this post was submitted on 13 Dec 2024
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[–] Stovetop@lemmy.world 30 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I used to live in China, where socialized medicine was in theory available for everyone, but in practice most everyone who had a decent job had private insurance from their employer not unlike in the US, which was my situation. It was...fine, but I was a healthy young adult and didn't have much going on medically. I've heard some horror stories from others about the degree of care they received, and had one experience where my doctor simply attributed my migraines to my "unhealthy American lifestyle", but I never had to worry about coverage.

When I moved back home to Massachusetts a few years later, I didn't have a job lined up right away, but I did gain immediate coverage through MassHealth (the system the Affordable Care Act was based upon) and it was very cheap. I didn't have to pay for coverage, but did have a couple copays here and there which weren't anything crazy.

I started up one job, was laid off after just a couple months when the pandemic happened, and MassHealth was still there to give me some peace of mind. It's not a perfect system, but it beats running the risk of suffering a health episode that leaves you financially destitute for years and years. I don't know how well I would have managed elsewhere.

I eventually landed a more stable-long term career and get employer-provided insurance through Tufts. And it's okay, but I recently had to fight a months-long prolonged battle to get a prior authorization approved for a med I had been taking for years that they just decided out of the blue I didn't need to take anymore. And it took a lot of back and forth from my doctor to really stress that I needed to stay on this med before they eventually caved and gave me a 1-year approval, but now I'm worried I'll have to go through this whole song and dance again when that time elapses in a few more months.

I think it's just a bit ridiculous that the insurance company can simply decide they know my health situation better than myself or my doctor who I've been seeing for years now, and out of the blue make life-changing decisions without even having spoken to me or my doctor first.