โJul-03-2015 10:52 PM
โJul-04-2015 04:36 PM
โJul-04-2015 03:48 PM
โJul-04-2015 03:21 PM
โJul-04-2015 12:43 PM
โJul-04-2015 12:37 PM
mockturtle wrote:
This is my home, Joe. Less expensive than a house.
โJul-04-2015 12:22 PM
sdianel wrote:Not so. ALL health insurance rules and rates are now totally regulated by the Government. This was enacted into law by the Congress - look up Affordable Healthcare Act. Health care is and always has been free at hospital emergency rooms as mandated by law a long time ago. No one is turned away.
Now the insurance companies will raise the rates because they have an excuse to do so and there are no laws to prevent this. Hold onto your wallets! The premiums are high, the deductibles and copays are so high that lots of healthy people will pay high premiums and never get any benefits from their health insurance because they must meet a $5000 deductible before insurance pays a penny. This was all predicted. The next blow will be the employer mandate and people will lose their jobs. So much for "Affordable" health care. (I am for health care for everyone but not what we have)
โJul-04-2015 12:11 PM
โJul-04-2015 12:05 PM
Dutch_12078 wrote:Here's one reason why costs are so high. Folks are getting free healthcare, which in turn makes other's premiums and costs higher...
Wow! I hope United Healthcare continues the zero premium Medicare Advantage Plan my wife and I have had for the past few years. The savings has been a big budget help.
โJul-04-2015 11:28 AM
โJul-04-2015 11:23 AM
Skid Row Joe wrote:mockturtle wrote:The mandate from D.C. made it an 'industry' by taking it over to give free health care to anyone wanting it. It's fatcat elderly RVers that buy new $135K TCs that should be paying their fair share. They're the ones getting a free ride.:W
IMHO, health care should have never become an 'industry'. It's not the doctors who are getting rich. Many physicians I know are closing their practices because they can't afford to keep them and don't want to be swallowed up by the big corporations. We may all have to rein in our use of the system and its fancy services and even ration those services.
โJul-04-2015 11:03 AM
Old-Biscuit wrote:bid_time wrote:John & Angela wrote:If they can't afford it, per gov guidelines, they get Medicaid (taxpayer provided medical care) for free. If they choose not to buy insurance, hospitals are required to treat them regardless.
Question from a foreigner interested in other cultures. If an American can't afford insurance for diagnosis or treatment, is there some kind of backup plan. You read stories but its hard to cut though it all for a foreigner. We live in the US a few months per year but its all quite confusing. Does it also vary state to state?
Thanks in advance.
J and A
They only get Medicaid if their income is below poverty level.
Afford is subjective....
Over the poverty level you can get gov. subsides to off-set premiums IF you can afford to pay for coverage (after you pay for home/utilities/child care/food/fuel etc.)
And if you find that you can't afford the premiums you will pay a penalty/fee when you file your Federal Taxes.
Which at present is less than the cost of healthcare premiums and then you go to emergency rooms to get care.
โJul-04-2015 11:02 AM
bid_time wrote:John & Angela wrote:If they can't afford it, per gov guidelines, they get Medicaid (taxpayer provided medical care) for free. If they choose not to buy insurance, hospitals are required to treat them regardless.
Question from a foreigner interested in other cultures. If an American can't afford insurance for diagnosis or treatment, is there some kind of backup plan. You read stories but its hard to cut though it all for a foreigner. We live in the US a few months per year but its all quite confusing. Does it also vary state to state?
Thanks in advance.
J and A
โJul-04-2015 10:50 AM
bid_time wrote:John & Angela wrote:If they can't afford it, per gov guidelines, they get Medicaid (taxpayer provided medical care) for free. If they choose not to buy insurance, hospitals are required to treat them regardless.
Question from a foreigner interested in other cultures. If an American can't afford insurance for diagnosis or treatment, is there some kind of backup plan. You read stories but its hard to cut though it all for a foreigner. We live in the US a few months per year but its all quite confusing. Does it also vary state to state?
Thanks in advance.
J and A
โJul-04-2015 10:09 AM
John & Angela wrote:If they can't afford it, per gov guidelines, they get Medicaid (taxpayer provided medical care) for free. If they choose not to buy insurance, hospitals are required to treat them regardless.
Question from a foreigner interested in other cultures. If an American can't afford insurance for diagnosis or treatment, is there some kind of backup plan. You read stories but its hard to cut though it all for a foreigner. We live in the US a few months per year but its all quite confusing. Does it also vary state to state?
Thanks in advance.
J and A
โJul-04-2015 09:12 AM
mockturtle wrote:The mandate from D.C. made it an 'industry' by taking it over to give free health care to anyone wanting it. It's fatcat elderly RVers that buy new $135K TCs that should be paying their fair share. They're the ones getting a free ride.:W
IMHO, health care should have never become an 'industry'. It's not the doctors who are getting rich. Many physicians I know are closing their practices because they can't afford to keep them and don't want to be swallowed up by the big corporations. We may all have to rein in our use of the system and its fancy services and even ration those services.