You would definitely have claims denied in public option lol….
I'm on Medicare. I've never had a spinal surgery denied. Including for what Luigi suffered from. The public option has the incentive to keep people off disability, help them work part time, and to minimize costs over a much longer period. When coverage deciscions aren't driven by profits per quarted the incentives for approval/denial are very different.
Doctor says you need it to prevent further complications, along with imaging you get it.
The only medicare denial I've ever gotten was for pain management procedures. Apart from being crappy to wait on, there's no permanent harm.
If I wanted to jump straight to surgery, I could probably get the surgery approved no problem.
but in general the opioid epidemic really fucked him over. seeing way more acetaminophen 325 mg-codeine 30 mg tablet being prescribed now whereas he could have gotten Dilaudid a decade ago. no wonder he went the psychedelics route, especially when the "moreplatesmoredates" groups he seemed to heavily be a part of are all about that stuff. "dude ketamine cures PTSD in soldiers" the same way microdosing doesn't actually work but everyone still tries it for some reason
If he was in that much pain post surgery, he could have found someone to implant a stimulator or pump. He had a family that would support him so he could rest as much as he needed.
If he was able to do this killing, they wouldn't have helped him have a fulfilling life.
He needed effective treatment for depression/anxiety and his neurosis kept him from listening or even going to the doctor/pt/lifestyle adaptation. His problems were probably manageable, but he was seeing them through the lens of serioius depression.
People need to be protected from exposure to opiates. There's no way to predict who is going to have their health ruined by them, and who isn't. If you consider addiction an iatrogenic harm (google it) opiate therapy has a high risk vs. benefit.
We already dealt with this as a country once before. One of the keys to ending it was curtailing medical prescribing except where necessary.
As for the pre-existing condition, they won't cover the first year you're on the plan but after that they have to. basically there were numerous ways for this guy to get help if he was willing to look literally a year ahead of time, and the amount of money he must have spent on 3-d printing could have gone to figuring out the ins and outs of his healthcare.
Pre-existing conditions aren't a thing anymore.
Christians don't want him freed (?) because he (?) took revenge (?)
No, a Christian is saying that it's sinful to cheer about the murder. If you aren't a christian it doesn't matter, cheer away.
It was murder though, and there's no garauntee the guy won't keep doing it.
Did Luigi, an ultra wealthy, private $40k/year school attending, handsome, ivy leaguer ever have any romantic relationship ever? Did he ever post anything flirtatious? Did he ever make any public comments about any person in his personal life? Any comments congratulating someone?
I think underneath it all the guy had some serious insecurities and untreated mental problems. It's possible for someone to be a fucking wealthy gigachad and still deeply believe you're an ugly sack of shit loser. That's probably why he threw away all his accomplishments - he did them and they didn't change the way he felt about himself.