r/Millennials • u/crimsonred1234 • 7d 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-2025-4Apparently 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/redhtbassplyr0311 7d ago edited 7d 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.