Two weeks ago people were posting stats on the front page showing the industry average denied claims is around 16% and UnitedHealth denies double that at 32%, so that means the vast majority of claims are approved even for the worst examples.
And we only have those two choices because of capitalist gaslighting. Given those two options, I would advocate deposing a few more insurance executives to improve the situation.
This is a post about making threats of death and violence to people who work in an office building handling insurance claims, getting it to shut down for the day.
Excellent, I'd not heard of the coconut island parable before! That's very apt.
I was thinking of the False Dilemma fallacy. The notion that the only two options are a school bus service with 32% casualty/loss rate, or no bus and a 100% casualty/loss rate, is capitalist gaslighting when we can plainly see the government bus company in other countries getting all the kids to school. For less cost, at that.
You kind of defeated yourself by admitting the 32% is the lesser evil that you still wouldnt choose because you associate it with a different political tribe.
You're literally advocating we harm ourselves as an alternative to "caPiTAlisM".
You do, actually. We all do. You're either not a citizen of this nation and therefor you want others to face consequences, or you're beholden to the same consequences as us all. Even by saying you refuse to choose, you're picking one of the two. Just like 10 Million DNC voters stayed home last election, they're facing the consequences.
Ideally it should be 0% (this is too optomistic, but I am not one make that figure) people pay into an insurance system to distribute risk. If a company cant resolve the inflow/outflow problem (not even going to get into profits, for-profit insurance is unethical) then it needs to be managed by an organization that can. ~30 governments (USA not amongst them) that have solved this problem for their citizens and anyone requiring medical assistance within their borders.
Especially when you consider that these claims are not being made by random people but by trained board certified physicians whose entire livelihood depends on them providing prompt and appropriate care for their patients.
Well, the claims are reviewed by physicians but they're often not in the specialization of the care provided so they can make mistaken judgements and a great way to appeal it is to ask the insurance company for proof that the physician who denied the claim does specialize in the type of care being reviewed.
Unfortunately most people don't know that, less than 1% of denied claims are appealed.
What is this comment supposed to bring to the discussion?
Edit: bro is like im going to win this debate by having a very narrow defensible argument that 1 is smaller than 3
Well good news, we don't have that system. You don't magically wish your favorite legislature into existence after 24 kills, this isn't a call of duty lobby with kill streak rewards.
If you presume the other health funds are acting rationally, accepting legitimate claims, rejecting those that are not covered by the policy of the person claiming them, then for every illegitimate claim denied by the average fund United deny one illegitimate and one valid claim.
I'm not sure who you're arguing against but it isn't me.
I'm not defending anything. I'm just pointing out an obvious lie.
Why do you think none of the claims being accepted is not terrible but 84% being accepted is terrible? Are you pro-debt and unnecessary death and sickness?
I never suggested all should be accepted. I made an assumption for my argument that the average health funds are acting fairly. I don't believe that, incidentally, since many are far below the average and I don't believe they are approving invalid claims
Two weeks ago people were posting stats on the front page showing the industry average denied claims is around 16% and UnitedHealth denies double that at 32%, so that means the vast majority of claims are approved even for the worst examples.
Two weeks ago people were posting stats on the front page showing the industry average denied claims is around 16%
Right, this entire thread I made, which you were replying to, as well as the post above it, was about the entire industry and every single person who works in it.