Let me see if I can ask a reasonably balanced question about the whole "You could go bankrupt" thinking.
Though I have always self paid, I'd rather have insurance. Simply have not been able to.
I understand the possibility of a catastrophic scenario. But "you could loose everything" is simply not part of a balanced discussion, in my opinion. It's a little like selling life insurance by saying, "You could die". Uh, yeah...duh.
But that is NOT a reasonable way to measure the cost.
So, here's my dilema. The MINIMUM actual out of pocket cost to me for my family is about $12,000 per year, if we never file a claim. That is a VERY big percentage of my income. If we have a claim, there would also be a deductible of another $12K. So, I could be out $24K before I ever got a single dollar of benefit.
So, let's assume insurance is a good idea. My family is healthy, so we will be paying about $12K per year. And let's assume we have a serious medical issue in 5 years.
We will pay $12K per year for 4 years, and $24K in the 5th year (assuming no price increases- bad assumption.) We will have paid $72,000 before we ever get any significant benefit.
That sounds like a pretty good path to bankruptcy too.
That means, until we have a medical condition that exceeds $72,000, we are better off (financially) self paying.
We have savings. We could weather a $10K medical expense without too much trouble. $10K per year for 3 years would hurt badly, but we would survive. A $50K medical expense would be terrible, but it would not cause bankruptcy. A $100K medical expense would leave us indebted to the hospital for an extended period (decades?).
What am I missing here? Help me see this is a sensible way that is not extremist.
Again, I'd like insurance. Just can't make it make sense.