Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#6
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
If you are 62 and own a home outright You really don't have to worry about
your credit rating so screw the insurance companies and the high overpriced medical industry! If people refused to pay through the nose for medical insurance and care in this country then the damn ripoff insurance companies and overpriced hospitals and doctors who think they are God and charge like it wouldn't be able to continue to gouge our pockets for a damn flu shot. Just my 2 cents wrote in message ups.com... Skip Gundlach wrote: Coming late to this party, and having dealt with a deadline for Cobra conversion by gritting our teeth, grimacing and signing up, we have another avenue to explore. A full-time cruiser, just arrived in our boatyard where we're not quite left yet, but at least, in the water, published writer in Latts/Atts, Lat38 and others, sez he doesn't do health insurance, even in his relatively high risk years before cruising. Several reasons, all amounting to "wherever you are, they have to take care of you" plus whatever the cost adjustments/free you can negotiate on top of the international differences in the medical care costs as compared to the US. He cited several large medical expenses he'd incurred in the past several years, and the total expense was way smaller than he'd have paid in premiums. . . . My wife died about 5 years ago, leaving a hospital bill of about $80,000.00. The insurance company gave me a hard time for about 4 months and the hospital had started adding interest charges to the bill. Then one day I got a bill that said $6,000.00. I called the hospital and they said the insurance company had refused to pay so they had adjusted the bill. Then in the next breath she said, however, they have now agreed to pay and the balance had been returned to the original amount. I doubt if that's very typical and I still don't understand how or why they could have done that. It was a non-profit hospital, but I don't know if that makes any difference. Medical costs are, of course, less in foreign countries. In fact, there is something called "medical tourism" that's gaining popularity. Here's some example sites: http://www.newstarget.com/007097.html http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/he...altourism.html http://pd.cpim.org/2004/0509/05092004_snd.htm http://www.udel.edu/PR/UDaily/2005/m...ism072505.html If you are 62 and own a house that's paid for, a possibility might be to take out a reverse mortgage. This might discourage medical bill collectors from taking out a lien on your house. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Katrina coverage | General | |||
( OT) A tale told by an idiot (terri Schiavo coverage) | General | |||
Best paint system for bare steel hull? | Boat Building | |||
BlueChart coverage on Garmin 168 | Electronics |