be quicker (but not better) and the private health insurance usually covers most of the cost. The system could be better but it covers most needs.
Australia's health care system is Utopia compared with the USA. It isn't perfect but no-one will be bankrupt by health costs and Australians are much healthier than the US
As a nurse of 47 years I have had to do prior authorization for medical and procedures. It has always astounded me that insurance companies can make the decisions to pay or not pay for a service. They don't know your patient or what they need so the patient suffers needlessly because they get /o "play doctor". Love this portrayal. It is so true!
in my country, the doctor has to approve that the patient needs the treatment so the insurance will pay a huge percentage of it, it doesnt cover everything but it does help a lot, hospital becomes expensive without insurance but still not 1k per visit like americans..
They can also send letters weeks after, telling you that they won’t pay for a prescription that you already picked up.
Agree❤
These rules are in place so the medical system does not go the way of school tuition and charge whatever they want AND GET IT!!
well if the doctor didnt do the work cuz the ins wont pay how does that hurt the doctor?
You're forgetting the part where the doctor then sends a bill for the remainder of what they wanted to charge to the patient.
Ya know 🤣🤣🤣
It boggled my mind 10 years ago when a Texan colleague told me his insurance doesn't cover the whole medical bill. I live in a third world country and I don't have to pay out of pocket for anything. I'm not even talking about universal healthcare here, I'm talking about my employer-provided HMO.
And that's over and above the required PREPAYs that the practitioners demand.
And wait til ya find out about the dreaded retrospective denials of prior-authorizations, where insurance companies initially say "OK" and patients get the procedure and insurance companies then say "UMMM.. NO"
So the patient has to pay for all of it.
@@romxxii when you get healthy care through your employer here you still pay for it, usually a lot but less than it would be without your employer and you still have to out of pocket for whatever your insurance doesn't want to cover
@@brandyc9645 Nope, that's only in the US. In my country I do not pay out of pocket except for prescription medicines, which I can then reimburse in full.
I live in a third world country.
insurance company’s need to be sued for manslaughter, the amount of unnecessary death this fucked up system has caused is mind boggling to me.
Not manslaughter, this is premeditated murder
Lol no they don’t god you people are ridiculous
@@user-gl1ls1jx3hwrong
I died for just under a minute in 2018. I despise that the US can’t figure out how to not kill people. I’m only 30!
Canada kills more people by not letting them ever see a doctor.
I've worked in medical billing for a while, and its wild what the insurance companies try to get away with.
I saw a thing about a lady once who had to get brain surgery, and the insurance company said that putting back the wedge of skull they removed to get to her brain was an optional cosmetic surgery. So she just lived with a hole in the side of her head for several months until she and her mother could afford to get it taken care of out of pocket. Her SKULL.
@@haileybalmer9722. Did I mention that those insurance folks are inhumane? I thought that was obvious once I figured out how the American system works.
Not only this but, I'm a nurse, and most people have absolutely no idea that hospitals are not run by Drs or nurses. ALL the policies at a hospital are decided by MBA's. Business people decide what the Drs and Nurses are allowed to do and not do, not the Drs. They also decide what products and resources we have access to, not Drs.
Administration and insurance has ruined the system
@@drpotato5381 Yep.
Pharmacies are similar in my experience - corporate administration with zero experience with pharmacy, or anything healthcare related for that matter, setting policies because it looks good on paper. Who cares whether or not it's better for the patients or the employees who are trying to take care of them?
@@Edwahlq administration everywhere tends to be a joke. When your job is contingent upon the output of others you open up the door to lots of unethical behavior. The "best" managers are manipulaters that are good at people pleasing. Actual good management views their role as a coach or mentor instead and asks and discusses with everyone in the corporate hierarchy/totem pole before implementing policies or procedures
It's the rich simply buying their way into industries without necessary experience.
Evil, simply evil...
Managed to cut my insurance bill in half. Still costs the same, just got carried away with some scissors.
God I thought you were a geco commercial for a second
@@danielyuen8691 Definitely had us in the first half, not gonna lie 🤣
🤣🤣👍👍
Must have had some sharp scissors!
You saved no money, but for a second, I'm sure you felt like a million bucks.
I do billing for a private practice. The amount of BS the insurance companies do to get out of paying even when we are IN network is astounding. They’ll ask us for the notes from the appointment, I’ll send them, and then the insurance company just says they never got the records, and deny the claim. Then I have to appeal the claim, resend the notes, and then wait months for them to respond.
AND getting an Authorization billing with the auth # on the claim just to get an EOB with a denied claim for not having an authorization!
@@rachelh9071 yeah that’s always a fun time lol
God I hate this country lol
Hace you watched Sicko from Michael Moore
@@alejandrochataing5341 it’s been a long time but I did see it. Your comment makes me want to watch it now that I’ve been behind the scenes. When I watched it before I’d only been to the emergency room once on my parents insurance lol I was so naive to how shit works
Health insurance is why medical procedures cost insane amounts of money. People could actually afford doctors before they existed.
Wrong, it is the governments involvement that increased prices as well as advancement in technology.
My private insurance was $150 a month before Obamacare. The same policy is now $765 a month. No preexisting conditions or medical problems. If you want the same medical device that was available in 1960, it is more than likely the same price with the inflation added (if it is still available). However, if you want the carbon fiber, titanium, microprocessor version, it will cost substantially more.
@@marshall4759that’s why healthcare needs to be publicly funded
@@marshall4759 You have been lied to by somebody. I suggest you stop listening to them and start thinking for yourself.
Your premiums went up because the insurance company needed to generate more profit for shareholders.
"Obamacare" was the insurance companies grifting the American taxpayers. People didnt get health care from the government, they got INSURANCE PLANS...
@@marshall4759Obama care or the individual mandate was thought up by Richard Nixon. It's a right wing Healthcare plan that only works for insurance companies and no one else.
In some blue states Obama care only cost people around $40 a month. Still shit. And then obviously where ever you lived was charging you a lot more, immoral, wrong.
Who knew right wing Healthcare plan made by the crook himself would've been bad? Wow 🤦♂️
@@marshall4759also, in what world do you live in where this issue started with Obamacare? This started with the insurance companies going wild and then the government backed their decision to go wild instead of using our trillion dollars in taxes a year to give that American people what they need, health care.
The government subsidizes insurance companies, with our tax money, the insurance companies take that money and give us a deductible that covers nothing and then they ask us for more money on top of that and they give us nothing.
It's always been that way and it's always been shit. You think your $150 insurance before obamacare would've covered major surgery? Thats a laugh. I remember way before obamacare/nixoncare people still complained about insurance and health care and said it was one of the nation's biggest problems.
I love as he explains how things work, he has a slow realization how nonsensical it is.
That’s the bit
And this why critical thinking is vital. And yet in America, so absent from policy.
I love that they look very alike
Guess what happens if the patient doesn’t have insurance? The patient pays. Meaning Mr. big bad private surgeon sets the rates. So don’t blame insurance for you jackin up the price.
@@AG-yc7vt wait are you.... defending insurance companies?
"I love my insurance"
-Person who has never had to use their insurance in the US.
Lol get better insurance, lunatic
@@_pandart6435 I live in Canada, I was born with better insurance than you have access to, tool.
@@1objection if u say so, ey? When u gotta wait a year to pull out a splinter, I can't imagine a major surgery 🤣
@@_pandart6435 Haha, the usa places dead last in life expectancy among first worrld countries even behind many 3rd world countries, but sure, whatever helps that boot stay tasty 😆
@@1objection because people choose to be huge, blobs of diabetic induced heart attacks...point being? If that's ur correlation to health insurance, then practice telling those fat-bodies that their insurance will be less if they decide to be healthier 🤷♂️
Ok quick breakdown for non Americans and Americans who don’t know. In America you pay for insurance, the more you pay the more hospitals you get access to in case of an emergency. But you also pay taxes, a lot of which go to the government for subsidies, which subsidies the healthcare industry. So for the ability to access the doctor without paying out of pocket, you not only pay a tax to the government that goes to the private healthcare sector, you also pay insurance which can be very limiting. But don’t worry, it gives us more freedom
Edit: Hospitals in America mainly charge so much for tax reasons as well. Say they lose $300 for a session of your treatment. They will charge your insurance company maybe $2000 for the treatment. The company knows this is bs and will only pay out the $300 or maybe a bit more. What they don’t pay the hospital can write down and report to the government as a loss and get reimbursed by the government. As well the rest of that initial bill is footed to you so they profit from subsidies you pay for with taxes, direct reimbursement from the government, and whatever your insurance won’t cover assuming you have a bad plan for the wrong procedure
And the kicker is, those taxes could easily fund most of the healthcare system if the healthcare system in America was structured remotely like other countries.
And we barely have a lower tax rate than Europeans but maybe three percent of the rights/benefits they have 🤣
@@Darth_InsidiousBut it would still mean government bureaucrats would be motivated to make the profits that healthcare CEO’s and shareholders make.
@@tybahza5643Since when was it legal to criticize a foreign government in Germany? Since when was it legal to burn a foreign flag in Denmark? Since when was it legal to have an abortion in Ireland without going through pages of bureaucracy?
@aycc-nbh7289 you don't think there are weeks of beauracracy in the states for an abortion?
Where is the right to sue your insurance provider in the states?
The right to easily participate in democracy?
The right to go to the hospital and receive treatment rather than to perish and not make your family inherit unplayable debt?
This hits a lot differently due to the events of the past week.
My dad was a surgeon and had his own practice. I remember when managed health care became a thing. He lost so much control over his standard of care and ability to practice most effectively
From the early days of HMOs, I became convinced they are the work of the devil.
If you’re diabetic with bad insurance it’s likely that the insurance company will only pay for a certain amount of insulin, even if it’s not enough. God bless American Healthcare
Yea I worked with a diabetic guy barely making minimum wage and his insurance company wouldn't pay for his insulin because they claimed he made too much money or something I don't know or understand the full details. I just know there were a few weeks he'd come to work without taking any insulin because he couldn't afford it and he literally looked like he'd drop dead at any moment while working, it was crazy.
@@joshualipsonhips4640 It literally kills you when you don't have insulin!
If you don't have Insulin your blood sugar rises until you die thanks to a hyperglycemic coma.
Treatment like that is insane!
He didn't just "look as if he might drop dead", he was rather close to _actually_ dropping dead.
I agree. I have a parent who is an endocrinologist and my cousin has diabetes. I remember my parent always coming home upset after dealing with an insurance company that refused to pay for the medication that they recommended. At the start of the pandemic, my parent gave higher doses of medication to their patients and told them to cut them in half because of the uncertainty of the next time they could get their medication. It really sucks to see this happening from an outside perspective and I wish I could do something to help.
Dude, even good insurance will actively try to screw you over as a diabetic.
@@fcasias7 Define "good insurance". I live in Germany and while it's not perfect and takes quite a chunk of the salaries so far I never had a problem with it. And I depend a lot on it due to epilepsy. Since over 10 years. While I don't die without medication it still makes sense to take it for obvious reasons.
While I don't have diabetes I know some who do and those don't have any problems with the insurance. But that's just anecdotical.
A special type of companies which are not aiming for the highest profit, but do compete, seems to be the way to go.
"Well now that sounds like slavery with extra steps"
-rick and morty
Ha! This shit funny
Imagine unironically quoting Rick and Morty 💀
Prison is a better example, and student debt is indentured servitude
@@potatopotato590 well no one made you take the loans.
@@user-jk2po3cz7d Lmao 🤣 😂 are we still not acknowledging coercion exists?
Second timely video from Doc. (First was his United Healthcare skit) Thanks again, YT algorithm
One of MANY reasons why our healthcare system doesn't work for anyone but insurance companies.
Until 2019, it was mandatory federally. If you didn't have insurance at some point during the year, you would have to pay a fine. Health insurance is the worst in the US. Literally destroys people's lives.
Yep. This is why we need Medicare for All. Under MfA, *_every_* doctor and *_every_* hospital would be in *_everyone's_* network.
And none of that "preapproval" nonsense where you can't get treatment unless and until the bean counters at the insurance company decide to authorize it. (Medicare doesn't do that.)
And because Medicare would be the only insurance company (i.e., a "single payer"), it would be in a powerful position to dramatically lower medical costs. And administrative costs as well.
The amount of money wasted by insurance companies (which of course they pass on to patients) on superfluous admin is criminal.
@@Milescocause it's way better when it's government bureaucrats denying your care or waiting 6 months to a year to get you your cancer treatments.
It's like knowing you need a new engine in your car, but your car insurance says lets just replace the timing belt instead.
This is after the timing belt snapped and grenaded the engine
Very well said, run for president please 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🙏🏻
"Medical Industrial complex!" A guy came up with the idea in 1980, Insurance companies owning hospitals and medical services, even retirement homes! Some have 50-70,000 employees! (Google it!)
Oh man, your ability to sum up these complex topics in really simple, yet funny and largely accurate snippets is Amazing! Sure everything is more complex, but I don't think I could describe it any more accurately in under 5 minutes, let alone 1! Keep it up!
In absolute agreement!
It's oversimplified for useful idiots. Consider yourself one of them.
@@sheet-son there is a different between uneducated and idiots, uneducated know they're stupid but want to learn, like him, idiots think they're smarter than everyone else who think they can understand more complex things than everyone else but they actually don't, like you, but alas you doesn't really said in your comment that you're also an idiot or not, so i might be wrong
@@sheet-son Who hurt you?
@@ferdinandb.s8975 you typed all that to say that he used the term idiot correctly. If you think you can convey any unbiased solid information on the healthcare system in a 60 second clip then sadly you are a useful idiot.
This is a reminder to vote for politicians who fight health insurance companies. It's an election year and your vote has more power than you think
No one like that would ever get voted in.
@@Later_Dooberas president? Probably not for a while, no. The presidential race isn't the only race happening, though! Your representatives in the federal and state legislatures are super important in making these changes, and your vote is so important in determining who gets elected to those positions!
Yeah, sure.
But the last US election was frauded.
Oh. Can you list any?
Don’t forget the part where hospitals set unreasonable prices for everything to offset the discount demanded by insurance companies
Yes I saw that with my $52K bill from the hospital outpatient surgery center for basal cell surgery on my face under general anesthesia. Insurance paid about $2500.
This should go viral. Straight up.
It did 😅
This is 100% truth. The insurance companies decide the quality of your care, so be very careful when choosing your plan.
Priceless truth. Some insurance companies also retain the right to drop doctors from their plan at their discretion; so basically same as right to fire, just like an employer employee situation. Hospitals are already complaining about abuses within the alternative insurance programs offered instead of traditional Medicare, at a time baby boomers are moving into retirement: they are creating monolpolies using the heath care system, so that any heath care workers that don’t align with them have difficulty working independently from them, while also forcing patients to use doctors they have under contracts. Would be interesting what would happen if someone started sounding this alarm and asking Congress to investigate how this is beneficial to the people, over the way things have been pre COVID. Also who actually owns these companies covertly taking over Americans healthcare choices?, as another form of control of freedom of choice. Great video. God’s Blessings 🙏🏼
My brother had cancer and needed chemotherapy and 2 surgeries. He was sent to the hospital after diagnosis, went into surgery after a 90 minute wait, was placed on chemo after, had someone sent to drive him to and from his chemo sessions, had a follow up surgery after chemo, and is now cancer free. He paid a total of $35 for parking.
We live in Canada
Another story: My girlfriend's mom had COVID and was placed on life support for 3 days, needed a ventilator for weeks after, was given a private room, and ended up spending about 2 months in hospital. They paid nothing out of pocket
Canada is nice along with many other countries. I wish the US was like that. I have major back and neck pain. I just got done getting a shot in the neck for pain only for it not to work. We set another go to try a new location and insurance deined the request stating I need to do a bunch of things to which I was already doing. Anyways they fixed it and was approved.
My medication is another one thing that pisses me off. They give me 2 of them for 90 days and then the 3rd one is 30 days ( 4 1 gram pills ) and they will not fill it because it cost like 400 dollars for the month because its 120 pills worth. I have a bunch of stories as to how dealing with medical care and insurance. My Doctor and her staff are far better than my former doctor in getting things approved.
Horrible Communism, no free market in healthcare, you really need make Canada great again 🤦
@@kozmikmercu horrible right? 😂 We're all super upset that our mothers and brothers had access to care without needing to sell their homes
@@heeeydevon8262 wait a second, you already lose your homes and properties right, I mean is a communism system
@@kozmikmercu but... We don't. I have friends that work for ReMax who buy and sell homes, hell I own property and nothing was given to us or taken from us.
We have the option to choose what doctors we use, I can go to any walk in clinic I want, I can change my family doctor if I don't like them.
I think you have an skewed idea of what political system Canada uses.
Outside of the fact that there isn't any true _communist_ country that exists, we are nowhere close to countries that identify as "communist".
If we're talking _socialism_ , then Canada is more socialist than America, but only when it really comes to healthcare... I mean, how do you pay your teachers, firefighters, and police? You have a welfare system right? You have transit systems, public roads, public schools, and garbage workers, right? That's all paid for through taxes, they're SOCIALized programs (socialist programs)
Absolute truth, and the fact that we have allowed insurance companies to run the medicine show makes me crazier than a long tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs.
what the hell was that analogy
@@lowkeylokii4205
I think the phrase is "more nervous than a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs" but people kindof mess up the phrases sometimes either because they haven't heard them enough, or heard them wrong their whole lives lol
Really? And hospitals don't over charge
Got some bad news. It's not just medicine that is run by corporations in your country.
YES, and you know what adds insult to injury? All the people who blame health care costs on “the government.”
I’m in the UK, it really scares me (and others) that our NHS (which we love dearly) is slowly being privatised. We see and hear how it can be in places like the US if you can’t afford it and it’s just mind blowing that adequate health care isn’t treated as a basic right for all, no matter if they have money, insurance or whatever. Yes we all automatically pay a small (you don’t even notice it) amount out of your wages each month towards it but even if you don’t work or have never worked you still have access to medical care without any costs or worry.
Right?? Conservatives are trying to do that in Canada too. Why?! You think you ain't gonna get sick or hurt ever?!
The politicians strip more and more out of the provincial healthcare budgets, and then when, SURPRISE, they start to struggle to meet everyone's needs, the politicians go, "Oh, dear, it's looks like there public healthcare system just can't actually handle things. What a shame. Perhaps we should let those who can afford it go to private doctors, you know, ease the burden on the public system some?" 😠😠😠
The Premier of Ontario gave the provincial system like $1.3 BILLION less than they had budgeted last year, ends up! DURING A PANDEMIC!!
What kind of a jerk even does that?!
The problem is that we have technologies that are so expensive to produce and administer that we would quickly bankrupt ourselves (as in, the global economy) if we covered every procedure that was optimal for the patient.
So someone has to decide who is treated and what they're treated with. Doctors are going to advocate for their patients to have the best, especially if the patient and dr are not paying. Someone has to advocate for the economic side. That's either a government, a hospital, or an ins. company
The problem isn't privatization, it's corruption (money bleeding out when companies "take profits"). I personally agree with publicized healthcare but I can understand how somewhere like Russia that would actually be way way way way way worse
@@seeker296
This is actually incorrect in that, our "administrative overhead" (read, insurance company and pharmaceutical company profits) now take huge amounts of money out.
If we went to a system where the government just paid for care, where we all paid for our medical care through our taxes, and pharmaceutical prices were capped, we could still get all our procedures, AND...
*we would actually all save money.*
Really.
The insurance and the pharma companies are gobbling up THAT MUCH MONEY.
We would also get better care.
We would not have to fight an insurance company to get care.
We could just go to the doctor. It would be free at the point of service, because it already came out of our taxes.
...People die every day because they can't afford treatment or medication.😠
@@seeker296
As for the argument that capping pharmaceutical prices will limit medical research money? Big pharma collectively spends more on advertising than on pharmaceutical research. The commercials the pharmaceutical industry puts out on the subject are...well...🙄
The Tories have run it down over the last 10 years. Covid probably saved the NHS.
Denying medical attention should be a crime
It is. What country are you talking about? Only in countries with socialized medicine are you denied based on government programs and quotas.
In the US they just Bill You Later.
@@shannonbarber6161 did you not see the video? At the start it literally says US healthcare system then proceeds to say the person was denied something simply due to insurance reasons that's what I'm talking about. The fact that someone loses the right to something potentially life saving simply due to insurance
Healthcare is a business not a right! If you want it PAY for it! This is why I quit working in healthcare! You entitled people expect I should not get paid to save your life! God Forbid I can get paid so I can have a place to live or buy food! You do not deserve healthcare! Get a job and pay for it like a normal person! The solutions is eliminate Terrible socialized healthcare. Force Insurance, Hospitals and Pharmacies to pulically list prices so you can shop X-rays, MRI's and pay actual cost of services. That would drop the price for the patient to 1/20th of current costs. Insurance companies can legally steal from you under Socialized healthcare and charge you for other people's care. You want better health care eliminate Socialism and make it cost competitive so hospitals have to lower costs to compete for patients.
Socialism let's the insurance companies decide your level of care.
Capitalism let's you decide YOUR OWN LEVEL OF CARE!
@@wolfbrother9025 Good job, you caught the lie. This is literally not how this would play out ever.
But it's a nice fantasy people who just want to hate the system like to play out in their heads.
@Cdaragorn why is it a lie? If you're in an HMO and the doctor is out of network, this is exactly what could happen. It's up to the patient to ask whether or not a doctor is in-network, and if the patient forgets to ask and the doctor is out of network, it could end up being a very costly mistake.
As for insurance denials unrelated to this video though, yes, they do happen, and don't try to pretend that they don't.
This is precisely why providers (doctors) are banding together to negotiate with or cut out insurance companies. It’s also why hospital systems are merging and why insurers like Optum (United Healthcare) are flat out buying up and hiring providers. It’s a battle to determine which healthcare services are rendered for an acceptable cost. And all at the expense of patients.
Yup. That's 100% true. I worked in medical care for 40 years. It's tough not being able to treat the patients without the insurance company interference. 😪
We need more doctors talking out and complaining about the system!
While I totally agree, what's gonna happen? The insurance companies will magically develop a conscience? Or will the lawmakers who are paid atrocious amounts of money by said insurance companies will do...what..? Fluff the pillows under the insurance ceos feet? Give them their choice of hookers with tiniest, softest hands for hand jobs?
@Alex first and foremost, healthcare in the USA is not the best, it is one of the worst, but it is the first in terms of costs.
Second, a medical school debt of 400,000 is really a lot, you probably won't spend more than 100,000 (usually 40-60,000).
The reason US healthcare is expensive is not that doctors get paid so much, (most of them don't) but that insurance companies want to make money (and no, an increase in the number of insurance companies would not drive prices down).
third, it is not true that more people die in the UK from poor health care, in fact life expectancy in the US is lower than in the UK.
(U can verify evrything with a quick google research)
It seems to me that your political outlook affects your idea of health care, the fact that the rich have access to the best care does not make health care good in the United States.
@Alessandro Zatelli holy shit please tell me where you were able to get a 12 year Doctorate/Doctorin Degree for 40,000 to 60,000 because I had no idea!! Lmfao gtfoh dumbass literally 1 year is 45 to 60 thousand a year so more like 500,000 in debt once in the medical practice field is more realistic, and go back to your google searches for more than a quick second and gain some real knowledge and insight and not just some bullshit article that merely fits your mediocre blurts of misinformation 🤣🤣🤣
You get them and then they get banned off twitter because they spoke out about the vaccine
@Alex Dude, what's the data for you to say that "USA healthcare is better"?
Longer waiting is nothing compared to being able to be cured no matter your financial history.
Free healthcare isn't socialist, is just common sense.
As being paid for a job isn't capitalist, is again, common sense.
Insurance companies, assuming they should exist at all, should be owned by the customers. They should not be allowed to exist to merely generate the highest possible profit for shareholders at the expense of the healthcare industry.
For the people who complain about taxes for free healthcare, put it this way.
With taxes, you pay an amount of money towards a group every month/year in exchange for getting healthcare when you eventually need it.
With insurance, you pay an amount of money towards a group every month/year in exchange for getting healthcare when you eventually need it- if they decide you can get it.
Sometimes they say you don’t need it and you just get ripped off
ikr. Americans spend more money per capita in the world for healthcare, yet their health outcomes haven't been improving for several decades now?
I come from a small European country, which is by no means perfect, but at least there is no such thing as "copay" "in network" "deductible" or even "hospital bill". Yes we pay for it in taxes, but it't better than this...
Agreed and they charge you more as it's a profit driven business. Public Healthcare tax would likely be less or same as it would remove the profit margins. And you never have to worry about getting covered or not. In network out of network or overpaying or underpaying as all hospitals would need to agree to accept it. Government can negotiate prices and keep costs down eliminating profit factor. Government can pay doctors a fair fee. And adding free education system would eliminate the debt that doctors and specialists often have to combat for first few years of their lives keeping the entire system effectively fair.
AND you’re paying extra to cover the insurance companies salaries for deciding not to pay for your care
The amount of times a specialist said I wasn’t in their network confused the crap out of me, as someone who lived in Toronto, Canada. American health care has given me so much anxiety, I am so glad I’m a dual citizen. Definitely leaving America when I’m older and need more health care. Living in the US is so overrated.
Idk man, tredeau is an asshole
*Living in the US, while not being rich is overrated.*
@@makoosh3448 Fortunately for them Canada is a pretty big place. If you don't want to run into the guy it'd be pretty easy.
Clever you are just away avoiding a Toad
That’s a great idea you should leave as soon as possible.
Medical tourism is a thing for a reason
It’s frustrating, especially when you're paying more in premiums. Health insurance networks have been shrinking for a while now. I think it’s tied to the rising costs of care and the pressure on insurance companies to control expenses.
Exactly. And if you have any medical needs that go beyond the basic, you’re almost guaranteed to pay out-of-pocket. I’ve been thinking about switching plans, but with all the changes, it’s hard to know what's the best option.
That’s where I think managing your overall portfolio comes into play. Health insurance is just one piece of the puzzle. You’ve got to balance it with other aspects, like your investments, savings, and even retirement planning. All of it ties together when it comes to long-term financial security
Absolutely. I mean, think about it-if you get hit with a big medical expense and your insurance doesn’t cover it, it could drain your investments quickly. That's why I started looking at ways to balance everything, not just my insurance but also how my investments could cover any gaps
That’s smart. I’ve been doing the same. I actually had a free consultation with Joseph Nick Cahill, a CFP I heard about. He helped me see how my health insurance choices fit into my broader financial plan.
Oh, I’ve heard of Joseph. He’s got a solid reputation, doesn’t he? I’ve been meaning to talk to someone like that. It’s tough navigating all these different areas-insurance, investments, retirement-and making sure they work together
LOL, I'm an insurance broker and I have had this same conversation with 6 family friends who are doctors. 2 of them are my age. Thank you for speaking truth.
Please explain why it costs 500 dollars with no insurance for a basic check up? Sine insurance is the bad guy and “sets the price” why is it so high when you have 0 insurance? Shouldn’t the private doctor lower the price?
@@AG-yc7vt it is dependent 9n the doctor and if they have a private practice or are part of a Medical Group. If they are a part of a medical group, then restrictions will be put in place for their billing and it would be best if you did have insurance, because they would have pretty much made a deal with the insurance company to charge anyone a higher price, if they do not have insurance. This is legal in all 50 U.S. States. It is kind of the same question as, why do all cell phone companies seem to get along?
Insurance is a scam, they can just choose not to pay if they don’t want to, how is that not illegal
I don't know but it really should be. I don't even live in the US and I've had to deal with health insurance taking control of my health. I have a mole like thing on my leg that doctors warn could be cancerous. But insurance won't pay for the removal because it's "cosmetic". Yes Karen my cancer is cosmetic 🙂
1 word, greed
because wealthy people write the laws.
If that's true, then the fault most likely lies with the private health company for signing a shitty contract. I don't think there should be laws to restrict scamming potential. It's up to both sides to make sure they're not agreeing to one. If you do sign a contract (as long as you're under no external threat), then it should be your problem alone 🤷♂️. Don't blame the scammer for scamming an idiot, blame the idiot for not hiring a competent lawyer.
For the same reason a lot of shady shit that big corporations do isn't illegal - because they pay immense amounts of money to lobby the government and when said lobbyists retire they join the very government departments they were lobbying to begin with. In other words, the US is actually controlled by the very monopolies that its laws should have prevented forming in the first place (gotta love unchecked, unfettered capitalism).
I pray that one day the American Healthcare system will be fixed along with other major problems like education
It's not broken, it's working as designed.
That's the problem. Can't fix something that's not broken. It needs to be replaced. That applies to medicine and education and probably a bunch of other things.
@@Rutabega_NG i feel like a lot of the major issues the US faces is like a massive tangled knot of wires that are impossible to work through. it feels like voting alone often isnt enough to incite any reasonable change
*HEALTHCARE IS A RIGHT*
funny but I can’t find it in the constitution anywhere. The founders must have left that one out.
What I do find is the 2A.
And yet I never hear leftists clamoring that gun ownership is a right and that other tax payers have to buy me any.
Yah, I don’t hear that about bibles or laptops either.
It’s only their sacred cow they clamor about.
How bizarre…
@funinthechamber4252 you really think someone who is further right is going to fix the healthcare system? they are the ones keeping it broken because the insurance companies are funding them.
@@CherryBotV2you're mistaking libertarian with neocon
They also tell doctors what medications to prescribe and the doctor has to go through steps of testing of course the cheapest, even if the doctor wants to go straight to the test that gives the most answers.
American HC is like “Thanks for coming in today, sorry for the four hour wait. That’ll be 1000.95. So can you tell me what brought you in today?”
Don't answer that question! It's a trap! The receptionist just sits there typing up your bill as you go oh I've had a sore throat for 4 days now.
Yeah you gotta love the bill for just waiting in the ER...even if you don't get any actual treatment.
Get better insurance
@@kennethmasters9329 Not really feasible for a lot of people at the prices insurance companies charge, also, chances are you're still paying it. It's just over time so it is disguised to you.
I'm not American, so I really can't tell if you are joking or not
And this is why having a rare medical disease or condition sucks so much. Finding a doctor who knows how to treat you and is able to accept your insurance is like looking for the short piece of straw in a haystack.
I know I'm making a large assumption here..but since I'd assume your American. You were given the opportunity to have nationwide free healthcare a few years ago remember? I thought most of you thought it was a terrible idea and would "bankrupt" you even though multiple other countries have a universal free system payed for by everyone which all work just because they made access to healthcare a basic human right?
@@FuzzzehOG Obama didn't try to install single payer since he understood that the overhaul would destroy the American Healthcare system. And also, it's not free, stop claiming it is free because that's dishonest framing, because you pay for it in taxes, in fact in most places with single payer, like Canada, 25% of your taxes go into it, which considering their tax rate is outrageous.
And in the US Healthcare is a human right, because we have Medicare, medicaid, and emergency insurance which along with the main privatized system, which does have issues, but aren't nearly as bad as most other nation's(the spark notes version of the issue is that FDR prevented wages from rising leading to companies offering health insurance and to make their deals sweeter they colluded with hospitals to make their nominal prices outrageous to make the insurance seem better). Since the US's are due to regulation preventing competitive drug prices, while places like Canada's are due to them treating people like they're cars leading to surgeries, such as hip replacements, taking about 41 weeks to get done after diagnosis and scheduling, which can take another 10 weeks (and these are the generous numbers since scheduling can take up to 30 weeks) in a good year, with that number growing by 3x under covid.
@@nope929 your just wrong though in every way. As demonstrated by the multiple countries that transitioned away from health insurance, it was far fucking easier than regularly hauling large insurance companies to congress to give them a good old telling off...which results in 0 action.
Yes the healthcare is not necessarily free, I'll agree on that..but what I won't entertain is the idea that bankrupting entire families because of preventable diseases and big pharma saying they'll lose profits. Good! They should lose profits for being heartless money making machines that use people's misery solely to gain. That is the real reason the US didn't switch, it had nothing to do with the cost.
Just to point out. To have full medicare cover you spend around $150 a month. I live in the UK, my contribution is far...far less and I won't have to pay into this my entire life as once I retire I won't be earning to pay in any further but guess what...I'll still be covered for all range of medical issues until my dying day. This is because instead of allowing for profit organisations to have their say on a system which they put nothing into we force companies to adhere to sane pricing laws for the benefit of the British population, not investors pockets. They're also held to higher standards might I add.
Also using the point that paying for healthcare means you get surgery faster makes no sense, its damn obvious that if you pay for something that is usually free your generally gonna get served quicker. For all surgery there is a waiting list meaning whoever pays most gets served first..implying the system is broken and again serves only those most who can afford it.
And that's if you even have a diagnosis. If you don't, when you make an appointment and try to explain your uncommon symptoms there's a 90% chance the doctor or nurse practitioner will try to gaslight you into thinking it's not as bad as it is.
@@FuzzzehOG listen if you want to understand America, understand that there really isn't a most. Everything is divided in half. 50% believed what ever Trump and Fox News said, even if it was to their own detriment.
Lots of his supporters claiming they didn't want it, didn't realize they already had it because the assumed the official name was Obamacare.
I live in California more of a 65-35 split for "liberal stuff," like affordable health insurance and medical care and taxing Billionaires.
People don't agree, they don't want to meet in the middle, and "Don't Look Up." Is a clear summation of American insanity.
That slowly dawning realisation of "yes, I do actually work for the insurance company..."
Makes the NZ health care look a lot less broken in comparison.
No system is as broken as our terrible system.
Yes it is horrible. I avoid doctors like the plague. Well except for the dentist and eye doctor since I wear contact lenses.
@@TD32333 yeah, the only ones that are worse are in broken impoverished countries where they just can't do much better with the resources they have....and hell, some of _Them_ are beating us. It's a barbaric disgrace.
Well do take care. These vampire companies don’t stop at anything. My country has mostly free healthcare but lo and behold they bribe their way into the system and now the corrupt govt has announced plans to shift the whole country’s health system to the oh so good American Health insurance company based model of health deliverance. Sadly our people are so blind to see it, no one is challenging it.
@@STMARTIN009 stop shoehorning in anti science in the comments.
This guy should get an Oscar, The Congressional Gold Medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Spread these videos far and wide.
I'm so happy to see this channel! I've been trying to tell people for at least the past decade that those who really run this country are none other than the infamous insurance companies. They make decisions that we don't have a choice in and many aspects of our day-to-day life. So if you want to make it change oh, it's not only the politicians but the people that purchased the politicians as well be aware that it is your insurance companies
My therapist of 4 years is not in network with my new insurance company, so I get to decide if I want to pay a huge amount to continue my therapy with the same person I've been seeing for years, or if I want to completely start over with a different person who doesn't know me or my psychological history...
I also work with insurance at a healthcare provider office and I see out of network issues all the time
This whole video was too real and I want to cry a lil bit
Currently loosing my current health insurance because I can't work there with a current mental health issue I'm having. My ability to continue getting mental health treatment is currently up in the air because of the mental health issue I'm being treated for, and I don't even have it the worst. Hell, this isn't even the worst _I've_ had it.
The people who've set up this system need to be institutionalized. I'm not even joking. They're clearly a danger to society. A padded room, one with bars, or one with dirt on 6 sides are the only places any of them belong.
If you've been seeing a therapist for 4 years maybe you need a better one anyway.
@@blades. anything related to childhood trauma typically take significantly longer than the standard 6 months to a year.
If you think you can manage sexual abuse, physical abuse, psychological abuse, and how those issues manifest in your life over the course of a few years you completely have no idea how trauma and therapy work
@@blades. we found the guy that had the nice perfect life! Lol probably writing us from Mom's basement
@@blades. I had a professor in my counseling masters program who had clients that came to see her for 25 years. The stories she heard from those clients would turn your stomach with how depraved humans can act towards each other. Trauma sucks man,
I understand nothing about being a doctor or a med student, I love your videos man it brings me so much joy binge watching them, keep up the good work
same here!
That's why you're being ripped off for insurance. Insurance isn't the problem, predatory hospitals shacking down insurance companies is the problem. And the problem will only get worse with universal healthcare.
@@SerangelROM We have universal healthcare here in Canada and have no problem?
@@Caroline1261 I guess the woman who lost both legs to an infection that could been fixed because it took so long to see a specialist didn't have a problem.
@@SerangelROM I don't know which woman you're talking about but there are medical mistakes in every country.
There was a very good quote on another video, I can’t remember who posted it though, it went something like this
“The American healthcare system works fine, it’s just not designed to benefit the patient”
It's funny how things sound when you just say them out loud.
Definition of Insurance: a dishonest scheme; a fraud. See also: Scam.
Haha love this
Well, insurance is generally a good thing. Getting a good policy is an important part of financial planning. It’s just the healthcare system in America is totally fucked up.
Insurance technically is cool;
Statistically, one in a 100 people will break a leg this year. Me and other 99 guys will each put 1/100 of the medical expenses into a pool and whoever breaks a leg gets that money. Really good if organized well.
Also: since it’s required by law, it’s technically a tax.
@@creengton8594 except you don't get to choose and pay for the supplier.
Your employer does. He then sells it onto you in exchange for man hours.
Which means if they can sign things like co pay and minimum charges etc into the agreement the insurance company will offer it to them for less.
The one size fits all fight to the buttom approach is why American healthcare sucks.
I’ve always said that to my patients. We don’t run the show, the insurance company does. Broken healthcare system. Always about the money. 💰💵💸
Thats why i say to everyone with permanent health problems to come here to germany. We welcome everyone willing to work and integrate. Our country is not perfekt by far but ive got several surgerys and never saw a bill for them. Well ok once because i ordered a pizza. And thats all.
drive.google.com/file/d/1l_T2wNTYr3P1TvB4CyeHXLesJW9t51Pr/view?usp=sharing
We're paying more to get worse outcomes, patients and practitioners hate the system and yet so many people bristle at the thought of adopting ideas from systems that work. Only in America.
@@MrDekuchan how do I move there sincerely I have chronic health issues and I need a masters in psychology or social work but then I am good to go as a mental health professional i am also married we are pretty poor I am willing to work through school remotely i just need to get out of the USA it's getting scary here with all the facism looming in the air.
Yep. A lot of Americans argue that this is better than Universal because "we don't have to wait long time for appointments." So, I was raised in a country with a Universal HC system, but im also American, and I've been living here for almost a decade.
Yes, the equivalent to "PCP" appointments are booked for up to 8 months (sometimes. I've heard others with longer waits), and specialists take less time. We also have emergency rooms where you can walk in if you're very ill and need ASAP assistance, and we won't charge a $100+ copay and $25 tylenol😒😒 plua other fees. The wait times are long because people go for even a cold, flu, cough, or headache (abusing free healthcare or low-cost healthcare).
Here, we pay hundreds for health insurance, we still pay copay, and we still pay for meds. Sorry, but I still have to wait 3 months+ for an appointment with my PCP and with specialists, it's worst. Called OB/GYN, and they said at least 7 months. I was like, WHAT?! Doctors can't treat patients accordingly because everything is subject to insurance approval or how much the insurance allows us to spend.
The ER is expensive, wait times are LOOOOONG, and we think thrice before going to the ER because it is tedious and costs a lot.
Doctors and nurses are not nice to people because they are bound to insurance policies and they have to abide because people have this misconception that they have money because theh make "good money", in reality, they have a sh!t ton of debt from student loans. So their hands are bound by policies, patients are frustrated with them, and they deliver poor services out of frustration as well.
It is a complete chaos and sh!t show.
So, do I rather have it free or low-cost and wait for tbe next appointment to be in 8 months? Yeah. I still have the opportunity to go to a private clinic or hospital if I want to be seen faster, but it's my choice and I know that doctors have the freedom to say, "here, we need to do these test and we'll do it asap. It'll cost this much or nothing at all." But getting surprise bills after getting treated, man?
Lawyers and insurance companies have screwed up the whole system. Lawyers help insurance companies get away with lawsuits and sh!t.
"We the People" are here to only get the scraps and get indoctrinated to believe we have the best.
So sad.
people dont seem to realize that not waiting long comes from poor people not getting care lmao
So very, very true. I grew up in Toronto and live near NYC now. I just saw my PCP for an annual checkup and it took THREE MONTHS to get an appointment. I never had to wait that long to see a GP in Toronto. Two, three weeks, max. Americans always like to criticize socialized medicine, saying how bad it is for the government to dictate the kind of care you get, but they don't realize that they actually have it worse, because their healthcare is dictated by insurance companies, which are driven by corporate greed. And they still have co-pays and co-insurance on top of the hundreds or thousands of dollars in premiums they are already paying. The great irony is that health insurance companies don't care about the patient's health so much as their own botton line.
Why this man is not in movies yet? His expressions are worth millions of dollars 😂 Thanks doc for these shorts. ❤️
Agree 100% such an amazing actor
Because he's too busy being a doctor lmao
@@JustLostTheGame you got a good point
Then he'd be a celebrity and it would all go belly up from that point onwards. Keep it classy Dr Glauc and stay out of show business.
He's not in movies for the same reason movies like the death wish remake are about imaginary rape gangs instead of a dude using violence to get even with the insurance execs that rape our wallets every paycheck and still have the gall to deny lifesaving treatment.
If only there were laws we could repeal that would allow people to take their insurance anywhere. I don't remember not being able to buy a car because my dealership was "out of network."
Or our tax dollars going towards health care costs.
If only out of touch red state idiots didn't force those laws to be put in that health care act that protected insurance companies instead of making them more or less obsolete as was the original intent of said health care act.
@@magoo9279 but you would prefer those tax dollars to get funneled into some pharmaceutical CEO or Defense Contractor's off shore bank account right? Instead of using it for infrastructure which should include education and healthcare by design anyway?
@@sorrenblitz805 Where does our money go now? Might as well get care and not a bill before and after care.
@@magoo9279 your comment was confusing, made it seem like you were against tax dollars going towards healthcare
I’ll never forget being on a bed in the middle of the procedure at UConn, and the admin walked in all upset because she didn’t think I had insurance. I was so embarrassed! Heathcare is such a nightmare.
I’ve only seen these scenarios on comedy sketches that’s crazy.
Yeah no UConn is a joke in all aspects of medical......... They literally allow students to diagnose and see real patients 😬
This is why the US needs to have a real national health service.
Who’s going to pay for it?
@@ngf5077 you could pay for it through general taxation, like a first world country.
@@integrationalpolytheism so I still have to pay for it?
@ngf5077 And in those "first world" socialized medicine countries, wait 6 to 12 months for a surgery... but die before you get it. Oh and get taxed a minimum of 40% of your income. Yeah, so much better.
I will never understand the mentality that prefers for everybody to fight against each other, clawing over each other to reach the top of the pile of bodies.
There are many examples of countries where higher taxes (properly managed, so higher incomes genuinely pay more tax) is used for genuine common good.
Even if you are a rich fat idiot with your own house, car and private health insurance and all that crap, how could you even sleep comfortably in your bed knowing that your selfishness was the cause of the majority not being able to live a decent quality life, because your country has no adequate social healthcare, housing, transport etc?
I mean, how could you live your life happily, knowing that?
Most people should be able to answer this, I think, because most people do seem to be selfish arseholes, as far as I can see. The only mystery to me is how any countries actually have made so much progress in this direction. Maybe the example of the USA shows those other countries the warning of what they could turn into if they don't look after their citizens.
I mean, if a country doesn't exist for the benefit of its citizens and residents, then what's the point?
This guy could single handedly take down the entire system, through laughter.
I could also do that through laughter and to be more specific man'slaughter
*Laughs in free healthcare*
We should abolish the health insurance industry and send all the highest ranking employees of those companies to an island to star in a survivor style reality show for the rest of their lives.
Should send one of them after he’s contracted a severe, communicable disease.
You think a bunch of government bureaucrats would do better? The number of administrators in the medical system has risen about 3000% since passing the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare. If you wonder why health care costs rise much higher than the rate of inflation those high paid administrators are probably the reason.
@@jeptoungrit9000 yup, they are definitely the reason, totally not the insurance companies wanting more money and having an easy scapegoat.
@@CherryBotV2 You think there are many hospital administrators who make under 100k? I think there is a medical industrial complex in this country that includes the greedy insurance companies. I know a bit since I work for it.
send 👏 them 👏 to 👏 Antarctica 👏
It’s also wild that taxpayer money is going to this insurance companies as well.
Excellent explanation! 👊🏾 The insurance companies have realized that a healthcare provider is more concerned about getting paid than how much they are paid.
My wife and I have finally found good doctors who we trust and will actually listen to us. The insurance company won't compromise on the new contract and we're probably going to lose our doctors.
That's exactly why I signed up for traditional Medicare. I hated being forced to leave my established doctors due to insurance network limitations.
I actually never had this problem until I moved back to Oregon. When I lived in Arkansas and Idaho, every doctor, specialist and quack with in 100 miles was in-network for my healthcare (and it cost me far less for my premium AND my deductible was super low). When I moved back to Oregon I could only buy a PPO. And these seem to be predominantly based on specific "private" networks (Legacy, Providence or Kiaser). This sucks because my GP is in-network and my OBGYN is out of network because she's in private practice. Even though she has privileges at my in-network facilities I still have to pay out-of-network prices because she is not an actual part of the network. It's absurd.
Insurance companies hire people that can do coding in order to determine whether or not certain procedures will or won't be covered according to their coverage. The people themselves more than likely have not worked in the healthcare field. Higher ups, that have more training in how billing has to be done according to rules, mandates or laws still have to deal with government deciding how much to give them, on top of what tax payers pay out in premiums every month. Insurance is one heck of a racket though, because they do make money hand over fist either way.
Its because Arkansas is such a close knit space that most doctors are going to be in the same network
Glad we have the NHS in the UK.
Thanks Doc, another good post 👍🏻👏🏻
Why?
@@soundbite290 Why what?
"Free healthcare" isn't free and is just horrible.
The wait times here in Canada for simple procedures is insane
@@conradmcdougall3629 Yes. Not all free healthcare is the same. Here in Spain, it's free and it's amazing.
Yeh I've paid £2500 in national insurance since April alone (9 months) and I haven't been to the hospital in many years. Yeh it saves paying out a big lump sum for anything but knowing there is some overweight jobless benefit scrounging leech out there who I'm paying for does not sit well with me. I'd rather pay insurance to cover just me not those who aren't willing to get up off their asses
I'm just happy to live in a country where the law and your doctor determine what health insurance has to cover.
The part about this that’s honestly the most screwed up (in my experience) is how much power insurance companies have over letting you in and out of residential care/detox/etc.
I checked myself into resi voluntarily for the first time when I was 18, in a misguided attempt to “man up” lol - but I definitely needed to be there. I’d needed blood transfusions to even meet the minimum criteria to get in. The first 2 weeks they wouldn’t let me walk because I was so bradychardic. But on day 30, my insurance saw I had gained exactly 5lbs, and determined I didn’t need that level of care. Which meant I had to physically leave the premises by midnight. I was in Utah, in January! Again, l was 18, didn’t know anything about insurance, but I knew that they’d screwed up.
(Cut to three months later, me laying in the ICU with metabolic acidosis.)
I’m no longer a teenager and no longer fighting with insurance companies, but it still makes me really angry they have that kind of power, instead of, ya know, *doctors* making *medical assessments.*
My mom works home health. She had a patient who was denied surgery to remove a tumor. Because cancer isn't as deadly as covid, apparently.
@@KenderGuy that's fkd up.
All respect to your mom.
It's hard to work in those evironments.
Abolish health insurance honestly, they caused the huge spike in medical prices. Go to a full retail system and instead of employers having to pay for employees insurance have employers provide HSA accounts that they deposit into as well as their employees
@@pigtaku4276 Right there with ya
@@KenderGuy Yeah I know a few people who had to get either chemo or cancer related surgeries pushed back when the hospitals were all at overflow. It’s an awful situation bc yeah no shit don’t wanna leave cancer unchecked, but sending an immunocompromised patient to a hospital full of covid patients would also put them at risk. I definitely think the patients should get to decide which risk they wanna take though. Just a shit situation all around.
Okay but this was also super educational for me! I was just wondering why I struggling to find a new dentists office that took my insurance and basically said "why do they all take different insurers instead of all of them?"
So thanks for the explanation lol
Seriously contemplating how long America can survive as a country. An awakening is coming and I don’t think the elite are going to like it
The NHS in the UK and Medicare in Australia are being eroded by this kind of BS. It's appalling.
Good. Eat the rich
what
What're you gonna do about it tough guy
If you plan a revolution don't tell the idiots online
"Health insurance" used to be a thing to prevent you from being bankrupted by sudden expensive treatments. Now it's a weird credit system to pay for day to day care, and you still pay an arm and a leg for big treatments. Even with insurance, hospital births can go well into five figures out pocket.
Work in Healthcare and this frustrates us all the time. I deal with cancer pts and sometimes we have to delay scans and treatments because insurance companies sometimes take forever to approve a scan or they require a peer to peer consultation. Very frustrating
😒😩 that's an absolute disgrace and those insurance company's should be barred from practicing,but unlikely to ever happen as wherever there is big money there is big corruption and no doubt in my mind political parties are getting their wallets fattened to keep it the way it is 🤔
HOW CAN YOU AVOID THINGS LIKE THIS FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS WANTING TO KNOW WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR
My uncle had soft tissue sarcoma and his temperate went through the roof and he passed out and stopped breathing a few times and had to be brought back. Insurance didn’t cover the hospital bill because they said it had nothing to do with his cancer. He unfortunately passed away last month
Sounds like dealing with the va. 6 months to review treatment just for that treatment to be ineffective after approval
Doing cancer treatments right now and insurance is one of the biggest stressors rn.
getting out of the military was very interesting trying to understand how civilian healthcare works go to the hospital once and get 7 bills
This is so true. Started working in the healthcare system last year and I have to turn away so many people for being “out of network”. Some of these people were in network in 2021 then when 2022 came it changed and some people have to find all new doctors. It’s so crazy
It amazes me that people don't want national health care because they "don't want the government to decide if you get medical care" but they don't mind if for-profit insurance companies decide if you will get medical care.
THIS!!! YESSSSS!
If you have a private practice and dont want insurance overlords then just charge your patients an affordable ammount so they can pay for the service out of pocket. Bet you'd have more patients than you could shake a stick at.
Exactly!
You mean charging $25,000 for something that should cost $500
Isn't the way?
Okay - maybe and quite possibly the “affordable”!amount is too low to support his business- that’s why we are in this problem in the first place- eliminate the Federal Reserve private central banking model and get money out of politics would be a real solution - don’t worry people will miss the mark and support your argument which just creates an endless loop of suffering because your argument not focus on the heart of the problem - who controls money!!!!
@@WeJamWorld the federal reserve and private banking are what make these things affordable lol. sorry bro but without the federal reserve u wouldn't be a bitcoin billionaire 😂
Oh so make the patient just waste all the money they paid for insurance. If the system isn’t fixed, what the individual does doesn’t matter.
Whatever you are doing is very brave of you. I have seen a very few man of intellect to stand for themselves. Just be safe, insurance company might not like this. If you can stand strong, trust me you are capable enough to bring a revolution in the health sector of the world.
Was pre- med and figured this out years ago... went in an entirely different direction.
Our health care system should be socialized as the costs are ridiculous
Good job. Complain about how high the costs are and then propose the fastest possible way to raise them even further.
This whole out of network thing you guys in America have to deal with is ridiculous!
That's not even the worst of it. Wait till you find out that after paying hundreds of dollars in premiums every month, you still have to meet an annual deductible before the insurance will start paying and even then, you still have to pay co-pays and co-insurance (meaning you must pay your 20% of the cost before the insurance will pay their 80% share).
@@NikoBellaKhouf2 would it not be cheaper to directly bear the cost instead?
@@dream-ui2gp if you ever need anything no. Let's say just a surgery like appendectomy the most common surgery can cost anywhere from 10,000-35,000. Now you'd assume you would have an ambulance bill if it was an emergency and that can be around 1200, and the cost of the ER, imaging, test etc. Or let's say you go to the doctor that can cost 300-600 and then again imaging, test, etc. So at the low end and everything goes perfect it's 11k, but probably be a lot more. That's just for a basic surgery, now if you cancer or anything complicated get ready to be fucked. Insurance is very much needed sadly.
@@bobhanson1037 Thanks for explaining clearly. So is insurance a middle man between patients and doctors? If someone is healthy and does not usually need healthcare wouldn't this just be a waste of money? Like the only person profiting off this trade is the insurance people?
@@dream-ui2gp if you go look at what US hospitals charge for random shit like aspirin, you'll see a big problem there. Every part of the system above the people actually providing the care to the patients is absolutely broken beyond comprehension. We'd honestly probably be better off scrapping the entire system and just treating it like disaster relief where we just try our best to get supplies to the people doing the work at the ground level and trusting them to act in good faith while we put a more functional system in place while they deal with keeping people alive.
This is exactly why I won’t work on healthcare any longer. Insurance gets in the way of patient care.
H-E-L-L-O N-U-R-S-E ! 😆
@@davidgilde7982 Why did you have to make it cringe
Yep, me either!
Or the back office staff arbitrarily choosing not to submit claims because they don't care.
Have you all heard about concierge functional medicine Healthcare system or your patient pays $150 a month and you don't have to deal with insurance companies anymore they mail out the claim and you get to actually help your patient not deal with a bunch of insurance companies. Just saying....
Point if inquiry : where does the Hippocratic oath fit in to the healthcare's equation?
Doctors take it and not insurance insurance companies. What point are you trying to make ?
@@alesiswhite9010 doctor here is complaining that he can’t treat someone when they can’t pay for service.
It doesn’t. And most doctors only care about payment
Doctors don't take an oath. That's a myth. Look it up yourself if you don't believe me.
@@yesitsme1642 its like a therapist, they wouldn’t be there unless you paid them, I don’t blame them though, if I wasted half my life in school just getting ready for a job then I would only care about it for the pay as well.
Oh! This blew my mind. I never saw it in that perspective and I was a nurse.
Totally true! I used to be a medical biller, it's messed up.
Meanwhile in the UK the state owns all of the hospitals and pays all of the doctors directly. If I get ill… I go to get treated, get the help I need, and leave. Private treatment is available and it is cheaper thanks to the NHS being available for everyone from homeless people to billionaires and being used by 80% of the population. But when the system was created doctors didn’t want it because they said it would give the state too much control and the British medical association fiercely protested it so the minister for health at the time bribed them and said the famous quote… “I stuffed their mouths with gold”. Since 1948 when it was created as the worlds first fully universal and free at the point of delivery healthcare service people have always loved the principles on which it provides care to us, it’s just the lack of funding which we all hate.
The NHS is failing terribly, 17 months to see a specialist for urgent care, ambulances backed up outside of A&E for hours, patients on corridors having to urinate in front of everyone and their visitors, no mental health care for the most seriously ill and 2yr wait for the rest. Worlds a mess
I'll never deny the system here in the US is busted, but here it's illegal to deny emergency care even to someone without insurance, and you can generally get care in a timeframe of hours and days versus weeks and months. My opinion is that much of the mess in our system is caused by bureaucratic bloat(both corporate and governmental) as well as corporate greed. Personally I believe health care should be completely privatized or under the purview of the Church, with only very limited governmental interference(i.e. the aforementioned law where emergency care cannot be denied.) Basically corporations and the Government butt out.
It's like when my mom needed emergency major surgery on her ankle. The only available combination of doctors and hospitals they'd pay for had her getting orthopedic surgery at the heart hospital by an orthopedic surgeon who doesn't work there
So file a out of network referral
This is why we need Medicare for All. Under MfA, *_every_* doctor and *_every_* hospital would be in *_everyone's_* network.
And none of that "preapproval" nonsense where you can't get treatment unless and until the insurance company decides to pay. (Medicare doesn't do that.)
And because Medicare would be the only insurance company (i.e., a "single payer"), it would be in a powerful position to dramatically lower medical costs. And administrative costs as well.