2025-01-25 23:34:47
In the U.S., nearly all types of non-Medicare health insurance have to cap in-network out-of-pocket costs at no more than $9,450 for a single person in 2024. (This limit will decrease to $9,200 in 2025.) This assumes of course that the patient carries health insurance. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(21-2-88) Author
2025-01-25 23:46:56
NNN - The cap on the maximum out of pocket is only if the procedure is covered by the insurance company. And the figure provided is for an individual. The original poster stated his son had surgery. This would be covered under a family plan, which has a much higher “cap”. NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(30-1-10) Author
2025-01-26 02:45:31
NNN - go defend your orange president in the comments, fucktards. The CN are NOT the place to do so. CURRENTLY_RATED_NOT_HELPFUL(12-1-15) Author
2025-01-26 04:41:44
He paid for it in his taxes. Canadas healthcare costs were $8,563 per Canadian in 2022. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(22-1-101) Author
2025-01-26 06:46:31
NNN- this is a personal anecdote NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(14-1-3) Author
2025-01-26 13:28:18
The post describes a personal experience and gives an opinion. Community Notes are not made to dispute opiniões. NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(7-0-3) Author
2025-01-26 14:26:57
1. This is a personal anecdote 2. There was not a specific bill the user would've been charged with 3. Other notes assume insurance would deem the entire process to procedure fully covered to make their statement applicable. NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(6-0-2) Author
2025-01-26 17:34:44
The average yearly premium for a single person in the United states is $8,951, which is higher than the speculated CAN yearly cost, and the average family pays $25,572 yearly. Any out of plan coverage costs are not capped, and prices can get this high with additional costs. [Link][Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(5-0-4) Author