Mep
Well-Known Member
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- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Insulin
These threads always fascinate me as there is still an ongoing battle about health insurance here in the US. The bottom line is that there is a huge range in the level of care you can have here in the US (from nothing to top tier) compared to many European countries which seem to have very consistent (but limited) healthcare options.
My health insurance through work costs about $1200/year and my maximum annual out of pocket is $2000. Meaning after I pay that much in medical bills (almost) everything is covered 100% by my insurance. That basically translates to $3200/year in health costs (about 2100 gbp) which is nothing compared to the additional $10k+ I'd pay in income taxes if I lived in the UK.
A few examples: when I was first diagnosed, my emergency room visit cost me about $1600 which probably would have been free in the UK. However, my Dexcom G5 kit and 28 sensors has cost me a total of $287 (less than 200 gbp).
I don't mean for any of this to sound/turn political, but it's truly interesting to me.
Yes, it is interesting.
I pay for private health insurance also... my premium is $1744 per year and that is for basic hospital cover and extras. I also pay a medicare rebate with my income tax. Last year I paid over $13000 in income tax. Plus I'd spend hundreds at the pharmacy regularly. I calculated recently that in just 3 months I paid $4000 in medical costs (including my health insurance quarterly bill). We also have GST here on goods and services. So we're taxed quite heavily and healthcare still isn't free. I'm thankful we can get subsidies though. If you go through the public health system that is the only time you get free health care and I have to say at times the level of service is substandard. You can wait and awful long time on a public hospital waiting list for surgery, etc. From what I've read about the US system you seem to at least have health cover that includes your docs and pharmaceuticals. Here that is completely separate and not included in any health cover insurance plans.