Thousands of volunteers across Virginia pick up litter on ‘Clean the Bay Day’
June 17, 2019
Storms wreak havoc in Montgomery County with hail and toppled trees
June 17, 2019

I had a good job and insurance but high health care costs still drove me to bankruptcy

Some residents in Montgomery County described Sunday’s storm as a white-out of Many Americans assume that if they have a good job, they’ll have a good health care plan. And if they have insurance, they assume that they are immune from the health care debate. In reality, many of us are just one major illness away from financial devastation. I know, I’ve been there.

About a decade ago, I was severely injured after I was run off the road by a vehicle while riding my bicycle. The injury caused a series of health issues resulting in more than $50,000 worth of medical bills that I was responsible for paying, despite having good health insurance and financial security. That was $50,000 beyond my premiums, deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums that I already paid. In my case, my injury slowed my ability to work, generate income for my business, and keep up with prescription medications, follow-up procedures and large deductibles.

Sadly, my situation is not unique. According to Gallup polls, 70% of Americans say our health care “is in a state of crisis,” and rising insurance premiums are a major concern for 61% of Americans. Nearly half (46%) are worried they won’t be able to afford their care.

Medicare for All government chokehold would be even worse than private insurance: Doctor. Take it from an economist, Medicare for All is the most sensible way to fix health care. A quarter of Americans have skipped treatment because of its cost and, even among people of means (households earning $180,000 or more a year), a third fear a major health event could lead them to file for bankruptcy. How secure can lower-income Americans feel? I was lucky. I had family and friends who were able to lend me money. Not everyone has that much help.

Congress fiddles while Americans get burned

In Washington, Congress and the president remain at a standstill on this issue, despite the fact that daily we hear stories about citizens who, for example, must ration their insulin. Or people who don’t take their medication as prescribed in order to stretch them out. Or seniors forced to choose between buying food or medicine. And, worst of all, some have even died from not being able to afford their medicine. This clearly should not be the case in America. I have a life-threatening endocrine condition that requires me to take medication daily. At times, I need emergency IV injections. This medication is a monthly expense that, without a good prescription drug plan, could cost me hundreds of dollars each month, plus any out-of-network costs to see specialists not covered by my insurance. My budget revolves around my medical costs.

I am a single woman, with no dependent children. I own a successful consulting firm. My health care costs run more than $600 a month just for the premiums (what I pay in order to have my insurance policy). Nationwide, average premiums vary widely by age, plan and state of residence. Then, there are $50 copays for every doctor visit, prescription costs and visits to urgent care.

With an eye to the future, I also have long-term care insurance, which three-quarters of Americans say they don’t have and more than half say is too expensive. What happens if you cannot work? What happens if you get disabled temporarily? How will you pay your bills, keep your home and cover medical expenses? Health care costs do not just begin and end with your health care coverage.

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