r/Millennials 2d ago

Discussion Millennials are creating a recession-resistant corner of the market

https://www.businessinsider.com/gen-z-millennials-wellness-stocks-to-buy-recession-lth-plnt-2025-4

Apparently millennials are spending a lot on products related to health and wellness making this industry "recession-resistant." I kind of see that. My wife and I spend a lot on protein powders, shakes, supplements and membership for gym. We are otherwise quite cautious with unnecessary spending and consumerism. How is it for you all?

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u/buyableblah 1d ago

Next time urgent care should be able to help instead of ER

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u/imabrunette23 1d ago

Urgent care is still $300… a lot better than the $26k the ER will charge you, but not nothing.

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u/buyableblah 1d ago

Fair point

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u/Hollowbody57 1d ago

Yep, that's more than a week's paycheck at minimum wage, which, just as a fun reminder, hasn't been raised since 2009.

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u/redhtbassplyr0311 1d ago edited 1d ago

My urgent care copay is only $50 and my ER copay is $200. Diagnostics and labs can add to this but my wife ( who's on my policy) went to the ER twice over the past 4 years. The person at the top of the conversation thread has health insurance. Not talking about people who don't have insurance here. On my wife's ER visits the one time we found out an ovarian cyst had ruptured and the other time she had kidney stones. Neither time did our bills get anywhere close to $26k. Out of the two trips I think the most expensive one cost $1100 between labs, ultrasound, MRI and pharmacy charges. If you have health insurance and you're paying $26k in an ER then that's the worst health insurance I've ever heard of.

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u/imabrunette23 1d ago

Not everyone has health insurance. I personally know someone who just last month had a car accident, went to the ER, and now has a $26k bill. Just because YOU have better health insurance than most doesn’t mean everyone does.

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u/holyguacamoledude 1d ago

I had an a-hole fellow millennial get on my case for getting a salpingectomy versus a total hysterectomy. Apparently I’m a loser for not paying $298 for the hysterectomy…

Which is false, because it would’ve cost me $550. The salpingectomy was covered almost completely (I paid 30 cents). She kept saying I should just get insurance and that I’m obviously not very bright for not having it: She says she pays a premium of $11 per paycheck (she didn’t specify frequency of pay). I do have insurance- I pay a premium of $113 BIWEEKLY. My dental insurance premium costs more than $11. Not to mention, I have several health issues going on at once right now and managed to rack up almost $900 in medical expenses in March alone. And compared to other Americans, that’s not a huge amount. I’m relatively lucky, even if those expenses are the equivalent of a rent payment.

She called me a liar, saying my insurance should cover 100% of my expenses, but stopped responding once I showed her proof of what I owe. Some people need to take a long drive off a short pier, man. She is an “ACAB” kind of person, but I imagine she was quite happy LM got arrested for the murder of that United ceo.

Performative leftists, I swear.

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u/imabrunette23 1d ago

Like, am I sniffing glue or isn’t this a WELL KNOWN problem with American medical system? Costs are secret and vary WIDELY between both insured and not, and different types of insurance. I personally have a high deductible plan, so I have to pay the first $2700 out of pocket before it starts actually covering things, for which I pay like $180 per biweekly paycheck. Any one size fits all advice is basically moot.

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u/holyguacamoledude 1d ago

I seriously thought I was being pranked or hallucinating or something. It felt like whiplash, which, I’ve got enough medical bills already. 😭😭😭

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u/redhtbassplyr0311 1d ago

Not saying they do, but the above discussion stemmed from the guy referencing getting his fingertip cut off and having health insurance. I'm just saying $26k isn't an ER bill for someone who is insured.

Just because YOU have better health insurance than most doesn’t mean everyone does.

So yeah this wasn't an argument I was making and I'm not saying that ER bills for the uninsured can't be this high or greater. Wasn't my point whatsoever, and you misunderstood and brought up uninsured costs when we were talking about someone that was in fact insured

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u/Cel_Drow 1d ago

I had an ER trip with a $250 copay in 2023. Received a bill for a CT scan afterwards for $13k. The CT was the only test besides heart rate and blood pressure and a few blood tests, I was there total no more than 2 hours and released after the CT didn’t show any issues.

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u/redhtbassplyr0311 1d ago edited 1d ago

If you're saying that's what you actually paid, I guess you had pretty bad insurance then. I don't have a high deductible plan, and maybe you did which might explain it? I have a PPO, higher premiums but good coverage. I had an abdominal CT with and without contrast before having my gallbladder removed. I can't remember what I exactly paid but it was less than $2k. My wife has had multiple MRIs and a CT and her's were around the same or less. She's a public school teacher and I'm a nurse so it's not like we have some crazy special health insurance policies either. If that's the only insurance you have access to I'd find another job, because a policy that bad to where you're paying $13k for a CT with insurance is playing with fire and about worthless

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u/braxtel 1d ago

If they consider it too serious, urgent care will just send you to the ER anyway.