Rising Health Care Use Due To Vaccine Adverse Events?
This was a data point that has not surfaced until now, possibly because many adverse events end in death without the ability to reach the hospital for care...
Given the many and varied adverse events that the COVID-19 shots are documented to cause, I’ve been wondering when we would start to see real pressure on the health care system. It seems that we may now be seeing this. Here’s how the article summarizes this:
UnitedHealth, the parent company of the largest private payer in the U.S., expects its medical loss ratio — the share of premiums spent on member’s healthcare costs — to be higher than previously expected in the second quarter of 2023, due to a surge in outpatient care utilization among seniors, CFO John Rex said Tuesday during Goldman Sachs’ investor conference.
Of course this raises the question of “Why now?” The article tries to lead with the answer:
Pent-up demand for delayed healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic is pressuring medical costs for health insurers that had a financial windfall during the pandemic amid low utilization.
Maybe.
Yes, there probably was SOME “pent-up demand for delayed healthcare,” but if that was the only cause why didn’t this uptick begin in 2021…or even 2022?
I would tentatively suggest, that maybe this is now the fallout from all the new chronic and health conditions that are befalling people who have been vaxxed and are now regularly being “boosted.” Many simply die without hospitalization, but as chronic, auto-immune diseases and inflammatory syndromes set in, it is going to tax the health care industry…as it now seems to be beginning to do.