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Cake day: June 26th, 2023

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  • And the more you dig into it, the worse it gets. That price discrepancy exists at the provider level too.

    • You have a health issue and need treatment.
    • The treatment cost the Dr $200 to perform.
    • The list price for the treatment is $500.
    • The big insurer uses the weight of their customer base to negotiate with the Dr and the agree to pay $300 for the treatment. If the doctor doesn’t accept, then they’re out of network and can’t get patients.
    • The plucky startup co-op doesn’t have the same negotiating leverage, so they have to pay $400 for the treatment.
    • The co-op is going to cost more to operate, and now the real monthly cost you have to pay with the co-op is $700 instead of $600.

    And it gets worse.

    This video is a nice little primer about how the insurer might not even pay that $300 they agreed to, how that let’s them profit further on the treatment while creating financial pressure on healthcare providers, and how your Dr may end up being owned by the insurer, further reducing the ability of a new co-op to compete.


  • Glasses usually have obscene markups. Imo, the most cost effective way is often lasik (or similar), but it’s an up front cost.

    I think I paid 4k usd for both eyes, but that was something like 10 years ago and with no assistance from insurance.

    I still get an eye exam every few years just to make sure everything is okay, but I am expecting another 10 years before I need too start thinking about vision correction again. Also, I’m fairly certain the provider that performed my lasik offered a warranty and would perform additional corrections as I age, but I don’t live anywhere near the location anymore.

    When I compare that to the combined cost of insurance, exams, glasses, contacts, and prescription sunglasses that my wife pays… lasik was a significant cost savings for me (and that’s not counting any quality of life benefits).



  • Not an expert here, but given the differences in measurement scales, I suspect there is a difference in intensity.

    If my reading of this Hong Kong Observatory reference is correct, a no 8 is classified as wind speeds between 63-117 km/h.

    When we talk about hurricane strength, we’re using this scale. Unless they are measuring different metrics, a no 8 is the equivalent of a tropical storm. Which is to say, we don’t even rate that as hurricane strength.

    Helene hit land at around 220 km/h (Cat 4). Milton reached speeds of 260km/h (Cat 5), but might weaken to 190-200km/h (Cat 3) by the time it reaches land.