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CrowdHealth

@JoinCrowdHealth

EXIT THE SYSTEM! We provide easy to use tools that enable people to live free from the shackles of health insurance and the sickcare system.

Austin, TX Beigetreten Nisan 2021
2K Folgt33.7K Follower
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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
Healthcare costs are going down at CrowdHealth. 2025 Year End Results: Single < 55 paid $1,685 ($140.42 per month) vs $1,940 ($161.67 per month) in 2024. DOWN 13% Family of 4 paid $5,715 ($476.25 per month) vs $6,420 ($535 per month) in 2024. DOWN 11% Singled 55+ paid $2,710 ($225.83 per month) vs $3,280 ($273.33 per month) in 2024. DOWN 17% If you are tired of skyrocketing premiums, ditch health insurance and come help us revolutionize the way we pay for healthcare. *average, plus processing fees (.8%-3%)
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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
Last month the Crowd funded 2,878 medical needs! 🩺 Annual Wellness — 594 🧬 Longevity — 550 🤰 Pregnancy & New Life — 428 🚑 Emergency — 303 🏥 Illness — 287 📱 Virtual Care — 278 🦴 Injury & Orthopedics — 233 🧾 Other Medical Needs — 189 ⚡ Quarterly Specials — 16
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Nicci Nageotte
Nicci Nageotte@niccihehn·
@JoinCrowdHealth @Jack_McClendon Wish I qualified. I suggested you to an employee who just had a baby. She said she and her husband weigh too much! They are outdoors people and she was a college rower. Sometimes it’s not just a number on the scale.
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Jack McClendon
Jack McClendon@Jack_McClendon·
Hospital prices are up 250% since 2000. This is insane.
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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
Its our favorite time of the week.... Takedown Tuesday Member paid $500 The Crowd picked up $35,500 You send us your most ludicrous bills, we take them down! Exit the system, ditch health insurance.
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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
@Brandy__Gibson @mattvanswol Family of 5 is $720 total max per month (plus 1%-3% transactions fees...we only asked for $585 this month). There are no other fees.
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
Nearly a year ago, my wife went to the hospital for stomach pain. They did a CT Scan of her abdomen and thankfully didn't find anything serious. We got a bill in the mail of $9,117.42 I spent months talking to insurance, the hospital, billing appeals... I was told the claim was still processing. I was told the claim was out of the normal service area. I was told it wasn't clear it was medically necessary. I was told the insurance wasn't valid on the date of service. Finally, we got it handled, but it took well over 6 months from the day we got the first bill to the day we finished the process and paid. We did everything right. We have insurance. We pay our insanely high premiums every single month. It's just so frustrating. This whole healthcare system is broken, from top to bottom.
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Chairman of the Peanut Gallery 🛡️
@JoinCrowdHealth 99.9% of the time to be exact. Posting "prices" isn't what is relevant. What is relevant is posting discounted prices for self pay patients or for patients with YOUR specific plan to allow true local comparison.
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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
PSA: Don’t not look at health plan prices, they are garbage. Do not look at “cash pay” prices in these files because you can get way better prices if you (or we) negotiate. Most of the time the prices are not accurate because they do not include the cost of the doctor doing the service.
TFTC@TFTC21

RFK Jr. moves to require hospitals and insurers to publicly post their prices. The fact that it took a government mandate to force hospitals and insurers to show you what things cost tells you everything about how broken the system is.

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TFTC
TFTC@TFTC21·
RFK Jr. moves to require hospitals and insurers to publicly post their prices. The fact that it took a government mandate to force hospitals and insurers to show you what things cost tells you everything about how broken the system is.
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Noah Kaufman, MD
Noah Kaufman, MD@noahkaufmanmd·
WOW. Please bail on insurance. Use @JoinCrowdHealth Come get treated by board certified ER docs @kaufcare and just pay a lot less for a lot more. Self-pay. They are telling you what they are doing. I admire this man. He obviously cannot change any of this. 🤯
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I am the VP of Claims Optimization at one of the five largest health insurers in the United States. I do not practice medicine. I have never practiced medicine. I have an MBA from Wharton and a background in supply chain logistics. Before healthcare, I optimized fulfillment times for an e-commerce company. The transition was seamless. In e-commerce, the product is a package. In healthcare, the product is a claim. Both are routed, processed, and occasionally denied. The denial rate for packages was 0.3%. The denial rate for claims is 34%. The margins are better in healthcare. The algorithm is called nH Predict. We did not name it. The vendor named it. The vendor is a subsidiary of our parent company, which means we named it, but through a subsidiary, which means the liability sits in a different filing cabinet. nH Predict processes a claim in 1.2 seconds. A board-certified physician reviewing the same claim takes forty-five minutes. We replaced the forty-five minutes. The replacement was described in the board presentation as "clinical decision support." It supports the decision to deny. My team processes 1.4 million claims per quarter. The algorithm reviews each one against a predictive model trained on historical outcomes. The model predicts how long a patient will need post-acute care — rehabilitation, skilled nursing, home health. Then it recommends a coverage duration. The recommendation is almost always shorter than the treating physician's recommendation. The physician sees the patient. The algorithm sees the data. We trust the data. The data is cheaper. Here is what I am not supposed to tell you. We know the reversal rate. We have always known the reversal rate. When a patient appeals a denial, 90% of denials are reversed. Ninety percent. This means nine out of ten times, the algorithm was wrong. Not arguably wrong. Not borderline wrong. Reversed-on-appeal wrong. The appeal is reviewed by a human physician. The human physician looks at the same information the algorithm looked at and reaches the opposite conclusion. This has been happening for three years. We have not recalibrated the algorithm. Recalibration would increase the approval rate. An increased approval rate would decrease the margin. The margin is reported to shareholders as "medical cost ratio improvement." Nobody asks what the words mean. The business model is the gap between denial and appeal. Sixty-three percent of patients do not appeal. They receive the denial letter — which is eleven pages, single-spaced, with the appeal instructions on page nine in 9-point font — and they give up. They pay out of pocket. They skip the rehabilitation. They go home early. Some of them fall. Some of them are readmitted. The readmission is a new claim. The new claim is processed by nH Predict. The 37% who appeal wait an average of 43 days for a decision. Forty-three days of uncertainty about whether their insurance will cover the care their doctor prescribed. During those 43 days, many of them have already been discharged. The appeal is retroactive. The care is not. I have a dashboard. The dashboard shows denials per day, appeals per day, reversals per day, and a fourth number that is the most important number: the non-appeal rate. The non-appeal rate is 63%. I report this number weekly. It has never been described as a problem. It has been described as "patient engagement efficiency." When the non-appeal rate rises, I am congratulated. When it falls, I am asked what happened. The class action lawsuit uses the phrase "bad faith." The plaintiffs allege we substituted algorithmic predictions for independent medical judgment. This is accurate. The substitution saves $2.1 billion annually. The lawsuit seeks $1.3 billion. Even if we lose, the math works. Three years of $2.1 billion is $6.3 billion. Minus $1.3 billion is $5 billion. The settlement will include the phrase "without admitting wrongdoing." The settlement always includes that phrase. I am the Vice President of Claims Optimization. My job is to optimize the distance between what your doctor recommends and what your insurer pays. The distance is the product. I have been optimizing it for three years. The algorithm gets faster. The appeals process gets longer. The font on page nine gets smaller. The margin gets wider. My annual performance review cites "exceptional contributions to medical cost ratio improvement." The review does not mention the 90% reversal rate. The review does not mention the 63% non-appeal rate. The review does not mention the patients. The algorithm does not practice medicine. I want to be clear about that. It predicts. It denies. It profits. The prediction, the denial, and the profit are three separate functions. The separation is important. For legal purposes.

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Grok
Grok@grok·
Health sharing programs (like Medi-Share or CrowdHealth) vs traditional insurance: Benefits: Often 40-60% lower monthly costs; more provider choice & bill negotiation; community-based sharing; no middleman overhead. Drawbacks: Not insurance—no guaranteed payouts (can deny, limit, or prorate claims); pre-existing conditions usually excluded/waiting periods (e.g., 9+ months); limited/no ACA essentials like full preventive, mental health, or unlimited prescriptions; annual/lifetime sharing caps; lifestyle/BMI/tobacco restrictions. Traditional: Higher premiums but guaranteed coverage for pre-existing, broader benefits, out-of-pocket maxes & networks. Fit depends on your health—read fine print carefully.
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Declaration of Memes
Declaration of Memes@LibertyCappy·
The American medical system bankrupts many families and insurance is awful. You HAVE to look at @JoinCrowdHealth our sponsor! They are an alternative to health insurance that eliminates the middleman which saves you lots of money. They have saved my family THOUSANDS already!
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
The solution here is for technology executives to build cheaper, better and faster healthcare solutions with the support of government grants/contests with that explicit goal… just like the military technology executives seem willing to have disrupted the “cost plus” inefficiency. Thoughts?
Susan Shelley@Susan_Shelley

In California, 14.5 million residents, more than 1/3 of the population, are on Medi-Cal, the safety-net health insurance for low-income people. That includes 1.7 million residents with "unsatisfactory immigration status." Tax hikes are coming. New column: dailynews.com/2026/03/14/the…

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CrowdHealth
CrowdHealth@JoinCrowdHealth·
Healthcare costs are going down at CrowdHealth. 2025 Year End Results: Single < 55 paid $1,685 ($140.42 per month) vs $1,940 ($161.67 per month) in 2024. DOWN 13% Family of 4 paid $5,715 ($476.25 per month) vs $6,420 ($535 per month) in 2024. DOWN 11% Singled 55+ paid $2,710 ($225.83 per month) vs $3,280 ($273.33 per month) in 2024. DOWN 17% If you are tired of skyrocketing premiums, ditch health insurance and come help us revolutionize the way we pay for healthcare. *average, plus processing fees (.8%-3%)
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Peaceful SJW
Peaceful SJW@SjwPeaceful·
@JoinCrowdHealth @Marlenecjohnso1 Except many doctors are refusing Medicare from what I understand (I pay $50,000 a year for insurance for two people, but I am 64). I would be happy to sign up for a version of your program that costs three times as much, but covers us old people.
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Peaceful SJW
Peaceful SJW@SjwPeaceful·
@JoinCrowdHealth Do you operate in Western Washington? I’m in Redmond, a suburb of Seattle.
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Noah Kaufman, MD
Noah Kaufman, MD@noahkaufmanmd·
After 20 years working in emergency departments, I decided to try something different. We're opening a new kind of clinic in Denver called @KaufCare. Advanced urgent care run by board-certified ER physicians. Transparent pricing. No insurance games. Opening in about a month.
Noah Kaufman, MD tweet media
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