On November 17, 2016, a bat flew into Ally McNamee’s mouth.
At the time, McNamee was a student at Keene State College in New Hampshire. A bat flew into her house, and she attempted to shoo it away with a broom, assuming the bat would retreat. It did not.
“It flew at my face, and I screamed,” McNamee says. “My mouth was open. I definitely caught a wing.”
When she woke up the next day, she started to worry about rabies. She went to the local urgent care center, which sent her to the emergency room. It was the only facility that stocked the drugs necessary to treat rabies, a situation that is typical across the United States.
A few weeks later, the bill arrived: $6,017. The vast majority of the charge was for a drug to treat rabies exposure called immunoglobulin. The emergency room billed this drug at $3,706.
And it turns out McNamee’s bill was actually at the low end of what hospitals charge for the drug in the United States, which can sometimes […]
Stephan, thanks for calling attention to this issue. I had a similar incident with a bat in college a couple decades ago and got the post-exposure rabies treatment as a precaution. Thankfully the university provided cheaper price thru campus medical system because it was several thousand dollars at any given hospital even back then. The prices are obscene now. This issue is more common than most people think and the price gouging needs to be addressed. These vaccine companies have no accountability..they are shielded from liability by our criminal government and they can pretty much do whatever the hell they want without consequence..to the detriment of peoples lives and imposing financial destruction. This is not to say they should not be paid a fair price for making the potential life-saving vaccines but these prices are the sign we are dealing with a cartel, not a legitimate business.
P.S. I still like bats..they are amazing little creatures.