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by Jesus_Jones 3062 days ago
I guess I'm person 2? I think that's not really what I was saying.

Here's my personal experience - I had a single parent who always worked and always had health insurance through her employer. In her 50s she got hurt and couldn't work much (no cobra, no money either) and lost her insurance. She worked in retail for a while. Then she got cancer and died. Maybe if she'd had more frequent checkups it might have been caught earlier? Maybe less stress would have helped? Who knows. I think if we had national health insurance or health insurance you can't lose, then a lot of people wouldn't face this problem, it would help in the aggregate. She never got to 65, so she didn't jump onto the safe medicare.

1 comments

So you're saying even working for a company (retail) she was at least no better or worse off than if she'd been a consultant who couldn't afford health insurance on her own.

Whether or not there are improvements to be made to our healthcare system is an entirely different discussion than whether or not an average, able bodied person could reasonably go out on their own without another person working in the home to back them up financially. Of course it would be better/easier to have a support system with another worker in the house. Of course it would be better if you had easier access to healthcare. I would never suggest otherwise.

Also, I'm sorry for your loss. My mother is a cancer survivor and it's just a shit situation all the way through.