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by brianwawok 2241 days ago
A lot of people don’t have insurance. You can’t go to a doctor for a $150 appointment without insurance. But you can go to the ER when it gets really bad for a $2000 appointment (which you don’t pay. May go to court against you but if you are poor, they won’t collect)
3 comments

The article addresses a decline in critical admissions such as strokes and heart attacks, so that would not explain it.
Countries where that isn't the case are seeing a big drop too.
That's what walk-in clinics (Urgent Care) are for. You can visit those often without insurance.
What?

At every one I have been to (not a lot I admit, maybe 4 in my life), I had to both provide insurance card AND pay my copay before a doctor would see me. Without payment, they send you to go to the ER.

How do you know they would send you to the ER? Did you not have insurance? Did they actually send you to the ER for not having it? Honestly, sounds like you simply had insurance, filled out a form and just assumed it was required. I've been to multiple walk-ins, and you can visit without insurance. They will ask for insurance up front, but you can simply say you don't have any. Then you will offer payment options. The average Urgent Care visit is under $200. The point of Urgent Care is literally to handle things that don't need ER visits, and at a much lower rate. I don't know why I've been down voted above, you can simply Google/Bing/Duck "no insurance Urgent Care" and find tons. The CVS MinuteClinic, which is everywhere, doesn't require insurance for instance.

https://www.cvs.com/minuteclinic/insurance-and-billing

The OP said without payment they will send you to the ER, which is true. If you can pay, as you said, then they will see you.