Yes, and they are not cheap. I typically hit my insurance deductible by the end of February each year.
I'm the kind of person insurance companies hate because I'm expensive and they can't deny most of my care.
Yes, and they are not cheap. I typically hit my insurance deductible by the end of February each year.
I'm the kind of person insurance companies hate because I'm expensive and they can't deny most of my care.
Not a high bar, but thanks!
My state requires a college education to be a peace officer and I went to, at the time, the best school for law enforcement in the country.
I actually changed my mind because the only part of the job that really interested me was investigations and I didn't want to spend years doing the other bullshit just to get there.
I am doing better though it's looking like I'll need another transplant at some point.
Fortunately, I had good insurance through work and because I ended up in renal failure that makes you automatically eligible for Medicare (one good thing Nixon did). Also, the billed amount gets discounted based on whatever deal your particular insurance has with the provider, so billed amount ≠ paid amount. Unless you're uninsured.
I did ended up going through bankruptcy anyway but that had more to do with my choices and lifestyle leading up to all of this. It did wipe out any portion of that bill that would have been my responsibility though
Thanks! Good chance I'd be unalive if it didn't happen when it did.
We were required to take civics but I also spent 4 years of college working towards my degree and licensure as a police officer in my state.
Got all the way to our version of the hands-on academy and decided policing wasn't for me. Now I work in IT.
That's… not how laws in the US work. I take it you're not familiar with the maxim "everything which is not forbidden is allowed". Abortion was never legalized by federal law in the US either yet they were still being performed.
The federal law protects states rights until the federal law directly overwrites it
Not exactly. State laws can be as, or more restrictive, than federal laws but they cannot be less. This means that if the federal government doesn't restrict it then states can be as restrictive as they want, as long as those restrictions aren't in opposition to existing federal laws.
Slavery wasn't federally legalized
Well…
This is all in any decent history about slavery in the US. In fact, slavery is still not completely illegal in the US. Remember the 13th amendment? It formally abolished slavery and involuntary servitude in the US, except as a punishment for a crime.
This is too hard to answer because of the number of variables at play like, do you have insurance, does your condition/issue qualify you for Medicare, does your job offer disability leave, are you FMLA eligible, do you meet requirements for SSA disability etc.
Anecdotally, in 2017 I spent two non-consecutive months in the hospital. The first visit I came in through the ER, ended up in the ICU intubated and worked my way through each section as I got better.
My second stay I skipped the ICU but had a transplant halfway through. I also was on dialysis for the ~6 months in between.
Dialysis was billed at $7k a visit, roughly $500k in total. The transplant surgery alone was ~$750k. The hospital stays came to about $5k a day on average for roughly $300k in total.
So straight billed amount I was somewhere in the $1.5-$1.7 million range.
I set one of these up for our cats and they never used it. I'd always find them drinking out of the dogs water bowl.
This is a great idea! We had them on our "to buy" list when we bought our house and they ended up falling by the wayside.
Fast forward 4.5 years where we had a small grease fire in the oven and now we have general use ones on each level, a kitchen specific one and a fire blanket in the pantry for stove top fires.
The Roe decision folded abortion into the 14th Amendment until it was overturned in Dobbs returning legislation over it to the states.
If you don't know what you are talking about then maybe you should not chime in and research the issue instead. This is all basic American history. Honestly, spoon feeding you things you could learn yourself to correct your wrongly made statements is exhausting. It's time for me to block you and move on.