This is a far too common occurrence in the U.S.

And people wonder why Luigi is so popular?

@MikeDunnAuthor A diabetic dying from lack of insulin in a modern, rich country, in the 21st century is insane. It's a deliberate choice to just let people die for being poor. In the UK anyone prescribed insulin gets not only their insulin prescription free, but all their other prescriptions too. Almost the entire UK population would consider you a maniac if you proposed allowing diabetic people to just die if they couldn't pay for insulin.

@beecycling @MikeDunnAuthor probably worth adding that the average manufacturer cost of insulin in the USA is 13 times the cost (presumably the price to our NHS) in the UK. ($98.70 vs $7.52 per vial).

"A landmark study published by the RAND Corporation in 2020 analyzed the average price of several different forms of insulin (human, analog, rapid, rapid-intermediate, short, short-intermediate, intermediate, and long-acting) in 33 countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which includes most of the world's developed countries and high-income countries. The study revealed that the manufacturer price for any given type of insulin averaged five to ten times higher in the U.S. ($98.70 USD) than in all other OECD countries ($8.81 on average). Even when using net prices, which incorporate possible rebates, U.S. prices would be roughly four times higher than in other countries."

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/cost-of-insulin-by-country

Cost of Insulin by Country 2025

Detailed data on the cost of insulin by country, offering insights into the affordability of this essential medication for managing diabetes across different nations.

World Population Review
@marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor Oh yes, that's one of the things I think makes Americans think universal health care paid by taxes can't work because their taxes would have to be huge to afford it - not realising that their healthcare costs are hugely inflated from what they should be because of the perverse incentives built into their system.

@beecycling @marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor They need to consider their insurance payment a tax. Then look at the budget and realize that the part that's actually labeled "tax" is already like 1/2 for medical insurance for older people.

My tax burden is around 1.5k a month. The cheapest HSA qualified plan I could find is almost $800 a month. Anything cheaper and the deductible is too high to be considered "high".

So something around 2/3 of my taxes goes to medical insurance, considered this way.

@crazyeddie
Absolutely.

Around here "social security" (health care + pension contributions + half a dozen other minor things like unemployment) is certainly the bigger burden than legal taxes for average citizens. (And notice the difference is our healthcare contribution is based not on our health but on our income up to the cut off point)

But then what is the alternative?

Letting people die because of chronic illness?

Letting the old starve?
@beecycling @marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor

@crazyeddie
Besides these options, letting people simple for of treatable illness or let them starve are not exactly compatible with human rights.

Yes I know the USA is not exactly a champion of human rights, they just like to use them as a rhetoric weapon against foreign countries.
@beecycling @marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor

@yacc143
Quite. The US doesn't have to be perfect, it just has to at least try to be the country it claims to be. The champion of freedom and implacable enemy of tyranny. Its people have died bravely fighting for that. Americans who liberated concentration camps saw first hand the evil they were risking their own lives to halt the spread of and knew they were fighting for the right side. The US owes it to their people to continue being the right side.
@crazyeddie @marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor
@beecycling @yacc143 @crazyeddie @marjolica @MikeDunnAuthor The US fight on the right side only by accident. The US didn't enter WWII to fight any evil, but to gain strategic influence and showcase military power. The US dropped 2 atomic bombs, 3 days apart, on civilians from a country which they knew was about to surrender. The US provided weapons for several genocides, one of which is happening right now. The US will never come any close to the lie it pretends to be. It is the very opposite.