ANSWERS: 3
  • Pre-existing medical conditions, lifestyle choices and the area of the country in which you live can all increase the price you will pay for health insurance. Your profession can also affect the cost of insurance. All these variables can lead you to be labeled as Òhigh riskÓ by your insurer. Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/25/opinion/25sun1.html
  • Too many visits to the doctor’s office, but National Health Care Rationing will take care of that. The rationing of health care is what President Obama is referring to when he says "more efficiently managed health care system".... ;~)
  • I hate for anyone to find out too late just how badly Healthcare Reform or something, anything for that matter is needed in this country. I wonder, if people are more concerned with the equalizing of healthcare for all then with the fact that it will help not hurt the cost of visits to the doctor and emergency rooms. If people can afford a doctor to take their child too, then even afford to buy prescription, you will have less emergency room visits. In 1994 a Tylonel (2) cost my daughter $4.00. Last year my son 12, visit Florida Hospital for one whole day for a head bump. I don't recall the 4 doctors he seen. Just the Neoro dude. Only because he had a really long name. Combined, I owe them about $2,623 (not including the room service& equipment used, etc. You get a surprise bill from each).How do you explain a bill totaling over $15,000 dollars for a observation stay at the Hospital. I've been in health profession for 20 years, i told them,I can look at him at home.They gave me no chioce. Gee, I wonder why? It didn't cost me that much with his sister, who spent a whole week in Baptist Health in 1991, at the age of 6 months. And I paid out of pocket. Since then, I have been unhappy with my private insurance's.

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