Not the copays for dr visits but for all the visits we do weekly (OT, PT, and speech). The copays are doubling from $20 to $40 per visit. This is going to cost us $60 per week! Has anyone else had their copays go up for 2012?
thanks, Jen.
I wish we would get rid of all insurance for health care both employer and or government paid... The entire thing is a big racket. In the 1960's you paid $5.00 for a Dr Visit ($38 in today's dollars) without insurance! The insurance industry helped to drive the cost of healthcare sky high. Now we have to insure against getting even the most common sickness.
It's not the insurance industry, it's how much the times have changed since the 60's. Malpractice insurance is CRAZY high for those that practice, they have to pass that cost on to their patients. There are more drugs available than there were in the 60's and those drugs came at a high cost in research & development. Those costs need to be recovered. The cost of tests in general are higher because of the costs associated with purchasing the technology that is used to perform the tests.
services.
When my broke my foot as an adult, I had minor surgery to aid in the setting and months of PT following the cast removal.
I read that Vt voted on a single payer system for the state, which, on paper, should reduce the costs for everyone since it's taking the profit out of the insurance and using a much higher percentage of the $$$ for actual patient care. If that's how it ends up, I wonder if more states will follow suit.
I don't understand what kind of miracles PT and OT provide a patient. Can't you exercise twice a week at home and see the doctor once a week or once every two weeks? That's the way it used to work.
completely.
I can't speak for everyone but only from my own experience. My PT not only involved daily exercises that I did both at PT and at home, but also some serious stretching and manipulations of the shoulder joint that the therapist performed. I could not do those on my own and I would not have trusted a non-professional to do it.I don't understand what kind of miracles PT and OT provide a patient. Can't you exercise twice a week at home and see the doctor once a week or once every two weeks? That's the way it used to work.
Luckily, our premium is going to drop, by $5, but that is a $60 savings per year.
I am really glad that we now have the insurance we have, because I just switched from what we had through my employer to Tricare Reserve Select and it is saving me $1800 in premiums alone. We went from a $4000/person deductible to $50/person and the out of pocket is minimal, which is nice because I have run into some trouble with my foot/ankle. My family doctor over charged me on my portion at a recent office visit, which would have been a nightmare to get back from them, Tricare sent me a check for the portion I over-paid, that was a nice surprise.
My prescriptions have really dropped in price, also.
If any of you have a spouse that is in the Reserves or Nationl Guard, this is an option for all of you. A family plan is $182/ mo for 2012, an individual plan is $54/mo.
I don't understand what kind of miracles PT and OT provide a patient. Can't you exercise twice a week at home and see the doctor once a week or once every two weeks? That's the way it used to work.
A single payer health system, like in France and Canada, seems the only way to go. Companies and individuals can't afford healthcare, anymore. Let's cut out insurance, completely.
I don't understand what kind of miracles PT and OT provide a patient. Can't you exercise twice a week at home and see the doctor once a week or once every two weeks? That's the way it used to work.
The comment about having to work until you qualified for Medicare just struck me as out-of-touch because it's the norm not an exception for most Americans. I'm in my mid-50s and that describes most of my friends. It described my mother 20 years ago. My DH's company stopped covering retirees, not just their families, a few years back -- they can be part of the group if they pay the premium.
As part of my job in the hospital, we work closely with Case Management on patient care and the Supervisor says we are all probably better off if we didn't have insurance. We see alot of uninsured patients and they don't have the restricitions on them that those with insurance do, because of the things that insurance will allow and won't allow.
She also said that under the new Medicare, if the hospital gets a bad rating from the patient, the hospital won't get paid and we have alot of regulars with Medicare.
I work in a fairly small hospital, so we do alot of things other larger hospital may not do, buy meds for the patients (usually a one time thing), pay for a cab ride home if they have no transportation, they have even been know to pay a patients insurance premium if they think it will benefit them. I provide some services to self pay patients that may be elig for benefits in the community that may be able to pay for their visit, as well as assist thr truly disabled with obtaining SSI/Social Security Disability.
A single payer health system, like in France and Canada, seems the only way to go. Companies and individuals can't afford healthcare, anymore. Let's cut out insurance, completely.