by caseydog » Tue Sep 11, 2007 9:56 pm
I buy my own health insurance, and use Unicare.
In fairness, I have to give Unicare their props for doing what they said they would do when I was diagnosed with cancer a few years back. I was treated, and they paid what they said they would pay.
Now, I pay $271 per month for my HI. I have a $3,000 annual deductible. After that, Unicare pays 75-percent.
When I was first diagnosed with cancer, I blew through my entire annual deductible in 24 hours. My out-of-pocket expenses for the first year was more than a third of my annual income. The second year, it was just as much.
I am cancer-free right now, and have a good outlook for the future. However, I really don't have an option of "shopping" for a better rate, because of my "pre-existing condition".
I can't imagine being a father of three kids, and working as a truck driver or warehouseman, and having a kid diagnosed with cancer. My cancer forced me to give up my nice car and drive a faded Volvo with 110K miles on it for a year. What does the truck driver with three kids have to give up? Lunches for a year? Two years? Bankruptcy?
My premiums are 3/5 of my house payment, now, and just as much as my car payment. By the end of next year, I expect my health insurance payment to be bigger than either my house or car payment.
How does that effect other people? Well, I've already cut my consumption of other things to prepare for $500 per month health insurance payments in a year or two. The US is supported by a consumption economy (not "service" like the talkingheads like to say). People stop buying stuff -- the US economy is dead.
CD
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