Posted on 12/05/2025 7:14:00 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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Back in the 80’s you could get employee Health insurance for a couple of dollar a week. Paid 80% of doctors bills. 100% hospital bills. and 1 dollar prescriptions. And you could go to any doctor anytime you wanted. The government came in and screwed it all up. HMO networks, Deductibles, and nothing good came of it. And the cost sky rocketed through the roof. Also back in the 80’s you could get into a doctor in a day or two. How much the world goes to hell when they tell you they are going to fix something that was not broke.
Eventually A.I. will diagnose symptoms and suggest treatment protocol. Dr. will just sign off.
Oddly you are correct. A few years ago I had to take my wife to the ER at night. I am a gringo that speaks Spanish and my wife is from Mexico and highly educated here in the USA and an American citizen that speaks perfect English. In the waiting room were about 20 people all speaking Spanish. My wife could identify their accents by states in Mexico but not for of those from Central America.
I suspect my wife was the only one with insurance.
I do not use the term mojado as it is an insult, but I do not want them here.
I needed to see an ENT doc this week. Called on Monday and was seen on Tuesday morning.
I wanted a whole-body scan on a DEXA scanner (body fitness, visceral fat, bone density). My insurance said they don’t cover it, so I paid the $95 out of pocket and got it done on Tuesday. Then on Thursday, I got a message from insurance saying that they had gotten a referral for the scan from my doctor and insurance approved it! I calle the clinic billing department this morning and they are billing insurance. When insurance pays, I’ll get the refund.
The specialist with the longest wait time is the skin doc. He’s often broke a month or more out.
I had a pulmonary embolism 17 months ago. Spent one night in the hospital then see my hematologist on an outpatient basis once a year. Getting in to see my hematologist for a follow-up has been a breeze.
I have no complaints at all...except for the almost 10X jump in insurance price for 2026! But I’m on a plan where i can see a doc in-network or out-of-network because I split time between Idaho and California.
I’m in Atlanta and betting appointments is not usually a problem.
Meh. A month ago, I made an appt for Hubby to get his teeth cleaned. So, in November, the first available appointment is in MAY. Holy crap!
A bunch of doctors retired rather than be forced to take people that didn’t pay for their care or have to treat people IAW government rules. Thanks, Obummer.
Review
What state? Everyone should mention their state before suggesting it can be quick where they live. We lived in Ohio until three years ago and could get in with a specialty or even establish care with a new PCP within a few days. Moved to Mew Mexico and first appt for a cardiologist schedule was 9 months or longer. Had kidney stones and first available was 9 months out. Medical care here is abysmal due to blue state politics.
Seems like there's an urgent care facility within a couple miles of each other.
Anyhow, I've been an active patient over the past year: two cataract removals, six months of neuropathy treatments, quarterly visits to my endocrinologist, and my primary care physician signed me up for iGlucose, where my morning blood glucose readings are transmitted electronically.
The availability of health care must be a factor in the growth of residents in North Texas: we're up to 8 million in DFW.
That's often my first line of treatment, good 'ol Dr. Google.
Just remember, faster treatment doesn't always mean better treatment. You are the one who controls your own healthcare.
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