> And yes, dental care is all over the map— it feels very much like what I imagine US healthcare to be,
Funny enough, dental insurance in the US is very straight forward. I have always gotten quotes up front with very clearly explained charges. The way it has worked is dentist talks over with me what they want done, billing person runs the numbers and gives me paper with estimates, and if I agree I pay whatever balance I owe on the way out.
Amazingly straight forward, kind of like how everything else should work...
FWIW Eye doctors and insurance on glasses works just as well.
Ha, I mean that's basically what it is in Canada as well— it's just so much more than going to the doctor, where you never even see a bill.
An example of my frustration with dental: I went to my usual dentist for a checkup, but then he referred me to a specialist. The specialist appointment wasn't going to be for a month, but then they call suddenly and have a cancellation the next day. I end up having to pay full price for the specialist appointment because my insurance doesn't like that I had two "assessment" appointments back to back.
On another occasion, I was quoted a procedure, and my decision for when I wanted to have it done was driven entirely by which insurance-year it was going to fall under, rather than by my convenience or how urgent it was, or anything else.
I know these are fundamentally "insurance issues" and I suppose better supplemental insurance could make them go away, but at the end of the day, just like with Americans, my insurance is chosen by my employer and I have basically no control over it.
It's uncommon here in Norway, unheard of in fact as far as I am concerned. I have a checkup once a year that includes a really thorough cleaning procedure and x-rays. That costs about 120 USD. If I need a filling that will probably add about 100 USD at the most and the two crowns (milled ceramic done on site, on demand) that I have cost about 500 USD each so over the last thirty years I have spent about 6000 USD on dentistry, so an average of 200 USD per year.
Funny enough, dental insurance in the US is very straight forward. I have always gotten quotes up front with very clearly explained charges. The way it has worked is dentist talks over with me what they want done, billing person runs the numbers and gives me paper with estimates, and if I agree I pay whatever balance I owe on the way out.
Amazingly straight forward, kind of like how everything else should work...
FWIW Eye doctors and insurance on glasses works just as well.