Are people exaggerating about the American Healthcare system or is it that bad if you don't have insurance?
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Answer by Libby Brooks, works at University of Florida
Answered Jan 30
Well, I’ll let you judge for yourself.
A little more than six years ago, my husband and I were both working good jobs. Because it costs so much to add your spouse and/or family members to the insurance you get through your job here (*if* you get insurance through your employer at all), most couples keep their health insurance through their employer. Of course that means that you may have dramatically different plans, coverage, co-pays, in or out of network criteria, and so on, but it keeps it very affordable. So that’s what we did!
In the fall, my husband, who has inherited Type 2 Diabetes (yes, it is a thing - Type 2 just means that it doesn’t manifest at birth or early childhood) got really sick. He went to the doctor who noted some weird stuff going on with his kidneys, but didn’t really follow up on it because the testing on my husband’s insurance plan was REALLY expensive. Unfortunately without those expensive tests, no one realized that he was actually experiencing intermittent kidney failure, not just a prolonged bout of the flu. He was seriously ill off and on for several months, so his employer fired him. He lost his health insurance.
We had already decided that we were going to enroll him in my company’s far superior health insurance anyway, so I had done that during Open Enrollment in October… but the coverage would not go into effect until January 1st. We were offered COBRA coverage (look it up if you don’t know what that is) for an amount slightly larger than his (former) bi-weekly income, so obviously we couldn’t begin to afford it. He was looking for work but that’s a whole other kettle of fish….
Anyway - we decided to go see his family in another part of our state for Thanksgiving. He was very sick at this point and we still didn’t know what was wrong. One the way back home, we stopped at a half-way point to visit our best friends and force my husband to go see a doctor because, quite honestly, he was scaring us.
We got him into one of those Doc-in-a-Box places at a nearby pharmacy and for the $150 (because… no insurance) she took his temperature (high), listened to his heart (pounding but oddly muffled), measured his pulse-ox with a finger clip (severely low) and told us that either she had to call 911, or we had to swear to take him to the emergency department at the hospital down the block.