The Washington Post agrees.
-- Christian R. Conrad The Man Who Apparently Still Knows Fucking Everything Mail: Same username as at the top left of this post, at iki.fi |
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looked at my 2023 medicare guide
Part A and B service anywhere is the US where it is accepted advantage plan? Locked into their area of service with huge costs if elsewhere, looks like I am sticking with A & B. Thanks for the link "Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts" – Richard Feynman |
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Also - 'deny until they die' - gotta make that profit somehow
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There are good threads at Balloon-Juice on medical insurance.
David Anderson is the front pager there that talks about it clearly and with lots of facts. Lots of good comments on his threads. One woman makes the point that if you're in an Advantage plan, there are severe constraints if you later decide that regular Medicare works better. E.g. this comment by Ohio Mom. Personally, I start suspicious when for-profit outfits advertise insurance on TV. TV ads cost money, and that money has to come from somewhere... So, while Medicare Advantage may work, one has to verify it with one's own work based on one's own circumstances. We're a few years away from signing up for Medicare, but we dread the process. David makes the point that picking insurance is complicated and there are too many variables to make an "optimum" choice. The best you can hope for is to not make a bad choice, and keep an eye on annual changes. Good luck!! Cheers, Scott. |
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And they have an incentive to make you choose the plan that's best for them
I try to do the math and figure what we're going to need each year. But they have better actuarial tables, and they know what hospitals are actually going to charge. -- Drew |
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I am so, so pleased to not have to deal with all that bullshit
I know there are variances in quality of care and outcomes. But holy shit, from where I’m sitting, it’s worth it. |
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Seconded. Thank Bog for the pinko commie Nordic Welfare State.
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