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Beep boop I am a robot.
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# ? May 2, 2012 01:14 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 14:42 |
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At least the aftermarket mods are lighter and stronger, right?
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# ? May 2, 2012 01:21 |
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*Ignore me.
Hughmoris fucked around with this message at 01:33 on May 2, 2012 |
# ? May 2, 2012 01:26 |
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Edit: Hughmoris didn't have lupus.
MotoMind fucked around with this message at 01:36 on May 2, 2012 |
# ? May 2, 2012 01:31 |
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Becktastic posted:Beep boop I am a robot. I've always wondered - do you need to carry xrays when you fly? Or doesn't it set off metal detectors
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# ? May 2, 2012 01:52 |
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Aargh posted:I've always wondered - do you need to carry xrays when you fly? Or doesn't it set off metal detectors I heard something about a card you can get? I went through a metal detector recently though and much to my surprise it didn't beep. Someone said the new metals (titanium? You think I'd know what's in my own arm, but I don't) won't set them off.
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# ? May 2, 2012 02:01 |
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Aargh posted:I wake up to 70 odd new posts in this thread and was worried something had happened to someone. Turns out there was a minor crash, some self diagnosed mild concussion and a bit of sperging, ah SA. Same, saw 92 new posts and thought someone died. Turned out, some guy just tried to "walk it off" a concussion cause he has poo poo insurance and seems more concerned about his drat Shoei than his melon.
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# ? May 2, 2012 02:01 |
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Becktastic posted:I heard something about a card you can get? I went through a metal detector recently though and much to my surprise it didn't beep. Someone said the new metals (titanium? You think I'd know what's in my own arm, but I don't) won't set them off. I have a plate across my left collar bone, haven't set off a metal detector yet. However, it is detectable by them, it depends on how sensitive they have it set. I have a Stud/AC/Metal detector and it does pick up the plate. Edit in: Helmet discussion. In my wreck I was wearing a Scorpion brand. No concussion detected at the shock trauma center. So they have my business.
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# ? May 2, 2012 02:56 |
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Aargh posted:Without turning this into a social welfare discussion, as an Australian it boggles my mind that someone would suffer a mild concussion and not go to the hospital to get himself checked out, or would pass up a ride to the hospital by the EMT's just to save a few bucks. It's the last I'll say about this derail, but I assure you it's not just a "few bucks".
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# ? May 2, 2012 05:19 |
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Aargh posted:I've always wondered - do you need to carry xrays when you fly? Or doesn't it set off metal detectors I'll find out later this month, but I believe it is the case that if the metal is deep enough in your body, it won't set off the detector at some given sensitivity. IM rod down my tibia is probably deep enough that nothing will happen. This varies depending on how much of what kind of metal we're talking about, of course.
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# ? May 2, 2012 05:43 |
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VendaGoat posted:I have a Stud/AC/Metal detector and it does pick up the plate. I imagine you frantically rubbing a stud detector all over your naked body like a bipolar Mulder and it makes me happy.
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# ? May 2, 2012 08:57 |
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KARMA! posted:I imagine you frantically rubbing a stud detector all over your naked body like a bipolar Mulder and it makes me happy. I don't need no metal plates to trigger a stud detector (preempting the "No, you just have to be really dense" response)
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# ? May 2, 2012 09:12 |
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All I have to say about this discussion is gently caress I'm glad I'm Australian - public healthcare is the best thing in the world by far. I spent 4 hours getting my eye poked and prodded when I got fibreglass in it the other week and it didn't cost me a cent. I'm kind of curious how much that would have cost in America - this was in a Hospital by the way. 2 visits, 1 was 1 hour, the other was 3 hours. I couldn't imagine not going to the doctor after an accident on my Motorcycle, that just sounds crazy.
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# ? May 2, 2012 09:20 |
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Shimrod posted:All I have to say about this discussion is gently caress I'm glad I'm Australian - public healthcare is the best thing in the world by far. Here's some perspective for you: 1. Let's say it would have cost you about $10,000 after all fees, visits, medications, etc. 2. You'd have had to take out some form of lifelong loan if you could not pay for it up front 3. You'd be denied for any health care in the future due to preexisting conditions now associated with any prolonged injuries sustained from the fiberglass 4. If you're young, you likely work a minimum wage job. The money would cut severely into your cost of living, and combined with tuition increasing in, say, University of California schools by 80% over four years, would make it virtually impossible to ever go to college to better your living condition due to the impact on your overall income. 5. You'd likely never be able to have more than an associate's degree, making approximately 32k-40k a year for the rest of your life with no real future opportunities. Realistically, you'd have about $10k of real spending money per year. You are also likely to be splitting bills with roommates or a girlfriend if you are lucky enough to have found one that isn't mundane and below average intelligence since most of your social contact are from average people at lower level education facilities (such as community college) or the middle-management job that you were somehow able to score. 6. You are living the American Dream Meanwhile, let me remind you that this woman does absolutely nothing for anyone had has millions upon millions of dollars. She doesn't care about you. She has done nothing for anything in her life and she thinks you're not of the same quality person as she is because you don't have as much money as her. You're obviously poor for a reason, and it's likely because you're lazy and stupid. Americans all grow up to believe this and one day they might be this woman if they're not lazy and not poor. Welcome to America! Enjoy your stay. (My cousin, 5.0 valedictorian of her class, was accepted to every school in America with at least a half-ride scholarship. Went to UCSD for poli sci and ended up becoming president of the student body in her freshman year because they recognized how brilliant she is. What happened? Oh yeah, spinal meningitis. Had to stay another year in college because she couldn't get health insurance due to it being a "preexisting condition". Naturally still keeps a solid 4.0. Can't afford hospital bills for her treatments in the US and would have likely died. Luckily she's also fluent in German and German grad schools would gladly take her. So now she has health insurance in Germany and is completing her course work abroad.) Knot My President! fucked around with this message at 10:37 on May 2, 2012 |
# ? May 2, 2012 10:15 |
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What. The. gently caress.
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# ? May 2, 2012 10:47 |
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I wonder is that 32-40k gross or take home?
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# ? May 2, 2012 11:17 |
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Sweet LF chat guys
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# ? May 2, 2012 11:17 |
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Gnaghi posted:I wonder is that 32-40k gross or take home?
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# ? May 2, 2012 13:25 |
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KARMA! posted:I imagine you frantically rubbing a stud detector all over your naked body like a bipolar Mulder and it makes me happy. Should I be flattered?
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# ? May 2, 2012 16:01 |
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Aaaaaaaand this thread just went straight into "Crash" territory.
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# ? May 2, 2012 16:21 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:Sweet LF chat guys Well, to be fair, LF *was* the best satire subforum
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# ? May 2, 2012 18:44 |
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Had a friend crash in front of me yesterday. I was following behind him and he took a decreasing radius turn too quickly on an unfamiliar road. Caught up just in time to see him cross into the southbound lane and wrap around a guardrail. Luckily he was wearing a helmet and jacket, ended up with a solid concussion and a few lacerations. Bike had somewhat significant damage and might be totalled, but the rider was flown out by helicopter and most certainly had his head scanned at the hospital. And he won't be recycling the helmet either, the visor separated and tore the brackets out. Later on that day I was doing another backroad and got stung by a bee while group riding. Couldn't stop and check it out for ten minutes as there weren't any shoulders or driveways to pull into. lovely day for riding but it could be worse.
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# ? May 2, 2012 19:40 |
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Royale with Cheese posted:Had a friend crash in front of me yesterday. I was following behind him and he took a decreasing radius turn too quickly on an unfamiliar road. Caught up just in time to see him cross into the southbound lane and wrap around a guardrail. Luckily he was wearing a helmet and jacket, ended up with a solid concussion and a few lacerations. Bike had somewhat significant damage and might be totalled, but the rider was flown out by helicopter and most certainly had his head scanned at the hospital. And he won't be recycling the helmet either, the visor separated and tore the brackets out. That sucks, but at least he was relatively ok. Hope he has good insurance, helicopter rides are money. quote:Later on that day I was doing another backroad and got stung by a bee while group riding. Couldn't stop and check it out for ten minutes as there weren't any shoulders or driveways to pull into. lovely day for riding but it could be worse. That happened to me once, fucker hit me right in the neck then bounced off. Hurt for a week. Snowdens Secret posted:Sweet LF chat guys There's nothing "LF" about a dude having to do mental gymanstics to justify not going to a hospital after a drat motorcycle crash. Despite all the poo poo said in his direction, I can actually identify since when I refused medical attention after my first crash a few years ago because I had no money and my insurance was some lovely HMO and I had no idea if it would cover an ambulance ride that may or may not have been "out of network." Fortunately in my case, my shoulder took most of the impact and my head just scraped the ground instead of slamming into it. I also didn't experience any post-concussion symptoms, otherwise I would have found my way to an ER, bills be damned. Its not a calculation that should have to be made in a developed country.
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# ? May 2, 2012 20:32 |
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Royale with Cheese posted:Had a friend crash in front of me yesterday. Tell your friend not to worry about the "concussion", he can sleep it off. Hope he turns out ok.
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# ? May 2, 2012 22:18 |
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redscare posted:There's nothing "LF" about a dude having to do mental gymanstics to justify not going to a hospital after a drat motorcycle crash. Despite all the poo poo said in his direction, I can actually identify since when I refused medical attention after my first crash a few years ago because I had no money and my insurance was some lovely HMO and I had no idea if it would cover an ambulance ride that may or may not have been "out of network." Fortunately in my case, my shoulder took most of the impact and my head just scraped the ground instead of slamming into it. I also didn't experience any post-concussion symptoms, otherwise I would have found my way to an ER, bills be damned. Its not a calculation that should have to be made in a developed country. When I had temp jobs I paid almost $200 a month for Horizon. When I crashed and went to the hospital I basically just got bandaged up (covered) and charged $600 for a 10 minute ambulance ride (not covered). Now I have Horizon through a job and it is a lot better, but I get the feeling if I needed repeat visits and meds (not included) they'd find a way around the maximum out of pocket. Really the best plan for healthcare in the US is to be completely broke, get treatment and just never pay.
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# ? May 2, 2012 23:46 |
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redscare posted:There's nothing "LF" about a dude having to do mental gymanstics to justify not going to a hospital after a drat motorcycle crash. Despite all the poo poo said in his direction, I can actually identify since when I refused medical attention after my first crash a few years ago because I had no money and my insurance was some lovely HMO and I had no idea if it would cover an ambulance ride that may or may not have been "out of network." Fortunately in my case, my shoulder took most of the impact and my head just scraped the ground instead of slamming into it. I also didn't experience any post-concussion symptoms, otherwise I would have found my way to an ER, bills be damned. Its not a calculation that should have to be made in a developed country. Seriously. If you aren't American, kindly piss off with the judgments about whether people here are right to make decisions between an ER visit and eating for the next few months.
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# ? May 2, 2012 23:46 |
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Radbot posted:Seriously. If you aren't American, kindly piss off with the judgments about whether people here are right to make decisions between an ER visit and eating for the next few months. Just for the record, i wasn't making any kind of judgement on right or wrong. All I was saying is that with 32 years of free public healthcare i cannot associate with what you guys have to put up with.
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# ? May 3, 2012 00:44 |
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Radbot posted:Seriously. If you aren't American, kindly piss off with the judgments about whether people here are right to make decisions between an ER visit and eating for the next few months. I've had far more first-hand experience with 'free' US Federal government healthcare than I'd choose to. The only time I've ever heard of emergency care not being "in network" was when a guy who worked with me fell off his scooter while on vacation and shattered his arm. They told him he was not covered at his location, to just get his (badly broken, unset) arm in a sling, get back home (i.e. drive with one arm) and they'd fix him up in the local government hospital. The hospital took x-rays, lost them, decided he was fine and sent him back to work with his badly broken arm still in the private hospital sling. He ended up faking a suicide attempt just to get someone to look at his loving arm. I personally had two on-the-job injuries I got sent to the same government-run hospital for, got my x-rays 'lost' both times (you'll notice a trend here) and now have a permanently bent finger and a floppy knee that makes me veer right when I walk. That's just the medical fuckups that left permanent damage (that I know of.) Worth every penny! I've also got plenty of family members with horror stories in several "free health care" Euro countries, where they got injured and got put on months-long waiting lists because there were no doctors available, followed by hosed up care that they had essentially no recourse for. The reality is that when the government decides they don't want to (or can't) pay what the market requires for goods and services, you don't get goods and services, which means all the insurance in the world doesn't mean poo poo when there's no doctors and hospitals nearby and you can't get medicine. I'd much rather have to pay out of pocket to ride an ambulance to the hospital that'll save my life than for that hospital to not be there at all. Let me make this clear - you're better off being in debt than not getting care you need. Seriously, I could give the analogy that US private health care care is to actual real-life government care as your private insurance company is to the DMV, but not only is that continuing the incorrect equivalence of "health insurance" with "health care" but it doesn't begin to convey the disaster show of dealing with an entire medical system whose paychecks are 100% detached from actually treating you timely and properly. And if you really think you're going to be not "eating for the next few months" because you had to pay medical bills, either pinch pennies and build up more rainy-day savings, or stop doing risky poo poo like riding a loving motorcycle, and stop trying to gently caress up my private health insurance and care (that I know is way loving better than I'm going to get from Uncle Sugar) in the process.
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# ? May 3, 2012 00:46 |
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Take this poo poo to D&D with the rest of the LF expats.
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# ? May 3, 2012 00:51 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:Seriously, I could give the analogy that US private health care care is to actual real-life government care as your private insurance company is to the DMV, but not only is that continuing the incorrect equivalence of "health insurance" with "health care" but it doesn't begin to convey the disaster show of dealing with an entire medical system whose paychecks are 100% detached from actually treating you timely and properly. And if you really think you're going to be not "eating for the next few months" because you had to pay medical bills, either pinch pennies and build up more rainy-day savings, or stop doing risky poo poo like riding a loving motorcycle, and stop trying to gently caress up my private health insurance and care (that I know is way loving better than I'm going to get from Uncle Sugar) in the process. Except that our coverage in the US is more expensive for worse care, doesn't allow for preventative medicine, 45,000 people a year die to preventable illnesses due to not having proper health care. The other major issue is that prices are incredibly inflated because of the back and forth between insurance and hospitals, driving up the costs for those who should otherwise be able to afford costs out of pocket. The idea is to get a certain baseline level of care because "your private health insurance and care" doesn't actually give a gently caress about keeping you healthy, instead they care about profit, and the second you start to show up on the wrong side of their risk valuations, they're gonna drop you so fast your head will spin. Or at least they would have, if not for that meddling government ending stuff like denying coverage for pre-existing conditions, and lifetime payout limits. I'm sorry you got stuck with bullshit health care, courtesy of our government, but realize that that health care was actually probably some cut rate company trying to eek out a profit on slim margins and loving you over because health insurance should never, ever, ever, EVER be a for profit enterprise, because you have a captive market who is basically forced to pay whatever you can get away with demanding. And you guys didn't raise hell when they lost your x-rays? quote:The reality is that when the government decides they don't want to (or can't) pay what the market requires for goods and services, you don't get goods and services, which means all the insurance in the world doesn't mean poo poo when there's no doctors and hospitals nearby and you can't get medicine. And all the doctors and hospitals in the world don't matter when they won't treat you because you can't afford it. I'm astounded you can make this post without realizing the opposite side of things...when you're loving poor, you can't afford to pay out of pocket, and any care is better than no care. Because that's what a large number of people in the US have...not lovely health care, but no health care at all until they're dying. And that's why we have riders not going to the hospital when they should. Z3n fucked around with this message at 04:58 on May 3, 2012 |
# ? May 3, 2012 03:51 |
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Actually, the only reason I'm able to ride a motorcycle is because I have complete coverage through my dad's family health insurance plan with Kaiser. If I didn't have health insurance, I would be dead or hundreds upon thousands of dollars in debt right now. (chronic kidney problems in high school, bacterial bronchitis and pneumonia once a month for three years while working at Starbucks [which I can't take to court because to do an investigation of work standards would cost thousands if not tens of thousands], tonsilitis, nickel allergy nearly taking out my ear, horrible acne...)
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# ? May 3, 2012 04:02 |
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I like motorcycles. Sometimes people crash :-( We should have a thread about it.
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# ? May 3, 2012 05:11 |
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I don't think that's such a good idead, it'll only end in a derail about health care.
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# ? May 4, 2012 00:29 |
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Z3n posted:Except that our coverage in the US is more expensive for worse care, doesn't allow for preventative medicine, 45,000 people a year die to preventable illnesses due to not having proper health care. The other major issue is that prices are incredibly inflated because of the back and forth between insurance and hospitals, driving up the costs for those who should otherwise be able to afford costs out of pocket. The idea is to get a certain baseline level of care because "your private health insurance and care" doesn't actually give a gently caress about keeping you healthy, instead they care about profit, and the second you start to show up on the wrong side of their risk valuations, they're gonna drop you so fast your head will spin. It was a government run hospital. A US Federal Government hospital. No private companies involved. All government up and down and no one to give a gently caress about whether it was done right or not. THAT is where all this socialized medicine poo poo is headed and it is the absolute worst case; imagining that bringing public administration into any of this is going to make it better is abject fantasy. You are far better off with a private practice because at the end of the day if you're not fixed they don't get paid and if you're really hosed you can sue. Kiss that all goodbye when you sign that off to the Feds.
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# ? May 4, 2012 00:39 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:You are far better off with a private practice because at the end of the day if you're not fixed they don't get paid you can't be serious
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# ? May 4, 2012 00:55 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:It was a government run hospital. A US Federal Government hospital. No private companies involved. All government up and down and no one to give a gently caress about whether it was done right or not. THAT is where all this socialized medicine poo poo is headed and it is the absolute worst case; imagining that bringing public administration into any of this is going to make it better is abject fantasy. You are far better off with a private practice because at the end of the day if you're not fixed they don't get paid and if you're really hosed you can sue. Kiss that all goodbye when you sign that off to the Feds. Today is opposite day right?
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# ? May 4, 2012 03:53 |
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Snowdens Secret posted:It was a government run hospital. A US Federal Government hospital. No private companies involved. All government up and down and no one to give a gently caress about whether it was done right or not. THAT is where all this socialized medicine poo poo is headed and it is the absolute worst case; imagining that bringing public administration into any of this is going to make it better is abject fantasy. You are far better off with a private practice because at the end of the day if you're not fixed they don't get paid and if you're really hosed you can sue. Kiss that all goodbye when you sign that off to the Feds. Are you talking about the VA or something here? I've been in the military all my life, medically retired. I use Tricare and a combination of VA facilities so I've basically used exclusively US federal government facilities my whole adult life and I've never had as many problems as you're describing. Of course there have been issues but they've always been resolved and I'm overall very pleased.
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# ? May 4, 2012 04:15 |
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front wing flexing posted:Are you talking about the VA or something here? Yeah, for all the poo poo people talk about military healthcare it eventually does work. And I feel really loving thankful that I don't worry about getting hurt, because I know I can go to a doctor and be seen. Getting out scares me for exactly that reason.
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# ? May 4, 2012 04:20 |
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My Dad is a vet and the VA really takes care of him, free everything. Still I'd rather not have to have been in Vietnam to get it.
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# ? May 4, 2012 10:59 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 14:42 |
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drat people, have we derailed this thread enough? Anyway, regardless of health insurance if you do go to the hospital as a result of a motorcycle crash be ready for lectures from every single person who looks at you. The drat doctors were more interested in telling me that motorcycles are murder cycles instead of cleaning my wounds. I ended up with serious infections that left my general practioner speechless. Then again I crashed on a Friday evening which he said meant I probably got th shittiest emergency room care by the suckers who had to work the weekend shift. Based on my experience, he was right. As far as the healthcare debate in America, you either have the best or you have lovely useless insurance. I've always had the best and I pay money for it. I also know how it works. The insurance company was always refusing payment because the doctor or hospital wasn't filling out paperwork properly. For example my weekend stay in the ER was refused because the drat hospital didn't say it was life threatening. Two phone calls later and I had it solved. Some people think health insurance is magic. You need to know EXACTLY how it works. I know people who have chosen buying a smartphone instead of buying health insurance. Oh, and his teeth have fallen out because he won't pay $10 a month for dental insurance.
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# ? May 4, 2012 12:23 |