![]() |
Quote:
Then why would he choose to be in the Coventry network? |
Quote:
|
If people had to pay outside of work they would shit their pants.
46 non smoker married to a 42 female with great tits non-smoker. Healthy, I've been to the doctor one time in 20 years to get a thumb stitched up. 1400/month. Small business owner. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I'm going to leave it at that. |
Quote:
Coventry doesn't exist anymore, they were acquired by Aetna about a decade ago and slowly completely phased out into Aetna plans, but they were not unlike any other "big" insurance company. They each have their own fee schedule for the services provided. For example, Blue Cross may pay me $48 for doing one procedure yet United Health only pays me $31 for the exact same thing. I certainly have insurance companies I like better than others, but it mostly boils down to what they pay for services rather than ease of dealing with. Sure, some can be cumbersome at times but they all have to approve or deny claims w/in 30 days of submission and you basically know what you're getting paid before you send it. So on that note, when people say one insurance company they had was SO MUCH BETTER than a different one they had another time, it usually actually means they had a better plan/contract and not that the insurance company was better. In your example, you didn't only pay $50 because Coventry kicked ass. You paid that amount bc you were either close to hitting your out of pocket max or you had a really good plan with killer copays or cost sharing. Where people run into trouble with actual insurance companies is when they or their employer use one of the smaller guys that have narrower networks and more stringent pre-authorization requirements. If you have one of Aetna, UHC, Blue Cross, Medicare, Humana, etc, then your insurance company is basically as good as the plan you're signed up for. Not a ton of difference between them other than that, with some mild caveats. |
Quote:
I'm luckily on my wifes plan, but it would cost me $7-800/month for a plan with a high deductible and narrow network to insure just myself at 41 years old. And then I'd have to pay about $5k more before the insurance would even kick in. So you're basically looking at $15k out of pocket with the deductible and the monthly premium before actually getting any benefit. I don't mean to make this political, but prior to the ACA (and getting married and being on my wifes plan) I used to pay about $70/month for a $2500 deductible with the largest local insurer and network in KC. Obviously I'm 10 years older now and inflation, but it would cost 10 times as much for a shittier plan if I were out there on my own again. The individual marketplace is HORRIBLE if you're not receiving subsidies for having a lower income. |
Quote:
Florida is a no fault state. Two cars have a wreck. Police say and give a ticket to one driver of the car that caused the wreck. But, Both cars are flagged as if they were both at fault because there is this no fault insurance law. They raised my house insurance rates in Lees Summit in the mid 90's because a hurricane happened in Florida. |
Quote:
|
SOCIAL INFLATION
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Ugh, I work in Healthcare for a profit and even I suggest we'll move to a government supplemented program soon. Hopefully.
Before you jump down my throat, please note this is not a political perspective, its economic. Approx 55% of hospitals in the US are failing to make a profit post covid. Reminder to everyone that they are business, for profit, and will cut services and employees if they can't continue to profit. At least 5 hospitals in FL shut down 1st qrt last year. The trends relate to the increase in cost from vendors (medical and pharma companies), stagnant wages and decrease in headcount at hospitals due to less profit, YOY increases in cost of insurance, etc... Ultimately, run away capitalism requires some taming in key industries that act as the pillars of our society. I'm also a lifelong sales person, but even I can see that there are industries where we allow unnecessary middle men to profit just to give useless folks a job. Specifically, car sales, mortgage sale, and insurance sales could all be easily purchased online now but we inflate the ins industry bc it's powerful in the US and many folks depend on it for jobs and it would have ramifications on our economy to evolve to a new system. Don't let politicians feed you anti-american BS when it comes to offering citizens better value in healthcare is my .02c, they're paid to keep the status quo. |
Quote:
Costs are simply out of control. Changing the health insurance landscape with the ACA helped insure more people on net, but it skyrocketed spending and the cost of insurance. Hospitals are a big problem. They charge 2-4x to private insurers when compared to what they get from Medicare. They get away with it bc they've gobbled up every doctor possible from primary care to specialists. And then hospitals have boards and administrators making tens of millions of dollars that aren't in any way involved in patient care. We pay more for pharmaceuticals than any other country in the world, by multiple factors. Sometimes 10-fold for the same drugs. They always scream that if we didn't pay more and subsidize the cost for everyone, research money goes down the drain and we are no longer innovators. And then you flip the script and wonder how getting the govt MORE involved would ever even help anything. Half the reason costs are the way they are is due to burdensome regulation, lobbied loopholes for certain industries and the list goes on. I truly believe disassociating health insurance from employment could only be a good thing and a start to changing the landscape. But that will be a seismic change that I don't know anyone has balls to pull off. Hell, I'm getting more depressed about the prospect of any solution just typing this out! I'm saying more govt involvement on one hand while reminding myself that scenario typically only makes things worse. I think we're all just pretty much ****ed when it comes to healthcare spending. Maybe when it hits 25% GDP something will change? |
Quote:
Most of the people you are referring to are poor. Those people have to eat cheap. Do you know what is cheap? Food that is bad for you. There are many other factors. I will stop here as they will get into an area that is political and all of that other stuff that gets people mad. |
Quote:
This will never be changed. Insurance companies have been doing this forever. It is an agreement that they all made with each other to save themselves money. Also to get coverage for all vehicles in a large accident situation, otherwise drivers and others would not have been covered. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:06 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.