I finally understand what "CVS Caremark" is-- (it's not CVS stores) basically it's a service used by a number of huge healthcare plans to manage approved drugs and secure prices. It has its own network of pharmacies that goes way beyond just CVS.

This is why no one at your health insurance knows anything about why X drug wasn't approved.

I thought it was CVS stalking me trying to get me to go there for years, but my charmingly dysfunctional pharmacy is a "caremark" pharmacy.

Anyone who says that "government health care would mean bureaucracy" hasn't dealt w/ CVS caremark-- then there is the way that my doctor calls my insurance by one name, my work uses another, the pharmacy yet another & the insurance itself uses none of those.

Doctor "Do you have Earl Fiefdom Plus?"
Pharmacy "Is this ABC NYC XYZ Insurance?"
Insurance Co. "Thank you for calling HealthClub Go, the RTFM Plan. Please hold. [abominable music][audio cracks] Thank you for ..."

Feel like its on purpose.

@futurebird Oh god with the names..I have SEVEN cards for one insurance plan. There's the medical card and the dental card and the vision card...but then there's also the prescription card and the separate prescription *discount* card...and then during the pandemic they added a telehealth card, and now they've spun off a separate surgery card. These are all from the same company. All part of one plan. Why the fuck is it seven different things??

Meanwhile when I actually need service...I remember being extremely sick a few years back (well before COVID), couldn't even get out of bed...called the doctor and got told it was probably the flu and they could schedule me for a flu test. Then they tell me the next available appointment is in nine months.

People talk about "waiting in line for healthcare" in socialist systems while here in the US we get told to wait months FOR A DAMN FLU TEST!! The only damn things these companies can provide in a timely fashion is baffling piles of plastic trash!

@admin @futurebird

That's how I ended up going to Urgent Care three times over 3 months for a bad asthma reaction. Finally got in to see a pulmonologist, and he fixed me up in a few weeks.

It was a miserable 3 months of a deep, racking cough. The Urgent Care physicians assistants were prescribing steroid doses that didn't taper, and one prescribed an inhaler that wasn't suitable.

No criticism of the PAs -- they aren't specialists. I should have been able to get in to see a pulmonolgist!

@admin
Meanwhile, when my ex had breast cancer in 2018, her diagnosis was confirmed one week after her mammogram, and she had surgery one month later. She had home care visits for two weeks after that, and the pathology report on the mass came back three weeks later. The only treatment she required (Tamoxifen) was provided at the same appointment as the pathology results.

In just over two months she went from discovering she had cancer to being cancer-free.

During that period, we went to about half a dozen appointments totaling around eight hours, not including the day in hospital for her surgery.

Our out-of-pocket expenses came up to $9 for hospital parking and $20 because we ate lunch there once.

This is the scary Canadian socialist medical system.

@futurebird