I can’t go into much detail, but I know a lot of people with medical problems who aren’t being seen by doctors in the US. Time and again I see people who have what I know to be fairly routinely urgent medical concerns that do get told by the ER that they have to wait for a specialist… 6+ months out. I’m sorry, but an infection doesn’t wait 6+ months for you to put them on some basic antibiotics that a PA or I think even some nurse practitioners can prescribe in certain jurisdictions.

I remember when I was in the military (circa 2008), I had a colleague who told me his mother died on the sidewalk outside an ER because they couldn’t afford any insurance and the hospital refused to see her. I didn’t believe it, I though that it couldn’t possibly be a thing in the US. But I keep seeing parallel issues time and again, but now it’s for basic things and not because of insurance, but providers and networks are so fucked up that people must be dying from these things.

I know someone who worked in billing and claims for medical insurance too. They share horror stories about double leg amputees being denied a wheelchair…

Hope I don’t get an infected cut or something, even with my decent insurance who the hell knows at this point!

  • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    It’s rotting from the bottom-up. The collapse has already happened for the lowest income people, and in regions where incomes are predominantly low. If you don’t have enough money, or a reliable car, or the ability to take time off work, that means you simply don’t get professional medical service. For a lot of people, medical services have effectively stopped existing in the USA; you just ask your friends and family what sort of remedies you can buy at a corner drugstore, and do what you can. We’re at the beginning of the process of drugstores starting to pull out of certain areas as well, which will basically just leave local corner convenience stores as the last place where you can acquire actual medical supplies.

    This collapse is slowly creeping up the income ladder. It’s been hitting middle income people hard for awhile, who are regularly foegoing some important medical treatments. It’s even starting to creep into the lower eschelons of high income people, who are being hit long waits for scarce services, and are also at risk for bankruptcy for some medical issues.

    It’s a good example of how collapses happen. Not overnight, dramatic collapse of a structure. More like gangrenous flesh slowly rotting away until there’s nothing left. The collapse of US medicine comes in the form of “guess I’ll just die” die

    • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      porky-happy - Nature is healing.

      There’s a quote been going around for years in regard to climate change that really hit home and helped me understand how things work. “The apocalypse has already happened, it just hasn’t reached you yet.” But, as you show, it applies to so much more than just climate change, it’s a shortcut of first they came for the communists. It’s people not masking and leaving immunocompromised peoples to fend for themselves. It’s the US pretending they ended slavery when really they just nationalized it. It’s privilege of leftists in the US thinking that sitting around waiting for the collapse is enough.

      It’s led me to a very important lesson I’m trying to keep at the forefront of my mind when I’m feeling judgmental of others: We’re all somebody else’s LIB

      But that being said; I don’t know about y’all, but I fucking hate being a lib. JB-shining-aggro

      • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        4 months ago

        Global warming will not be an apocalypse… except for the people for whom it will literally be an apocalypse.

        Decades from now, comfortable people will be sitting around talking about how all that global warming stuff was really overblown. Meanwhile, un-comfortable people will be in the midst of their communities being inundated, destroyed, and their people scattered and struggling to survive. The lucky ones will find a way to survive, and remember their history. Others will just simply be swept away by the slow moving apocalypse, and it will be like they never existed at all.

  • Red_Sunshine_Over_Florida [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Time and again I see people who have what I know to be fairly routinely urgent medical concerns that do get told by the ER that they have to wait for a specialist… 6+ months out.

    Well, there goes my father’s reasoning against the universal healthcare that he wants. He keeps talking to all these retired Tory civil servants in anglophone countries and they always complain about the wait times. I keep saying to him: " We have the same wait times and we have to give them way more up front."

    • Lerios [hy/hym]@hexbear.net
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      also the “awful absurd socialist wait times” are either for very specific treatments or wildly exagerated. i’ve haven’t needed medical stuff since pre-covid, but i’ve never had to wait more than a few days to see an NHS doctor. i’ve heard family complain about ‘wait times’ for routine benign shit and it turns out they mean like, a few weeks.

      dentists on the other hand? it is more or less an impossibility to see a public dentist this decade

      i’ve been promised that keir starmer will sort it all out agony-shivering ukkk

      • Red_Sunshine_Over_Florida [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        For him, his anecdotal experience came from being treated for his colon cancer a decade ago. He was able to assemble the treatment rather quickly and travel to a good out of state hospital on his old insurance plan.

        Another thing is that he really resents needing specialists as he gets older because of all the diagnostics they have to run every so often. He doesn’t exactly have a lot of free time from his schedule and he gets irked by the way an upper middle class doctor can just casually suggest something that he still has to pay for out his meager janitor wages. That and the fact they can’t really offer him any solution for the painful neuropathy that the chemo gave him.

  • Black_Mald_Futures [any]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Yo if i ever am dying of an infection i’m sorry but i’m gonna be robbing a pharmacy. I already hate the pharmacy system and do not respect the idea that I need some dipshit with a degree sanctioning my ability to buy something, if i’m going to fucking die then yeah I’m taking what I need

  • yeah, it’s crazy fucked. i have/have been on “good” US insurance plans for over a decade and my previous employer was also the hospital (a ranked university teaching hospital) and even being on the good insurance there, it takes several months to get an appointment after a referral for something that is generally regarded as serious/debilitating. the insurance and employer are always finding weird little ways to negotiate the insurance down and claiming to be cash strapped, but have constantly rotating fine art displays, a grand piano in the lobby with a professional musician during several of the working hours, and the finest recruitment displays, entire floors dedicated to billing/account specialists chasing payments, and god tier outsourced/fee based catering/food services. not to mention all the exec level people of this non-profit make absolutely unjustifiably huge salaries. also, no one could ever, ever tell you how much something was going to cost. it was always a mystery. i remember going through every hoop i could find to get prior authorization for oral surgery my in-network/in-house dentist said i needed. i spent days getting various offices to email things to each other and eventually the biller said the insurance company finally agreed to cover everything after my $75 outpatient surgical co-pay. what that means was, after i paid by $75 and got the surgery, months down the line i had to pay a bill for about $300. i called the surgery office and apparently that was a totally different fee that insurance never covers that nobody told me about. i complained to some friends and they all said that i got off easy and i must have really bothered them, because their “after action” bill was like $500-600 for the same surgery.

    i bet if i hired a lawyer and sent threatening letters i could have gotten that taken off, but who the fuck has time, energy, and money for that? and what if the in-network provider/billing system decided to boot me because i engaged in legal action against them, then i’d really be fucked for everything else healthcare related.

    i remember a friend of mine fucked his ankle up on the job and with this good insurance going through all the protocols, it took months to get his ankle imaged for a diagnosis. and THEN, the imagery was digitally sent to an outsource firm in south east asia (where M.D. labor is cheaper per hour) to get the diagnosis, which was then typed up and returned to the US where someone read it to him over the phone and scheduled treatment.

    it would probably take 1000+ pages to identify all the ways in which any specific hospital in the US has been completely hollowed out from actually generating the value of public health and reoriented to the administrative bloat surrounding the pursuit of revenue streams.

    • Black_Mald_Futures [any]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      , it takes several months to get an appointment after a referral for something that is generally regarded as serious/debilitating

      And i hear time and again from dipshit boomers "oh no in Canada and the uk people have to WAIT to be SEEN :'( "

      • TerminalEncounter [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        It’s not as ghoulish as the states, but I work in healthcare in Canada and our system is collapsing. We also can’t get specialists, no one can get a GP (literally no doctors in rural areas and years long waiting lists in cities), walk-ins shut after the first couple hours cause that’s all the patients they’re taking, emergency is full, ambulance and RAAPID are full, some hospital emergency rooms shut down on weekends and holidays cause there’s no nurses or doctors so good luck people of x community, we have so many people stuck in inpatient medicine or mental health cause we don’t discharge to street (good) but also don’t have any long term care or socialized hosuing with supports (bad) so people just stay at the hospital for years and years.

        My hospital has a whole bunch of brand new radiation equipment for cancer- useless because we can’t get radoncs and why would we, who would go to school for that many years and then choose to be in my shithole community

        But!! People aren’t denied most care because they can’t pay (some weird edge cases and then stuff like pharamcare isn’t socialized but whatever). That does make a huge difference. We also don’t have an entire medical insurance bureaucracy weighing us down or acting like so much drag on top of our issues.

        • Black_Mald_Futures [any]@hexbear.net
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          No you don’t get it, if you have to wait either way then the only difference is in Canada I could be on a wait list. Here i just have no healthcare at all. Like oh no i’d have to wait in Canada? I’d have to wait here, but also here i can’t afford shit

        • TechnoUnionTypeBeat [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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          4 months ago

          Two years ago I slipped on the ice and shattered my right leg. This was in one of Canada’s biggest cities

          It was almost eight hours before I was even seen at the hospital. After tests confirmed I had destroyed the ankle, I was very luckily placed for emergency surgery the next morning - at this point about 13-14 hours away

          The hospital refused to let me stay anywhere. I was discharged and sent home to wait a handful of hours in immense pain before the surgery. When I say discharged however, I mean a nurse asked for my height, grabbed crutches that kinda fit (I learned later that the reason I struggled for two months with them was they were far too tall for me) and leaned them in a far corner out of reach then disappeared. I waited for almost 45 minutes before using my boot to hook the wheelchair nearby, drag it over, and drag myself to the crutches. The doctor’s suggestion, when I pointed out I had no easy way of getting home, was to take public transport

          In February. On an icy day I’d already broken a leg, with an exposed right foot and crutches too tall to get around on. I’d been able to scare up a ride, but I’ve never felt so fucking shocked at the state of our healthcare before

    • God I’m glad I have VA healthcare! They’ve gotten worse, but everything is in house and I can do a walk in for my primary care if I really need to!

      I’m frankly shocked that there aren’t mass acts of terrorism on insurance company offices.

    • YuccaMan [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      it would probably take 1000+ pages to identify all the ways in which any specific hospital in the US has been completely hollowed out

      And I’d read it by god; you wouldn’t happen to have any recommendations, would you?

    • Shinji_Ikari [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      i bet if i hired a lawyer and sent threatening letters i could have gotten that taken off,

      I wonder if a scientology grade mass legal DDOS of insurance companies would have any effect. I mean it defeated the IRS.

  • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    After working at the adrenochrome factory I got a good look at how things are going in healthcare in the US. I wouldn’t be shocked if some crisis befell everyone. For work I wouldn’t feel comfortable having someone without a relevant degree doing, we were making less than some fast food workers. Not to denigrate them, but I would trust a respectful high schooler to be able to help with the responsibility of feeding people. That shit had corporate shifting everything around, we had clean rooms that would pop for fungus, and we were constantly on edge of running out of shit like ethanol and containers. We had turnover >50%. I know someone who had to file a complaint with the labor board to get their overtime paid out. Meanwhile someone was making money hand over fist about it. I was so upset with how society handled this service that any rational actor would believe a civilized society required and how they just mismanaged it for profit. The wonton disregard for the work that had to be done weighed my spirit down. I started going to lunch instead of meetings - I had trouble saying no to two attractive people instead of falling asleep during the meetings as my reputation had declared.

    During the quarantine in the US, they had nurses wearing trash bags as PPE. Burnout was spreading as much as the virus. I’m sure with insurance money flying everywhere like a shell game for shell corporations all sorts of bullshit comes before making people better. If a hospital has that managerial browbeating flavor where in addition to helping people for 12 hours, you had to learn a new payroll system that some slick tongue in a suit sold them, I can’t imagine helping people is primary for the leadership. It all falls on people going the extra mile for people in spite of the incentives.

    It makes my stomach wretch because I did follow the incentives. I work for the CIA monitoring leftist forum activity now. It’s decidedly less important than synthesizing adrenochrome. I’m much more like the payroll salesman. But now I have monetary hope for the future. When there’s work to be done I do it and I don’t pretend to be busy when there’s not. I take on a reasonable load of responsibility and I’m appreciated and compensated for it (most of the time, some people are assholes for whom contracts and laws don’t apply). I would go back and do a lot of jobs if the CIA went under, but I would be so distraught if I were in healthcare again.

  • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    I live rural, so that’s been going on a while, and to make matters worse they’re closing hospitals as well as pharmacies. The 6 month wait is the standard if not on the shorter side for most specialities, and just to be seen by an endodontist or psychiatrist locally is a 2 year long waiting list for the former, and 4 years for the latter, and that’s the wait for people with good insurance, people with standard or medicaid/care go without, or have to travel 2-3 hrs one way just to be seen. Because of the years long waiting lists local places refuse to take new patients.

    Walgreens closed down last year and Riteaid is closing locations nationwide, which leaves a lot of the near towns with no pharmacies outside of Walmart, if lucky. For example, coworker of mine is both of the age and broke enough to qualify for medicare, she can only pick up medicines when she comes in to work now, which is a 40min drive for her. What few locally owned pharmacies we had had have long closed. I looked at vitamins at one of the closing Rite Aids and was stunned by some of the prices with 40% off, even vs GNC.

    At a residency clinic, as a non new medicaid/uninsured patient its over 3 months to be seen for an appointment, so I end up going to urgent care for everything and never following up generally. I had a sinus infection in December that didn’t get fully addressed until May. Ironically, the residency clinic was and is one of the quickest places (best reviewed too) to be seen outside urgent cares or places that only accept good private insurance. Tbf understandable no one wants to be a guinea pig, especially for first years, who tend to have a rough touch and are awkward. Since covid19 the residents are getting btfo by terminal burnout faster and quit, so I get a lot of letters informing me ‘Dr. FirstorSecondyear left for other ventures, now you have Dr. OtherFirstorSecondyear as your primary care physician’, only to receive another letter a few months or even weeks later. This used to be a much rarer event, tbh I don’t even know what stressed AF resident is assigned to me right now.

    I’ve been eying those remote scribe jobs I’ve seen online in attempting to leave retail, my sister who does something with medical claims says it isn’t a good idea right now since she expects a rural-like collapse to happen nationwide. She’s noted a lot of places have older medical professionals retiring/moving away and medical facilities are opting to go without replacement. When covid19 hit many medical workers left and also weren’t replaced.

  • Pandantic [they/them]@midwest.social
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    4 months ago

    This is a parallel tangent- I just had the price of one of the medicines I need very much go up 10x. I could afford it, but can’t afford it in the long run, and I called the insurance and they’re like 🤷”Nothing we can do. You could go to your Dr and see if they can prescribe another medicine.” But turns out the price depends on the manufacturer which changes depending on pharmacy, which I wouldn’t know until I had the Rx and called the pharmacy. And it’s hard enough to get into my Dr anyway. And I have decent insurance!! 😭

  • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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    4 months ago

    Yes.

    Rural medicine has been in collapse for a while. Hospitals close and it is affecting pharmacies and primary care.

    The problem right now is that people are choosing cultural war libertarian politicians over anyone who somewhat gives a shit about the people.

  • glans [it/its]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    there are lots of health services it’s just they are all so woke only providing gender affirming care and abortions to children

    that’s the impression i get anyway