“Norwegian hospitals are free though. I was just surprised the first time I learned Norwegians pay at all to visit the doctor because I assumed we had the same system.”

Sauce: https://satwcomic.com/everything-is-relative

  • mushroommunk@lemmy.today
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    10 hours ago

    Just to complete the comic. I’m in the US. I spend about $90 on a regular yearly checkup. Spent $218 to get seen to get something prescribed for a three week cough I had that was getting worse (plus another $68 or so for the meds themselves).

    Several of my friends are jealous of my health insurance because I’ve got the good one that covers more. Please shoot me.

    • Leon@pawb.social
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      5 hours ago

      We don’t do regular yearly checkups in Sweden.

      At a certain point when you reach a particular age or if you are at risk for something, that may change, but the average person doesn’t do yearly checkups.

      • Caedarai@reddthat.com
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        2 hours ago

        You should though. Most ages would benefit even if only from a quick opportunity to ask about anything that might have come up plus the chance for some bloodwork to verify nothing obvious is abnormal. Prevention is way better than getting to a problem when it’s already serious, and preventative checks can spot a lot of things (liver issues, some cancers, metabolic problems, etc.).

        • Leon@pawb.social
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          1 hour ago

          As far as I understand, yearly general health checkups aren’t that effective at catching things. That at least seems to be the basis for why we don’t have them. One meta-analysis I found referenced was this one published in the BMJ.

          That isn’t to say that people don’t get regular checkups here. Depending on your medical history, your age, and your potential for particular problems, there will be regular specific health checks. If a particular group of people are more likely to be affected with a particular condition, then said group will be called for checks.

          You can absolutely do regular yearly health checkups, but that’s generally done by private clinics, and you pay for that yourself.

          I have very mixed feelings about our healthcare system. On one hand it works well for the most part, but there are obviously some horror stories making the rounds. There are also some really questionable practices, for example you can get a referral to a chiropractor. Everyone knows that’s bunk science. At best chiropractors are con artists and at worst they’re butchers.

          • Caedarai@reddthat.com
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            26 minutes ago

            Yeah, we really need to remove chiropractors and osteopathic practitioners from public systems.

    • vrek@programming.dev
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      9 hours ago

      I called 911 and went to hospital, unable to stand and uncontrollable vomiting black sludge with white specs in it, imagine over-used engine oil with seaseme seeds mixed in. Turns out my liver was leaking into my gi track. 43k bill from hospital, 1200 from ambulance to drive 1 mile, combined 3k from various doctors, 8k for all the tests they ran. Yes all separate bills. I was there for 3 days. That’s about a total of 55k in bills for 3 days…

      Even if the 25 dollar an hour minimum wage bill passed, and I worked full time for minimum wage with no other expenses(no food, no rent, no gas, no nothing) I still couldn’t pay it in a year(yearly pay at 25 an hour is 52k a year).