Sorry, Canadian... Are you saying that to get healthcare you have to pay this company, out of your own pocket, a grand a month? And just hope they don't deny etc and forget about any deductible?
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In short yes.
It gets worse as you get older too. My dad was 1 month over 70 and they denied him a lung replacement because he was too old. He died 6mos later. Paid into the system since he was 25.
My condolences.
From their perspective that is a the perfect customer pretty much all profit.
This is essentially current corporate culture and all mega corps operate like this. Health just exposes how mental I'll this behavior is.
Yeah, 1k a month and then you go to your annual checkup which is covered but the dr orders labs which aren't so you pay 1200 for them. It's a scam.
Thats... Not the worst price ive seen either.
I have a different provider, and with 2 kids and knowing how many visits they'll have (plus me and my wife obviously), upgraded my plan. I pay about double that.
I can't get over how fucked it is that your employer is involved in determining the nature of the healthcare you get.
Edit: I'm In Canada, and it's fucked here too, just not as badly (yet).
Just wait until your a state /s
Okay but we're doing this
http://i0.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/facebook/000/003/664/600px-Jesusland_map_with_Alberta.svg.jpg
Fuck I'm still in Red
I am here to tell you that it doesn't matter how cheap they make it, reject UHC. There are plenty of healthcare providers that just don't accept UHC insurance, because they are such a pain in the ass to deal with. Yeah, I know, there aren't really any insurance companies in the US that are good, but UHC is orders of magnitude worse than anyone else.
I was looking to get an ACA plan, but i no longer seem to qualify because I can get the employer UHC :(
You're better off finding a catastrophic policy and putting the difference between that premium and the UHC one into an account you control that you can pay regular medical costs out of. I know that some providers will work with you on price if you aren't using insurance and are paying the bill at the time of service.
Tell your boss to DELAY in making the decision, then to DENY uhc, and if uhc complains then DEFEND the decision.
I'm not seeing the bullets in your solution here. Did I overlook them?
Here you go:
- Tell your boss to DELAY in making the decision,
- then to DENY uhc,
- and if uhc complains then DEFEND the decision.
Wrong kind of bullets.
What he said.
Not American, but isn't that a lot?
About standard for a family plan unfortunately. And that's just the premium. You still have a ~$5000 deductible to meet before they start fucking you without lube
Yeah and they're not gentle lol.
I'm at about $600 for my wife and I. And still have a too large of a deductable, co-pays for Dr and prescriptions. Fuck the US health system.
$683 a month for me and my kids. And that’s less than half the total cost, which my employer pays.
Thankfully it’s such a small company everyone has the same insurance plan so it’s really good insurance.
Before Medicare, I paid $1500 for a mid-tier Kaiser plan. It had a $6000 annual deductible which I kept in a tax deductible Health Savings Account. For the most part, I paid for routine stuff like vaccinations, yearly checkup and bloodwork, meds like statins, and a bid discount on stuff from their pharmacy. With Medicare, I pay $185 to the US Government and $199 to Kaiser for their Advantage plan.
I only have my wife and I covered in my employer insurance plan and it's about $80 biweekly. And I have the highest coverage. I'm Canadian.
My wife and I are both healthy and middle ages but that sounds ridiculously expensive.
When I lived in the US, I was in my 20s and had no healthcare needs, with the exceptions of birth control, an off brand adhd medication, and regular appointments to get the latter prescription. I paid $13k a year for health insurance, for which I had to pay for the first $3k of my medical bills every year.
If you're a brokie, yes goes to cry in broke
Im lucky im single with no family. So my plan is actually kinda okay at $130/mo
Canadian here. I have around $160/month for my plan. That doesn't sound so bad.
Worth noting mine does not include dental or vision.
Sure, but that's just what you pay them. What they pay the medical professionals is still zero. That's not even in the fine print -that's in the missing print.
Crazy
I don't think it was UHC that made a price drop either. I think HR may have gotten the ear of someone important and got them to change the company subsidy.
Australian here. We pay taxes, therefore the majority of healthcare is paid for by the govt. Visits to my GP cost $85, and I get about half back by rebate - they're 100% covered if you can find a doctor that bulk-bills medicare (unfortuntely rare these days). Prescription medicines cost ~$15 a script. A few years back I had stomach surgery, was in hospital for a few days, the whole experience cost me $30 out of pocket for post-surgery meds.