It’s almost like the people of many states decided to shoot their own foot off… with no insurance.
Gee… I wonder if there’s a voting pattern we could discern from this map.The actual fuck Wyoming?
I mean, that’s like eight people. Pretty easy for one guy with lousy insurance to throw off the results.
As a citizen of a civilized country: What is this “medical debt” Americans keep talking about?
Haha… I’m in Europe and have health insurance debt …
How did you manage that?
Where I’m from
- You legally have to be insured and the only way to change your insurance is proving that you’re insured somewhere else
- If you’re employed, your employer pays the insurance for you, if you’re unemployed the responsibility to pay is on you
it’s not very nice to shit-talk victims of exploitation
For ages, the American public does obviously not want any kind of social security, because you managed not to fix this basic problem for a number of differend government periods. So we are talking about happily agreeing victims.
A 57% majority of U.S. adults believe that the federal government should ensure all Americans have healthcare coverage.
https://news.gallup.com/poll/468401/majority-say-gov-ensure-healthcare.aspx
Now, if they would actually vote that way…
Our system as it is set up is explicitly anti democratic and impossible to reform in any way without the buy in of the very officials who benefit from it being so. There’s no solution but revolution, and the people are so trapped in capitalist realism that many cannot perceive that any option exists other than to slowly watch as our quality of life degrades and our rights are stripped away one by one. There are a minority who are against such things as affordable healthcare, but there is literally studies done showing that regardless of popular support numbers for any given policy, there is no effect on the likelihood said policy will be implemented. Conversely, the support of the top 10% for a policy, or lack thereof, correlates directly to its likelihood of being implemented.
All that to say, this country is definitively a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.
It’s how they punish us poor people for surviving instead of dying off like good little wage slaves.
As citizen of country that was civilized 25 years ago: I have no idea.
Aren’t you Russian?
Kinda meaningless now, actually.
As of 2022 it no longer shows up on your credit report, and the amounts are such incredibly high make-believe numbers ($15,000 for an ER visit in which you don’t even see a doctor), that the uninsured are essentially judgment-proof and those with insurance can just not pay anything past the deductible.
Honestly, if they kept the bills at like $200 it would be may more distressing for the poor. Once the debt is so high it can’t be paid, it becomes meaningless. Owing several times your annual salary is no different than owing nothing at all.
And how many times have the Republicans tried to abolish that program?
Are these figures by month or year or one-time or whatever? I assume by month.
My son is on MNSure and has no premiums or co-pays.
But the government is literally incapable of ever doing anything right! We made sure of it! How is this possible!!
No this is a failure of government, their job is to make poor people’s/ minority’s lives harder and keep them beaten down /s
Big coincidence all the red is in red states and counties. Hrmmmmm…
better red and dead, apparently…
This is because the higher values are denoted by a redder color, causing the states with the most red to be red in appearance
Thank you. My color-blind mind could not comprehend this.
Yeah but this doesn’t explain the urine colored states.
Thanks for breaking it down, doctor
🙏
RED STATES?! *Communism intensifies*
Overlay with the poorest and least educated and you may find even more surprising ‘coincidences’!
Wait, I thought most states did? Meant for the really low income people on food stamps and cash assistance?
Also, Jesus Christ Wyoming.
yo be fair, wyoming has a population smaller than major states bigger cities, so having access to a doctor in that reletively speaking, spread out isnt that easy, nor momentarily desireable for a doctor that would work there unless theyre heavily compensated.
I don’t believe for one second that the central valley in California isn’t in the top tier. They’re probably just not counting half the workforce there.
There’s really not a lot of people in the central valley compared to the coast (thank fuck).
What’s the square guy in top left that’s almost completely red?
Wyoming
Why not oming?
So many reasons, medical debt being one of them. Yellowstone is pretty, though.
I wanna see how this correlates with people who just refuse to go to a doctor because they are afraid of/hate doctors. Not likely to incur medical debt if you just never visit a doctor.
Until whatever minor problems you have boil over into a health emergency and then, blammo! Deferred treatment of healthcare is a massive source of health related costs.
But that requires someone who cares about you.
You can always just… Die alone. 🤷🏻♂️
Doesn’t every state have a public program for low income families? That’s literally what Medicaid is, I believe?
Some places are totally just not doing it right
It seems like it’s up to the state to set the barrier for entry to their Medicaid system. In my state, the limit was <$24k yearly income, and I think that’s gone up since I last looked. In a friend’s state, it was <$12k to qualify, which is a lot harder to survive on.
Depends on the state, mine only started participating in the Medicaid expansion program a year or two ago. Here low income families can have functional Medicaid coverage until you’re 18, then you get put on a limited care program that really only covers emergent care. However, both the child and adult programs recently got semi-privatized. Now the sate pays BCBS and Humana to run the Medicaid program for the state, letting them determine what coverage is like.
So even in southern states where there is a Medicaid program, the adults rarely have coverage for everyday healthcare needs. It’s mainly there to make sure there’s some way to reimburse emergent care facilities.
Some places are totally just not doing it right
Repugnantcans: “It’s not that we don’t know how to govern, it’s just that government is inherently bad compared to the free market”
Also known as: starving the beast
Anyone know what’s going on in that one red triangle in Pennsylvania? I’m not familiar with that part of PA and nothing stands out on a map
Aside from that, all of the northeast except Maine showing well.
That’s Franklin County.
Described as a Republican Party Stronghold, only three Democratic Party candidates for president managed to win the county since 1880. The most recent Dem candidate to win the county was LBJ.
There’s lots of counties in PA that are deep red but don’t have that amount of medical debt. Is Franklin County riddled with cancer or something?
No idea. Census info indicates more than 90% have health insurance. Maybe it’s related to distance from major medical centers.
Arkansas doing surprisingly well
I want to know how. I live here and am scared of medical debt. Maybe we just don’t have doctors
Spread the news!
It could start at the county level and move its way up.