Home › Forums › Other › OT: Anyone hear the NPR interview about the person getting dependant care coverage from parents
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September 23, 2010 at 1:05 AM #609433September 23, 2010 at 1:20 AM #608368equalizerParticipant
[quote=CA renter][quote=flu]Ok. My head is spinning. I guess the other question I have is. If what we really need is some sort of minimum universal health coverage then why the hell is everything still going through insurance companies???[/quote]
Good question.[/quote]
Simple fact to all questions on policy is that lobbyists wrote the bills and legally paid the Congress to pass the bills. Not hyberbole, c’est la vie.September 23, 2010 at 1:20 AM #608454equalizerParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=flu]Ok. My head is spinning. I guess the other question I have is. If what we really need is some sort of minimum universal health coverage then why the hell is everything still going through insurance companies???[/quote]
Good question.[/quote]
Simple fact to all questions on policy is that lobbyists wrote the bills and legally paid the Congress to pass the bills. Not hyberbole, c’est la vie.September 23, 2010 at 1:20 AM #609008equalizerParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=flu]Ok. My head is spinning. I guess the other question I have is. If what we really need is some sort of minimum universal health coverage then why the hell is everything still going through insurance companies???[/quote]
Good question.[/quote]
Simple fact to all questions on policy is that lobbyists wrote the bills and legally paid the Congress to pass the bills. Not hyberbole, c’est la vie.September 23, 2010 at 1:20 AM #609117equalizerParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=flu]Ok. My head is spinning. I guess the other question I have is. If what we really need is some sort of minimum universal health coverage then why the hell is everything still going through insurance companies???[/quote]
Good question.[/quote]
Simple fact to all questions on policy is that lobbyists wrote the bills and legally paid the Congress to pass the bills. Not hyberbole, c’est la vie.September 23, 2010 at 1:20 AM #609438equalizerParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=flu]Ok. My head is spinning. I guess the other question I have is. If what we really need is some sort of minimum universal health coverage then why the hell is everything still going through insurance companies???[/quote]
Good question.[/quote]
Simple fact to all questions on policy is that lobbyists wrote the bills and legally paid the Congress to pass the bills. Not hyberbole, c’est la vie.September 23, 2010 at 6:28 AM #608388meadandaleParticipant[quote=bearishgurl][quote=enron_by_the_sea] . . . Like it or not – the future of our healthcare is HSA+HDHP and some bargaining with your favorite doctor.
I am in the 5th stage of Anger-Denial-Bargaining-Depression-Acceptance cycle of this issue. Most of the country seems to be in stages 2 and 3.[/quote]
enron, I don’t have an HSA, but have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) which I used to think was “affordable.”[/quote]
If you have a HDHP it is likely an HSA qualifying plan…in which case you would be foolish not to take advantage of this and contribute pretax dollars to your HSA account that you can then use for any of your health related expenses. The annual max contribution is now almost $3k. If you have a plan with a deductible in the $3-4k range, one year of contributions gives you basically all the money you’d need to pay the deductible in the event you have a major health event (hospitalization, etc).
September 23, 2010 at 6:28 AM #608474meadandaleParticipant[quote=bearishgurl][quote=enron_by_the_sea] . . . Like it or not – the future of our healthcare is HSA+HDHP and some bargaining with your favorite doctor.
I am in the 5th stage of Anger-Denial-Bargaining-Depression-Acceptance cycle of this issue. Most of the country seems to be in stages 2 and 3.[/quote]
enron, I don’t have an HSA, but have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) which I used to think was “affordable.”[/quote]
If you have a HDHP it is likely an HSA qualifying plan…in which case you would be foolish not to take advantage of this and contribute pretax dollars to your HSA account that you can then use for any of your health related expenses. The annual max contribution is now almost $3k. If you have a plan with a deductible in the $3-4k range, one year of contributions gives you basically all the money you’d need to pay the deductible in the event you have a major health event (hospitalization, etc).
September 23, 2010 at 6:28 AM #609028meadandaleParticipant[quote=bearishgurl][quote=enron_by_the_sea] . . . Like it or not – the future of our healthcare is HSA+HDHP and some bargaining with your favorite doctor.
I am in the 5th stage of Anger-Denial-Bargaining-Depression-Acceptance cycle of this issue. Most of the country seems to be in stages 2 and 3.[/quote]
enron, I don’t have an HSA, but have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) which I used to think was “affordable.”[/quote]
If you have a HDHP it is likely an HSA qualifying plan…in which case you would be foolish not to take advantage of this and contribute pretax dollars to your HSA account that you can then use for any of your health related expenses. The annual max contribution is now almost $3k. If you have a plan with a deductible in the $3-4k range, one year of contributions gives you basically all the money you’d need to pay the deductible in the event you have a major health event (hospitalization, etc).
September 23, 2010 at 6:28 AM #609137meadandaleParticipant[quote=bearishgurl][quote=enron_by_the_sea] . . . Like it or not – the future of our healthcare is HSA+HDHP and some bargaining with your favorite doctor.
I am in the 5th stage of Anger-Denial-Bargaining-Depression-Acceptance cycle of this issue. Most of the country seems to be in stages 2 and 3.[/quote]
enron, I don’t have an HSA, but have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) which I used to think was “affordable.”[/quote]
If you have a HDHP it is likely an HSA qualifying plan…in which case you would be foolish not to take advantage of this and contribute pretax dollars to your HSA account that you can then use for any of your health related expenses. The annual max contribution is now almost $3k. If you have a plan with a deductible in the $3-4k range, one year of contributions gives you basically all the money you’d need to pay the deductible in the event you have a major health event (hospitalization, etc).
September 23, 2010 at 6:28 AM #609458meadandaleParticipant[quote=bearishgurl][quote=enron_by_the_sea] . . . Like it or not – the future of our healthcare is HSA+HDHP and some bargaining with your favorite doctor.
I am in the 5th stage of Anger-Denial-Bargaining-Depression-Acceptance cycle of this issue. Most of the country seems to be in stages 2 and 3.[/quote]
enron, I don’t have an HSA, but have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) which I used to think was “affordable.”[/quote]
If you have a HDHP it is likely an HSA qualifying plan…in which case you would be foolish not to take advantage of this and contribute pretax dollars to your HSA account that you can then use for any of your health related expenses. The annual max contribution is now almost $3k. If you have a plan with a deductible in the $3-4k range, one year of contributions gives you basically all the money you’d need to pay the deductible in the event you have a major health event (hospitalization, etc).
September 23, 2010 at 6:30 AM #608393meadandaleParticipant[quote=afx114]They don’t have to sign up if they don’t want do. How is this a mandate?[/quote]
Au Contraire…Obama care will be REQUIRING that every one have health insurance or they will be fined by the IRS. Period.
September 23, 2010 at 6:30 AM #608479meadandaleParticipant[quote=afx114]They don’t have to sign up if they don’t want do. How is this a mandate?[/quote]
Au Contraire…Obama care will be REQUIRING that every one have health insurance or they will be fined by the IRS. Period.
September 23, 2010 at 6:30 AM #609033meadandaleParticipant[quote=afx114]They don’t have to sign up if they don’t want do. How is this a mandate?[/quote]
Au Contraire…Obama care will be REQUIRING that every one have health insurance or they will be fined by the IRS. Period.
September 23, 2010 at 6:30 AM #609142meadandaleParticipant[quote=afx114]They don’t have to sign up if they don’t want do. How is this a mandate?[/quote]
Au Contraire…Obama care will be REQUIRING that every one have health insurance or they will be fined by the IRS. Period.
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