A breast cancer surgeon had to “scrub out mid-surgery” to call a UnitedHealthcare representative because the insurance giant questioned whether the procedure she was in the middle of performing was really necessary.
Dr. Elisabeth Potter posted her story to Instagram this week, and the post has gotten more than 221,000 likes.
Still wearing her scrub cap, Dr. Potter began her video saying, “It’s 2025, and navigating insurance has somehow just gotten worse.”
Medical insurance companies should be forced to also provide life insurance to the same customer.
Then they have incentive to keep their customers alive.
Idk if it’s only for like 200k and the procedure costs more than that then they have an incentive to kill you
In the current scenario, they have to pay nothing if they kill you. It’s just pure savings. In the other, they have to pay $200k.
That’s true but it’s a business. Yes they would prefer to pay nothing but if the law passed they had to cover life insurance then they straight up have a number to beat. If it’s gonna cost $200,001 to keep you alive then nope, denied.
Universal healthcare would have the same effect. The government would spend a lot more money on preventative care.
Looking at Canada and Sweden as models, they absolutely do. Getting an actual specialist appointment takes a long long time, but they do get there eventually. And they def do a better job at getting you the meds you need in a timely fashion.
Getting an actual specialist appointment takes a long long time
Well, thank the gods of capitalism that I only have to wait 5 months to see a specialist (for a basic intake appointment, mind you, not even one for any real treatment) for the debilitating spinal injury that is causing me severe pain and mobility issues every second of every day. I’d hate to have affordable universal health care that might make me wait to see a specialist.
I like this line of thinking, but I expect they’d just lobby to make the life insurance payout requirements lower than the expected cost of treatment.
So a-ok as long as it happens after the thing is passed? Because then it’s just a tip.
No, no, they should only be required to provide life insurance for deaths related to refused treatments, but the amount should be massive and punitive. Whoops, you died because we denied your treatment, your next of kin gets several times more than we could have hypothetically saved by denying the treatment.
You can’t make it a massive punitive amount of it’s general life insurance because everyone dies eventually. But you can if it’s for deaths related to a denied treatment, and you can make it high enough that the financial incentive is always in favor of approving necessary treatments.
CEO got killed but everything still working as intended. For everyone who was worried I can bring relieve, UnitedHealthcare is still working well.
Proud to say as of the first of the year I’m no longer insured with these dirtbags.
I’m now insured with some other dirtbags.
Some dirt bags are slightly less bad than other dirtbags. That’s why I have Comcast Internet.
Small regional providers. Ever heard of Wow! Internet? I assure you they are terrible.
Can’t speak any the companies in the south or on the coasts but Comcast is easily one of the best residential Internet providers in the Midwest.
I’m not fan of Comcast but I dealt with pretty much every provider out there when I was an integrator (IT and AV for rich people) and it’s not even close.
Let that sink in…that’s how shitty the other ISPs are.
Sad to say, my company was bought by another, and i am forced to change to these dirt bags. I currently have a malady that will require surgery. Not that it matters, the old company declined my last surgery anyway and i paid out of pocket
Push back when it’s auto-declined. You can often get them to pay up even if they decline at first. They’re trying to make as much profit as possible, so they decline and hope you don’t fight back.
I mean thats the thing right? Except it’s not that easy. The billing man at the practice has been trying, and when i call i get the, “your claim has been reviewed by a human and denied.” Canned response. And i have to go through the call carousel. And now my job changed providers, so now i am trying to get back pay from a healthcare company i don’t have an active account with. But i really don’t want to have half my jaw amputated.
Cigna has this cool new thing they do where, after they deny a medication for our son, they have a nurse call us and tell us why our doctor was wrong to prescribe it in the first place. You know, because a nurse who has never been in the same room as my son knows more than the fucking doctor who examined him.
I have Cigna. Did you catch the email they sent before the new year? In 2025 you need to centralize your prescriptions between either CVS or Walgreens (with exceptions for small pharmacies I didn’t look into). They didn’t even send a physical letter, just an email they hoped would be ignored or missed.
I’m sure there are so many people already getting surprise huge bills at the pharmacy in 2025. Luckily I saw the email and put all my prescriptions at a CVS all the way across town instead of the Walgreens two minutes away. Because that CVS has one of my prescriptions that Walgreens seems permanently out of. Absolute fucking bullshit.
No, I didn’t hear about that. I normally send my prescriptions to CVS anyway, since they’re down the street, but sometimes I send it to my local doctors office’s pharmacy when they can’t fill it. I’m gonna be pisse if they give me shit for that.