• chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    The short wait times are a myth.

    I went ot the ER with a heart scare in May. Turned out to probably be a panic attack, but they wanted a follow-up with a PCP just in case. The earliest appointment I could get with anyone within 100 miles on my insurance plan was in mid-July, and that wasn’t even with a doctor, but a PA.

    I went to the appointment, and they spent 5 minutes with me and ordered labs. I go to the lab on the 30th of this month, and have a follow-up with the PA in October.

    We’re looking at what’s essentially a 5 month wait for a diagnosis for an ER visit, and the total bill is gonna be around 15-20 grand.

    Fortunately, I have “great insurance” so it’s only gonna cost me about $1500 to be told that the tests are inconclusive because they were 3 months after the incident.

  • Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Shorter wait times? The US healthcare system is a massive fucking dumpster fire. There are cases of people dying in hospital waiting rooms.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      1 hour ago

      Probably if you’re a millionaire you can get shorter wait times.

      The rest of y’all are fucked tho. Wish it wasn’t so, but oh well.

  • Jollyllama@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Where are the shorter waits?! I called for a primary care appointment in July and only appointment was November or January the next year. FOR A 15-30 MINUTE APPOINTMENT. My insurance was billed $300+ for the visit.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      1 hour ago

      My insurance was billed $300+ for the visit.

      Rest assured, they didn’t pay $300+. Of course if you’d paid for it out of pocket without negotiating, YOU would’ve paid $300+.

      That’s part of why the prices are so goddamn high. EMR and billing software for the US market gets a “billed” and “expected” field on charges and the “expected” value in particular differs by insurance I believe.

    • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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      3 hours ago

      Conservatives bitching about how if we had Canada’s healthcare, we’d be waiting forever.

      I have AMERICAN healthcare and I have to schedule a basic ass mandatory checkup 4-6 months in advance.

      If it was an emergency, the next available slot is six weeks.

      • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        if we had Canada’s healthcare, we’d be waiting forever.

        Or another approach, calculate how much time it takes to save the cash for any given procedure and compare that to any socialized care. Say for an MRI, lab work, root canal, etc.

        USA system is great if your wealthy. Otherwise you might as well be in a developing country as far as your access to all these high tech treatments we need massive profits on.

    • Alaik@lemmy.zip
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      5 hours ago

      Same… to get an appointment at my PCP in a decently sized city it was 7 months.

      • Jollyllama@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        This is the new doctor 😭😭.

        I called another place and they actually said to call back in a couple months. The healthcare system is so consolidated in my state that there’s only a few systems to go to. Maine.

        I could schedule something hours away but then I’d need to take time off work to go or I won’t go because of the inconvenience

  • Bronzebeard@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    The US does not have shorter waits. Try scheduling an appointment with a primary care doctor, their schedule starts like a month and a half out

    • fishy@lemmy.today
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      2 hours ago

      I called to see any gp from a major hospital in my area last week. Earliest appointment is in Feb. Guess I’ll just go die.

    • booly@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      There are basically 3 main systems for universal healthcare in the world:

      Beveridge model: the government runs the hospitals and employs the doctors, and any resident may use the services. This is known as socialized healthcare, and it’s what UK uses.

      Bismarck model: the government mandates everyone get insurance from highly regulated competing insurance companies (some of which might be government operated and run, and some of which might be private). Everyone is put into the risk pools so that the insurers will collect enough from the entire population, including the low risk demographics. Those who cannot reasonably afford insurance are given government subsidies so that they can be covered, too. This is what Germany and Switzerland use, and is sometimes referred to as an “all payer” or “Swiss” model.

      National Health Insurance Model: This is where the government gives everyone insurance and positions itself as basically the monopoly/monopsony health insurer to cover everyone and negotiate compensation rates for health care services provided by private providers. This is what Canada uses. It’s also known as “single payer.”

      The fourth model of health care economics should be mentioned, as well. It does not promise, or even try to provide, universal health care. It’s the fee for service model, where private providers set their own prices and consumers decide whether to purchase those services. Sometimes insurance can be involved, but the providers are free to negotiate their own prices with insurers, but might opt not to take insurance at all and make the patients deal with that paperwork.

      Many countries use hybrid models that combine elements of the Beveridge Model and the Bismarck Model, with government providers competing with private providers, and maybe government insurers providing a backstop for what private insurers won’t cover.

      The U.S. doesn’t follow any one model. It follows all 4 models in different settings:

      • It follows the socialized model for the military and veterans affairs, as well as the Indian Health Service for Native American tribes (the government owns the hospitals and employs the staff directly).
      • It follows elements of the all payer model for most employer-provided health insurance (employers of a certain size are required to provide optional health insurance) and there are the ACA exchanges, where private insurance is highly regulated and is generally required to provide coverage to anyone who a>!!<pplies, and pays providers based on negotiated prices (and since 2021 providers can’t go after the patient for the difference if they don’t like how much the insurer pays).
      • It follows elements of the single payer model for the elderly, through universal Medicare coverage for those over 65. Medicare is the elephant in the room for negotiating prices and procedures, and providers generally don’t want to refuse to take Medicare because it’s just such a dominant insurer among the elderly population. For example, federal law requires any hospital with an emergency room to provide life saving services to anyone who needs it, regardless of ability to pay. The actual mechanism for making that policy is by tying Medicare eligibility to that policy. In theory hospitals could refuse to provide emergency medicine to those who can’t afford it, but then they’d lose millions in Medicare funding.
      • But the fundamental default in the U.S. is the fee for service model. Providers doing patient intake will ask “and how are you going to pay for this,” ready to accept either direct payment or an insurance policy.

      Turning back to waitlists for medical appointments, the specific type of payment arrangement in the U.S. is a big determinant for the waits. Providers who take the most popular insurance plans might get their calendars filled weeks or months in advance. Especially in lower population areas that are underserved by healthcare providers. (Side note, expect things to get much, much worse for rural healthcare with the DOGE cuts to HHS and USDA.) But in the big cities, those with higher paying insurance can generally get seen pretty quickly.

      There is no universal system in the U.S., so there is no standard experience in the U.S. It’s fragmented all to hell, and not only does it suck, it sucks for everyone in a different way.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Also, this is a dumb talking point that shouldn’t even be addressed as a serious critique of any country’s medical care. I hate it. It’s like people who want to see the post office abolished because they tried to send a package on a Friday afternoon after work and had to wait 10 minutes because everyone else wants to use the highly effective, cheaper solution for shipping.

      What “waits” are we talking about here? Waiting in line at a hospital to be seen by staff? There are always going to be so many doctors in a facility for dealing with emergencies, no matter where you go. It can change at times of day or with workload. I’ve been seen immediately, and I’ve had to wait hours for ER service.

      Are we talking primary care visits? Who doesn’t schedule them? Are there any countries where you can just walk into a doctor office and they magically have your tests and records just ready in-hand? Of course not, you make appointments. Same with operations and other medical procedures.

      Let’s argue the only point that matters here: affordability - the promise that the amount of money taken off my paycheck guarantees me healthcare that won’t put me in devastating debt or ruin my life with additional costs. As it has done to me. It’s such a simple concept and talks about “wait times” are just deliberate attempts to muddy this basic human right we should all have in the richest country on Earth in the most advanced time on Earth.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        44 minutes ago

        What “waits” are we talking about here

        It differs a lot by specialty and country, but there are genuine waitlist issues, and there are non-issues.

        Think the wait for a dermatologist appointment is approx 2 years in my country by now. Psychiatry? Called the hospital, they said they don’t have any openings for the foreseeable future (but luckily you can get private psychiatrists, only problem is that mine went to another clinic and doubled his already high price). ENT? A few weeks, very manageable. PCP? They’re limited by how many patients they can have (you’re assigned one at birth, but you can change later, you can’t just schedule an appt with a random PCP usually), it might vary by PCP, but mine schedules me for the next day quite often, no problem at all there.

        Let’s argue the only point that matters here: affordability - the promise that the amount of money taken off my paycheck guarantees me healthcare that won’t put me in devastating debt or ruin my life with additional costs.

        I’ll agree that healthcare access without devastating debt or costs is a basic human right. But it’s not the ONLY point that matters. In my country you might suspect a mole of being cancerous and die of said cancer before you get to see the dermatologist. Wouldn’t want to switch over to the American model, but there’s clearly something wrong with our system too. Parliament has decided to raise payroll taxes and enact a profit tax (a completely new tax) to develop our military since we share a border with Russia. There’s a brand new car tax including a pretty damn hefty registration tax (includes old cars changing owners if they haven’t been paid for yet, so pretty much all used cars) that’s being used to balance our budget… Oh and of course there was a second VAT increase in 1.5 years.

        I don’t see the healthcare system getting any better, despite my annual tax load across the board increasing by several thousand euros and the ER and specialty doctor visit charge being quadrupled (which, surprise surprise, has NOT lessened the burden on ERs because it’s already a literal meme how unlikely Estonians are to go to the ER, or to a doctor in general - we only do it when our family members tell us to, not when we’re simply bleeding to death).

      • lowside@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        It’s not a dumb talking point at all. The wait times are massively important as they are your actual access to said healthcare.

        You do not have access to any healthcare if the wait times are so long that by the time you see the doctor you are iether recovered or dead.

        The issue with wait times are multifaceted and can’t be fixed by switching to a different payment scheme. It has to do with hospital admin that cut costs at every opportunity. It has to do with the ACGMEs stranglehold on the amount of new doctors getting a medical licence comming in. It has to do with how few doctors are going into the lower paying specialties.

        Wait times are different depending on the area, the procedure, and necessity but they are also so what based on luck.

        Go into an ER because of a heart attack on a slow night and you get immediate treatment. Go in with the same issue on a busy night when they just had 3 GSWs dropped of at the ER doors, a cardiac arrest In progress, a CVA, and 5 psychs all in the ER right now. Not to mention a handful of incoming ambulances, and you will get the same treatment but much slower.

        You spend a few hours in triage then finally get a room inside. Another twenty minutes before a nurse sees you. Another hour before a doctor. They run an EKG and labs in the meanwhile. You are having an NSTEMI.

        After you get out of the ER. You spend a day in a hospital room for observation. They didn’t really do anything but you are feeling a bit better on your own. They tell you, you need to go to a cardiologist.

        The hospital tried to find you one to transfer you there directly, but no cardiologist within 250 miles has any opening so they spend a few days looking and nothing comes up. You get discharged. You still need to see a cardiologist.

        You call around and find which ones are covered by your insurence. You call their offices and they say they are booked out for 4 months. But you can be put on a wait list. There are only 20 other people on the wait-list before you. Maybe you will get lucky.

        You where not lucky. 4 months later you finally get seen by the cardiologist. They discover that you now have left sided heart failure which could have been avoided if you just saw them sooner and got a stent placed. Now you are diagnosed with CHF which you will struggle with for the rest of your life.

        Now you have to get regular checkup with your primary care provider but also with th cardiologist to keep an eye on things. You make sure to call 4 months in advance because that’s how far out they are booking appointments right now.

        You have an appointment comming up in only a month, but your realy not feeling well. You are worried that it’s your heart again. You can’t seem to catch your breath and your body feels slow and heavy. You call your primary care doctor and they say, no we can’t see you. You have to go to the ER. You go to the ER. They run an EKG and basic labs. Everything comes back ok. Your ER doc says nothing I can do, go see your cardiologist.

        You call your cardiologist and they say appointment in 3 months but if it gets worse, go to the ER. You call your Primary care and ask if they can move your appointment up. They say no. And they canceled your next appointment when you called because you where going to the ER so they figured you didn’t need it. The slot has already been given to someone else. But they will squeeze you in asap. Appintmet set a month from now.

        This is the cycle that people live and die in.

        Time matters. In an emergency, but also in routine daily care. Sure everyone makes appointment, but the problem is there are no open appointments for months.

        If I get the flu and want to see my primary care provider to get diagnosed and get some antivirals it will be at minimum 2 weeks before I can see her. That’s the closest appointment. By then I don’t have the flu anymore and it’s pointless. What if I was old and unhealthy and that flu nearly killed me? Now I go to the ER and tie up emergency resources all because I could not get in to see my normal doctor.

      • jon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        Are we talking primary care visits? Who doesn’t schedule them? Are there any countries where you can just walk into a doctor office and they magically have your tests and records just ready in-hand? Of course not, you make appointments. Same with operations and other medical procedures.

        In my province in Canada we have digital records. While there are some hiccups as a couple of systems merge to one I can see a doctor in the emergency room and then go see my GP the next morning and both the emergency room staff and my GP have access to all of my tests and records.

        There are still issues with long waits but in my experience if you have a long wait its because your issue is not extremely urgent and while waiting sucks its better than needing the care urgently.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      We have “plans” you can get through your employer which will bring down your cancer operation costs to just $15000 in deductibles, assuming you don’t get fired for taking the time off to get the operation.

      Otherwise, if you fall on a iron fence you can go to the ER and at least the bill won’t impact your credit history. Sorry I’m being told that now medical bills impact your credit history.

    • HereIAm@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I feel like the result from this image today would be to cut off the wings and make the fuselage weaker to make it cheaper to produce, because clearly they aren’t needed.

      • Alaik@lemmy.zip
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        5 hours ago

        You forgot to give yourself a bonus after “contributing value” to the company.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Sorta makes some sense. People wait until it’s critical and then get rushed in with a heart attack, or they go to walk-in clinics which are a growing trend - a major downside is you don’t have a regular doctor that knows you health trends and can keep up a plan for you. Walk-ins start you from scratch every time. Getting to see your PCP, if you have one? Months for an appointment. Tell them it’s important? Couple weeks. Really important? Tomorrow or go to the ER.

  • chunes@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    U.S. health care is something else. It took me 7 years to be diagnosed with a well-known disease that has a median survival duration of 2.5 years from onset.

    I’ll leave it to your imagination the obstacles I faced. Frankly, I don’t want to think about it.

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      How much of what you experienced is due to the medical mindset (doctors are morons)?

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        13 hours ago

        I’m not sure exactly what you mean but I would attribute it to four main reasons:

        • I’m rural and the quality of physicians here leaves a bit to be desired
        • Physicians are overworked and as a result, generally uncaring and unable to provide substantial help.
        • It takes months to get the ball rolling on every step of the process
        • Insurance is hellbent on denying everything

        My situation didn’t improve until I was finally referred to a couple physicians in the right specialty who truly care and were willing to fight my insurance.

        • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          2 hours ago

          If the insurance corporation wants to fight about it, i would recommend forgoing letters and requests and go directly to their headquarters for the physical altercation they desire.

        • _core@sh.itjust.works
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          9 hours ago

          I moved to a rural location and your four points are exactly how it is. I have to harass my doctor to get them to put in referrals. My wife had to go and physically walk a referral from the doctor to the hopsital across the parking lot to make sure they actually got it. Then stayed and scheduled it right then b/c getting a callback for scheduling is a crapshoot.

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          9 hours ago

          That’s exactly what I meant, the biggest problem in the medical field is the doctors themselves, they’re basically useless at this point. You could replace them with a potato and give you the same first three points of your list, but for cheaper.

            • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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              1 hour ago

              Why wouldn’t it? Doctors operate pill mills and have the ethics of your local gang member.

              Which type of potato do you prefer? Yukon Gold? Russet? Those little round hard ones everyone likes except me?

  • njm1314@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Who told you about shorter wait times? Oftentimes you have to wait in months.

    • lukaro@lemmy.zip
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      18 hours ago

      I can see my primary within hours normally, she can’t do much except refer me to who I really need see and those appointments take weeks to make and months to get to.

      • Tinidril@midwest.social
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        17 hours ago

        I have a chronic pain issue and my primary referred me to a specialist that took sox months to see. They referred me to a different specialist with a six month wait-list. They then referred me to a more specific sub-specialist for another three month wait. I live in a reasonably well-off and well populated area, so I’m not out in flyover country or anything. I’ve heard the same from many people. Short wait-lists in America is a myth.

        • Raiderkev@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          100%. Took me 3 months to get an ENT appointment. They’ve still done fuck all about the actual issue almost a year and a half later. The profit incentive is for return customers, not to actually fucking cure anything here.

          • Tinidril@midwest.social
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            4 hours ago

            My first six month wait was for an ENT. I’m actually past ten years, well over a dozen referrals, and three useless surgeries, but that’s another story.

            Pro-tip, if they want you to see a neurologist, make sure it’s a headache specialist. I waited 6 months to see a neurologist recommended by an ENT, only to have her immediately refer me to a headache specialist because, duh, nasal sinuses are in the head. What really kind of pisses me off is that I asked the ENT if this specific Neurologist he recommended was good with my kind of issue, and he assured me they were. Total bullshit.

      • isaaclw@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        We desperately need more doctors, and those doctors need to cost less.

        Free college would make a big difference for that.

        • Liz@midwest.social
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          15 hours ago

          Sort of. The US medical system has multiple choke points, but an undergraduate degree is the least limiting. The bigger barriers are the limited number of med school spots and the even smaller number of residency spots. Med school is a whole discussion, I don’t even think you should need an undergraduate degree, but whatever. The final filter is residency spots, which are functionally set by the government. They pay hospitals to take residents, and will only pay for a certain number each year. We gotta increase that number if we want to stop throwing away educated doctors before they can even get to helping people.

          • Alaik@lemmy.zip
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            4 hours ago

            I’d say you’re right honestly. Especially since the majority of courses are really pointless for doctors. Organic chemistry only serves to weed out those who can’t or won’t study. You’ll use very little of it as a practicing doctor (Biology majors who take things such as immunology, genetics, etc def get more value than other majors)

            Med school acceptance is definitely an issue like you said also. Its only getting worse, with the average GPA/MCAT/extracurriculars being waaaay higher than even in the 90s.

            Residency, thankfully, is something theyre trying to address by increasing the slots. Of course they also have fucked anyone who needs FinAid for premed/med school so…

    • CH3DD4R_G0B-L1N@sh.itjust.works
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      21 hours ago

      My other favorite refrain was the “You can keep your doctor!” crap that was a big selling point for that crowd.

      In this system I have had 4 doctors move practices while under their care because they’re playing the capitalist system. I was not able to benefit from continuity of care in any form.

      But at least I had to pay for it, not get it for “free” from a natl healthcare system. Yay.

    • Unbecredible@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      Seems like a simple enough case that there can be a fact of the matter. Either U.S. wait time are shorter than single payer systems on average or they’re not; no need to rely on anecdotal stuff.

      Is there anyone that can point to some good data on the subject?

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        15 hours ago

        Honestly? I can’t do the searching for you this time, but it’s all the top results when you look for average wait times between countries. The data is easy to access. Pretty much all developed nations have similar numbers, with wide variation between specialties.

  • DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    Shorter wait lmao

    I’ve been waiting for almost a year to see a specialist for my depression

    I have health insurance and my parents have money to pay for it, just that we aren’t rich enough to skip the line

  • jaschen306@sh.itjust.works
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    24 hours ago

    I accidentally sliced my finger and non stop bleeding in the ER for 5 hours straight.

    This was from 2am to 7am. Not exactly peak times.

    American healthcare is broken.

    • obrien_must_suffer@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      I went to the ER in a wealthy part of the Denver metro with abdominal pain and a significant fever. I was in the waiting room for at least 8 hours for them to decide I might have a perforated bowel and I was admitted. It ended up being diverticulitis.

      It makes my head explode when people say wait times are longer in countries with public systems because all the hypochondriacs will be abusing it. Motherfucker, wait times are ridiculous now.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        36 minutes ago

        It makes my head explode when people say wait times are longer in countries with public systems because all the hypochondriacs will be abusing it.

        It helps that in at least some countries (mine) you need to go to your PCP to even get a referral to a specialist unless you want to go to a private clinic and pay for the specialist. Then also all visits except PCP, are subject to a small fee. I suspect PCPs will stop sending you to specialists if you start raving about a new disease 5 times a month.

        My hypochondriac ex certainly went to the ER about 50-60 times in the 2 years we were together though. Mostly maternity ER (she claimed she started getting braxton-hicks at about 10-12 weeks and the hospital she wanted to give birth at was 100 km from home so it meant 2x100 km drives about 2-3 times a week during starting week 20 or so). I reckon in the US, insurance would’ve told her to fuck off quite soon and I would’ve been millions in debt for her bullshit.

    • PlaidBaron@lemmy.world
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      24 hours ago

      No no. It cant be. Everyone in America keeps telling me the wait times in Canada are so high because of socialized medicine and you only have to wait 7 seconds to see a doctor in the glorious US of A.

      • jaschen306@sh.itjust.works
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        23 hours ago

        I am also Canadian and having used both healthcare system, I want to tell you that your Canadian conservative friends and conservative political talking points are all lying to you. It’s far faster in Canada than in America.

        My point of view was from a suburb in Toronto and Vancouver vs NYC and Seattle.

        • PlaidBaron@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          Oh I know. Ive used both systems too and thank god Im Canadian and live here. The insurance scheme was a nightmare and the wait times were just as long.

      • Ulvain@sh.itjust.works
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        23 hours ago

        Am Canadian. Got stung by a wasp on the foot last Saturday. Got worried yesterday when i noticed the red area around the sting grew. Contacted my gp’s office at the CLSC, got an appointment to see her this morning, got a scrip for antibiotics since she thinks it’s likely an infection, picked it up this pm and starting it tonight. 0$ for the consult, antibiotics are ~60$ (that’s the only place my private insurance kicks in, my out of pocket is 12$).

        And this is a very standard experience in Quebec - with 1 caveat: my family’s fortunate enough to have an assigned GP, there’s a shortage and a pretty long (2y I think) waiting list; on the flip side there are a ton of walking/24/48h appointment clinics (also 0$) for those without.

        When i say 0$, i want to be clear: it’s not free, it’s part of what’s covered by the RAMQ, which is the provincial health insurance company, but our yearly premium for that insurance is at most 800$.

        That’s what happens when the health insurance is designed to hedge and amortize social costs rather than generate profits…

    • But_my_mom_says_im_cool@lemmy.world
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      24 hours ago

      Im Canadian and despite the American conservative talking points, I’ve never had to wait anywhere near that long and definitely not for a critical injury. There are busy hospitals but there are also more of them so you have options many times.

      We have however seen an erosion of our socialized healthcare by conservatives in power in that things keep being removed from coverage, and you have to go out of pocket on things that should be covered.

      • jaschen306@sh.itjust.works
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        24 hours ago

        I also like to mention that it was in a very high end city in the Seattle area.

        At 7am, I was considering leaving and waiting at home until a small clinic opens, but they finally saw me.

    • RidgeDweller@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      I had something similar happen to me like 5 years ago. I chopped part of my finger tip off with a slightly rusty axe while camping after having a few too many.

      I went into the ER the next day, waited about the same amount of time as you to be seen to have it checked out and get a tetanus booster. I got a bills from each doctor that happened to walk by, totalling in the realm of $2,000 after insurance. Literally all each did was say, “Ouch, lucky you didn’t hit the bone!”

      Luckily, my fingertip grew back without nerve damage or anything. I’ll probably try to stay up on my shots and get more confident on dressing myself next time, maybe try and make friends with nurses/vet techs. Shit’s broken on every level.

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Damn I have almost the exact same story. Except mine also comes with a fucked up workers compensation claim and it messed up my credit for years.

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    U.S. healthcare has shorter waits

    Is that even really true to begin with?

      • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        I’m not from the US but once I was in Orlando and took a friend to the hospital cause she wasn’t feeling well, she had insurance. We waited 4 hrs to even see a doctor, I have never waited that long even in public hospitals in my country

        • pohart@programming.dev
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          7 hours ago

          I waited from 6pm to 8am when my doctor’s office opened, and then talked to them to determine if I needed to be there (yes, I should have been seen/treated, but now they could see me in the office).

          Only one patient was taking from the waiting room in that time.

          The US health care system is baaaad.

          And almost any specialist is months for a first visit, even for issues that that are life threatening.

          • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            That’s insane, though I had something similar. I studied there for a year and at one point I dropped a bed on my toe (dont ask), hurt a lot, got all purple and I was pretty sure it broke. I found out in the US I cant just go directly to an orthopedist, even though its obvious I needed one, so I scheduled a general doctor. Long story a bit shorter: by the time I got an xray done, my toe had already calcified lol

        • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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          18 hours ago

          That’s because ERs are the only way poor people see doctors in the US. Since we can’t go see a GP without insurance and a copay, we wait for the stomach pain that could have been treated to turn into sepsis from a gaping ulcer and then crowd into the ER.

          • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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            17 hours ago

            You guys should have rioted decades ago, I feel sorry for you, animals live better than (non rich) americans

              • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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                6 hours ago

                I’d say nothing is more important than your health and you already lost that. You have people dying and suffering while waiting on healthcare.

                • obrien_must_suffer@lemmy.world
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                  6 hours ago

                  For me personally, I have a family that would be on the streets without my income. If I go protesting and get arrested, I lose my job and it’s GG. I’m sure that’s by design. If I was 20 years younger and didn’t have as much riding on me I’d be out there making some noise.

        • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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          15 hours ago

          i waited that long in public subsidized healthcare, i think they forgot me one time, when they put me in a room, i dint see anyone for like 4 hours because they forgot.

      • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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        18 hours ago

        I called my primary for my annual checkup, they can’t get me in for 2 months. It’s getting bad out there

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        1 day ago

        Elective surgery means surgery that can improve quality of life, but is not otherwise life saving right?

        Canada also has the lowest number of doctors per 10k, and the lowest wait for primary care.

        The US has more doctors, but the highest time to primary care.

        I don’t know many elective surgeries that can be scheduled without a primary care referring the patient to the surgeon for consult. Not to mention, beside plastic surgery, it’s usually a case where the patient has no idea they could benefit from the elective surgery.

        That graph is highly misleading.

        • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          Maybe you don’t need an appointment to see a GP in Canada? I’m from Austria and GPs are walk-in for most things here, maybe they’re the same. But yeah, the graph is pretty useless without explaining what kind of appointments and what kind of surgeries.

          To your last point: it could be, eg, your orthopedist (who isn’t a surgeon) referring you to an orthopedic surgeon, no GP required in that case. But that just makes it even more complicated, because in some countries, you need a GP referral to any specialist. I think sometimes even every time you see the specialist.

        • Typhoon@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          Canada also has the lowest number of doctors per 10k, and the lowest wait for primary care.

          That’s assuming you even have primary care. There’s a desperate shortage of family doctors in Ontario.

        • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          What is misleading about it, it’s just numbers? It basically says… My knee hurts, let me go get it checked out: wait time column A. Physician says I need a knee replacement, wait time column B.

          The chart isn’t claiming anything. It doesn’t say what is better or worse, just the wait times.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        What stands out to me on that chart is that the US is more than twice as bad as any other country when it comes to wait time for primary care appointments.

        • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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          11 hours ago

          right? like what is that… i consider a wait of more than a couple of days to be too long and just go to a random walk-in clinic… in a month most problems are gone already on their own or have gotten way out of control

    • SoupBrick@pawb.social
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      1 day ago

      It is a common talking point people use when justifying their anti-universal healthcare stance.

      It is often paired with refusing to acknowledge the current state of US healthcare and thinking they are paying more for quality and access.

      • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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        15 hours ago

        certain health care facilities. i know for things like medi-caid/care it can be weeks to months in advance to see a specialist. they usually are quite fast in scheudling though. if anyone had kaiser, you can see a doctor quite quickly.

        ALso URGENT care is a thing. i can see that for private practices, or doctors that Are swamped because of short staffing.

      • LordCrom@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        True. Even my primary care doctor needs 3 months advance scheduling to find me a slot.

    • theparadox@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      It depends. Do you have a lot of money? I’m sure you can find someone that can see you right away.

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s a very general broad topic. Probably depends a lot on what you need. And more importantly, how rich your are.

      I highly doubt Bill Gates have to wait 3 months for a specialist appointment.

    • ramenshaman@lemmy.world
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      From my experience it depends on which health care provider you have. I have Kaiser and some things are pretty quick, some things aren’t. I used to be on Covered California aka the ACA and things were a lot slower. Seems like, generally, the more money you pay in premiums the faster service you can get.

      • obrien_must_suffer@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        I’ve heard Kaiser is pretty good. I had an employer suddenly switch all their plans to Kaiser, and we had to go individual because we had a few specialists we liked that didn’t work for Kaiser. Plus i couldn’t get a straight answer on what would happen if I got hurt outside of their areas.

        • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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          15 hours ago

          kaiser is so-so, but not great, they are just all doctors in one building type of deal. i had a pretty bad experience with a Kaiser ENT, deliberately ignored my concerns because he got MAD , apparently i was supposed to do only phone appointments and he felt like i waste my time according to him, and he vented his anger on the poor nurse that was in the area/ or the one that put me in the room. then he started laughing me out of the room because of that(i was having pretty frequent nosebleeds). when i switched ENT they found the cause of it(and i did have deviated septum as well, but that was apparently the source of his anger, because doctors do not like to hear patients mention procedures/surgery).

          also KAIser tends to be expensive as well, thats why some employers arnt willing to pay for it.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Kaiser

        Maybe it could also be related to the difference between an HMO and normal insurance?

  • Triasha@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Does american healthcare really have shorter wait times? I’ve seen a lot of people waiting and done a lot of waiting myself.

    Is there any data?

    • untorquer@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      While it may depend on what country you want to compare it to there is nothing about privatization that inherently reduces wait times. My experience is that after leaving the US my wait times are equivalent or improved.

      Private insurance just means you wait, it costs a lot more, and you’re way more likely to delay treatment of your own accord because the profit motive makes the system a financial terror and a psychological torment.

      • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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        14 hours ago

        its also propagandized, designed to make people wait, because the insurance would rather you pay for insurance and not use its services at all, because thats costs them money each time. hence thats why they raise rates for OLDER people(55+), to price them out of the system, and you hare the shitty ones like UHC/UHG, or blue shield deny drugs or procedures all the time.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      15 hours ago

      it depends on the insurance, and the providers, kaiser has pretty fast appointments, by usually caters to the west coast, and its pretty expensive hmo plan. some i heard can be weeks or months, depending on where too.

    • bmdhacks@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Depends on the procedure. Orthopedic surgery in the USA is pretty fast to get. Getting an MRI approved when compared to, say Japan, takes forever.