How real is the health care crisis in America to you? My guess is it depends on how often you visit the doctor and what type of insurance you have. I am quite lucky. My family and I have been blessed with good health, and we also have insurance that covers the times when we don’t. It would be easy for me to not realize how broken our system really is. Not everyone is so lucky.
Chances are, there are people you know that struggle with medical bills, doctor visits and insurance claims—you just may not know that about them. Be it a co-worker with the same insurance options or an old college friend, someone in your life probably knows the downside of our system all too well.
Below you will find a glimpse inside the thoughts of others, just like you, in an honest dialog on medical insurance. I came across this post on Facebook the other day. Health care reform is very real to these people, and these people could be your employees.
It is your job to remember that this is what is out there. People trying their best to make a life they are proud to live and, often, struggling to do so, regardless of their salary. When you communicate about benefits—and you had better be communicating—help them get a better idea of the big picture. Provide your employees with resources and explanations, not just more numbers and frustration. Help them to see the value in the benefits you provide, so they can help others around them to learn more as well.
Being a member of the Benz team has taught me so much about health care and the need for good communication. You won’t see many blog posts on our website with my name on them (I’m the technical lead hiding behind the screen), but that is what hit me most about this Facebook rant: Had I worked for a different company, I could have easily been one of these people.
Our medical bills may be the end of us… I am so sick and tired of working so hard and yet not being able to pay these medical bills (even with our insurance)... I think it may be easier to move to another country where healthcare is a right and not a privilege…