Well,
I officailly joined the ranks of the Un-insured this month. It was running me close to $2,000 a month and I just couldn't stomache it anymore. The real joke is, noone will take us because my wife has endimetriosis and has not had surgery for it yet. The same surgery the insurance I had was stalling us on for the last 2 years. I figure that I by the time we could finally get them to give her the surgery, I will have paid the cost of it again. On top of all that, they still will refuse to cover my son (mildly autistic) even though every thing to do with his condition wouldn't be covered anyway. In the end, I was behind and came up with the money to bring it up to date, thought about it and realized we had visited the doctor once in the last 6 months and that the deductible wasn't even met. The shy $8,000 it would take to update it went into my account and I decided to risk it until I can come up with something better. The real kicker, if I had put the money I was paying into a seperate account and gathered interest, I would be nearing or perhaps even passed the maximum payout the insurance will pay for most incidents. Continue to pay until I retire and I will be paying much more than the maximum lifetime payout. Doesn't really sound like insurance to me, rather just a hole to throw money into.
The real joke is talking about a $6000 tax credit. First of all it would come as a tax credit, meaning you would have to come up with the entire premimum up front. Then, at the end of the year, I still would be short about $16,000 if you count the co-pays and dedectibles. About what some people make all year.
It really irks me to here government employees complain about a $10 or $20 premium increase or a $20 co-pay, when they have the same insurance as me and mine went up $300.00 a month.
Edited by Krijack (10/08/08 03:16 PM)