this post was submitted on 26 Jun 2025
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Are you asking about the specific course of treatment, which will verify by type and stage, or how people pay?
As for paying, the only national programs are Medicare (restricted by age) and Medicaid (restricted by income). The US veterans administration is a separate govt program for military veterans and I believe their families, too. Everyone else either has some level of insurance provided by their employer (which will still generally be terrible), or nothing at all.
The charts here are helpful https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6778988/
It looks like if a person is above the poverty line and is under 65 they will have to pay like 20% of the medical bill which could be insane, given they have an insurance. Otherwise most first line treatments are covered by Medicare and Medicaid Plan B.
So if a person earns, like not insane $3k/mo, they will most certainly be billed with enormous bills and be refused to be treated again in case of relapse, just because they haven't paid the previous bill?
In addition, medical costs in the US are higher than many places, because the insurance companies don't have to bargain with the whole nation at once. Even Medicare and Medicaid have historically been prevented by law from using their full bargaining power in some cases.
I don't actually know what happens to medical coverage if you have medical debt. It will eventually go to collections and can be used to garnish your wages, I believe.
That's really sad
If your country has a better system, it is because the unions and the left have fought for it. Don't let the Macrons of the world do to you what Reagan did to us.
This cannot be screamed loud or often enough!