|
|
|
|
|
by 0xBDB
1378 days ago
|
|
If 92% of American households have health insurance, which they do, and by law there is an annual out-of-pocket maximum on health insurance, which there is, I find it somewhat unlikely that 10% of the country will be medically bankrupt in a generation. I'm not saying it's impossible to go bankrupt on a capped 10k of medical bills, given that so many Americans live paycheck to paycheck. But if it happens there may be confounding factors. Or, you know, it's possible people facing bankruptcy have some incentive to exaggerate to a federal judge the reason they're standing there. |
|
Health insurance companies know about the annual caps and have strong incentives to deny as many costs as uncovered as possible. The out-of-pocket maximums only apply to covered costs. There are lots of costs that health insurance companies deny coverage for: - Incidents that the covered think are emergencies, but the insurer thinks aren’t. - Any time the insured doesn’t follow the policy procedures, such as visiting a specialist without first getting a recommendation from their primary care physician - Out of network providers. - Claims received after the insurer says the policy is cancelled
And there are dozens of reasons related to ineptitude (bad coding, mistyping, lack of cost transparency).
a blog article listing the top 10 types: https://mbamedical.com/blog/8-reasons-why-your-insurance-cla...