It's so fucking absurd and depressing they still try make someone else pay for the medical expenses of the person of someone who passed away, they're vultures. Those medical bills should be void after someone's passing.

I also just want to remind you of possible scams when it comes to Fundraisers, and double check before before sending anything.

Now that I got that warning out the way, if you're able and isn't going to put any financial strain on yourself, then go check out and donate to the GoFundMe fundraiser campaign for Dragoneer's passing to help support cover these insane expensive costs for medical bills and more.

https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-fur-affinity-honoring-dragoneers-legacy?attribution_id=sl:69700651-9d20-469e-b82f-6c125a41af65

#dragoneer #fundraiser

Donate to Support Fur Affinity: Honoring Dragoneer's Legacy, organized by Susan Hess

**Updated 8/15/2024- please scroll down to see the notes added "Somet… Susan Hess needs your support for Support Fur Affinity: Honoring Dragoneer's Legacy

gofundme.com
@Alkaris I've been thinking about that, and if medical expenses voided when the medical procedure "failed", we would sadly live in a world where doctors wouldn't try to save a lot of people because "oh there's only a 50% chance you'll live, and this reactant costs a lot of money".
Could it be solved via insurance? Sure, but looking at the current insurance landscape, that's not much of a hope.
Are these the only two possible ways to do this? of course not, but we should focus on what will actually help right now.
@FrankHghTwr That's the thing though, having to rely on an insurance policy in the first place to cover any medical expenses, people have created such a fucked up system where we need to put up unnecessary barriers around medical care that's restricting the level of care you get behind some financial gains system.
@Alkaris no no, i mean, let's assume we magically make this law: your patient dies, you don't get to collect from them any more. In patients where you had to use a lot of "consumables" (IV drips, gauze, etc) Hospitals would take a huge loss and would look to get insured from that loss. Insurance companies would need to create a new type of policy, but given how they've already exploited the helathcare system to absurd levels, the chances this new policy will be fair are ...kind of slim.