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Your experiences may be affected by your age and where you live. You say you get "discounts" -- AARP? Senior citizen? Are you on Medicare?
As far as where you live -- My ma lives in rural Missouri and the costs of basic doctor visits and even hospitalization are WAY below the national average there. Young people there with average income might be able to get away with not having insurance as long as nothing catastrophic happens.
In New York, on the other hand, most physicians will charge you at least $100 just for walking in the door, and then if they actually DO something, like use a stethoscope, there's more charges over that. A simple "well baby" visit may end up costing $200-300 dollars per child. So if you don't have insurance or a LOT of money, you don't go to doctors unless you think you are gonna die.
"You are better off taking the money you would pay in premiums and just putting it into a bank account dedicated to health care." That sounds grand, but it's not realistic for most people, and could be dangerous. Several years back my son broke his arm -- just broke his arm, mind you -- and the eventual bills added up to something in the neighborhood of $15,000. I'm sure today it would be closer to $20,000 for a damnfool broken arm.
Most working people don't have enought income to allow them to keep several thousand dollars stashed away for emergencies like that.
But then, most working people couldn't afford to pay for individual health insurance, so if they aren't getting insured through their jobs, they are probably not insured at all.
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