Realfoodology - How to Opt Out of Big Insurance - And Still Get Covered | Andy Schoonover
Episode Date: July 15, 2025259: If you’ve ever gotten a surprise medical bill, you need to stop everything and listen to my interview with Andy Schoonover. He founded CrowdHealth, a company that’s taking a crowdfunding appr...oach to healthcare - that means you pay into a community instead of giving your money to a big corporation, and that fund helps cover your medical costs upfront (so no expensive bills down the line). And it ends up being way cheaper than health insurance. If you’ve ever been frustrated with your insurance, you’re going to want to hear this. Topics Discussed: → What a crowdfunding approach to health insurance looks like → Difference between CrowdHealth and insurance → How the healthcare system got so broken → Why doctors hate dealing with insurance → Incentivizing healthy lifestyles Sponsored By: → FPOO | Get your free $39 bottle for just $1 shipping and taste the difference freshness makes at http://www.GetFresh324.com. → Seed | Ready to experience a probiotic that actually works? Go to https://www.Seed.com/Realfoodology and use code 25Realfoodology to get 25% off your first month. → CURED | Right now, CURED Nutrition is offering my listeners an exclusive 20% off Serenity Gummies with a monthly subscription. Just head to https://www.curednutrition.com/REALFOODOLOGY and use the code REALFOODOLOGY at checkout. → Qualia | Qualia | Go to https://www.qualialife.com/REALFOODOLOGY for up to 50% off your purchase and use code REALFOODOLOGY for an additional 15%. → Lineage | Try it for yourself at https://www.lineageprovisions.com and use the code REALFOODOLOGY for 10% off. Timestamps: → 00:00:00 - Introduction → 00:02:58 - How CrowdHealth Started → 00:05:51 - What is CrowdHealth → 00:09:18 - How it Works → 00:21:45 - The CrowdHealth Community → 00:25:21 - Why Healthcare is So Expensive → 00:26:35 - Doctors and Insurance → 00:28:40 - How CrowdHealth Covers Preventive Care → 00:34:59 - Surgeries and Medications → 00:37:08 - Doctor Database + Patient Support → 00:39:10 - Is Insurance a Scam? → 00:42:00 - Membership Rules → 00:47:44 - Incentivizing Healthy Lifestyles → 00:55:53 - Accepting Bitcoin → 00:57:13 - Concerns About Leaving Traditional Insurance → 01:00:50 - Where to Find CrowdHealth Show Links: → https://www.joincrowdhealth.com | Andy’s offering $99/month for the first three months when you join and use the code REALFOODOLOGY. Check Out: → Instagram → X Check Out Courtney: → LEAVE US A VOICE MESSAGE → Check Out My new FREE Grocery Guide! → @realfoodology → www.realfoodology.com → My Immune Supplement by 2x4 → Air Dr Air Purifier → AquaTru Water Filter → EWG Tap Water Database Produced By: Drake Peterson
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On today's episode of the Real Foodology podcast.
We're trying to build a community of these independent doctors who are typically better
than your hospital system doctors from my perspective.
Yeah.
To allow them to be cash pay as opposed to relying upon UnitedHealthcare and Blue Cross
with Shield and all these other plans.
Hello, friends.
Welcome back to another episode of the Real Foodology podcast.
I am your host Courtney Swan and today's guest is Andi Scoonover of Crowd Health.
I was blown away by this whole episode.
It is so cool that somebody is finally doing this and tackling big insurance in a community-driven,
crowdfunding approach to health insurance.
I'm not going to spend a lot of time in the intro because I really just want you to hear
because I went through all of the questions.
So this is a crowdfunding approach to health
insurance. This is going outside of the traditional health insurance model where traditionally
they don't even cover all of that. And then many times people get bankrupted by these
kinds of situations. This is your insurance and you go to your company and you say, Hey,
you know, I have all these bills and then those bills get paid for and then your, your
monthly bill is significantly cheaper as well. If this is at all confusing for you, don't worry.
Once we get into the episode, you're going to completely understand all this.
I'm blown away.
I want to join now.
And if you wait till the very, very end, we actually gave you a code if you want to try
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You get three months at a discounted rate, which is incredible.
So wait till the end.
I hope you love the episode and I hope you join me.
We'll all be in this amazing community together taking care of each other's health.
It's so freaking cool.
I'm so excited.
I'm like on cloud nine about this right now.
And if you love the episode,
you wanna take a moment to rate and review it.
Thank you so much.
It means so much.
It really helps the show.
It helps get it out to more people.
And if you're loving this episode,
if you wanna take a moment to tag me
at Real Foodology on Instagram,
I will hopefully see it and
repost you. Thank you so much. I hope you enjoy and love the episode.
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Andi, thank you so much for coming on.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, I'm super excited.
So you created something called Crowd Health, which I'm not even going to pretend or try
to explain what that is.
This concept is very new to me.
So I would love for you to tell my audience what is that?
What do you do?
Yeah, I'll give you a little bit of background.
I think it would be some good context.
This is actually my second healthcare company and I swore that I wasn't going to do another
healthcare company after the first one just because of the craziness and the complexity
of healthcare. wasn't going to do another healthcare company after the first one just because of the craziness and the complexity of
healthcare. And so, I sold my previous company and I didn't
have health insurance because most of us get health insurance
through our employer. And so, I went to the only place I
thought I could go, which was this Obamacare, you know,
healthcare marketplace thing. And so, I got a plan for me, my
wife, and my two kids. And it was, I think, $1,000 or $1,200 a month.
And I was like, all right, well, I guess I just have to pay this.
And I kind of joke it worked until I had to use it.
My little one was having recurring ear infections.
And so we went to the ear, nose, and throat doctor.
And he's like, yeah, she's got a hole in her eardrum.
And I was like, okay, well, you know, what do we do about this?
And he's like, it's no big deal.
We just got to put tubes in her ears.
And, you know, it's a 15-minute procedure. You know, there's a place in network for your health insurance plan to like, it's no big deal. We just got to put tubes in our ears and it's a 15-minute procedure.
There's a place in network for your health insurance plan to do it, so no big deal.
I was like, great, let's go do it.
So it was 15 minutes.
We were in and out of there in 45 minutes.
I was like, that was easy.
And then I got the bill and it was $8,000 for 15 minutes.
Honestly, I was going to think like 25.
I was like, what?
$8,000.
That's insane.
I was like, okay, this is what to think like 25. I was like, what? $8,000. That's insane.
I was like, okay, this is what health insurance is for.
Like, this is the whole point of us having health insurance.
And little did I know, a few weeks after that, the health insurance plan was going to send
me a note via snail mail, funny enough, that was medically unnecessary, so they weren't
going to pay it.
How can they deem that as medically unnecessary?
I have no idea.
And so we went through two rounds of appeals.
And I think my ear, nose, and throat doc was fighting with
like an ophthalmologist or an optometrist or something, which
is doctors who take care of eyes have no nothing about your
ears. And they're like, no, we're not paying for it. So I
had a stroke and $8,000 check to get this procedure paid for.
As you can probably imagine, I was pissed.
Yeah.
And so I called the health insurance plan. I was like, I
quit. I'm done. Like if you're not guys, if you guys aren't going to pay my bills imagine, I was pissed. Yeah. And so I called the health insurance plan. I was like, I quit. I'm done. Like, if you guys aren't going to pay my
bills, I'm not paying your bills. And so we became
uninsured. And so I went and told my wife, like, hey, we're
uninsured. And she's like, so what do we do now? And over
the following like 12 months, I really tried to figure out,
like, can we live without health insurance? Is there a
viable way of doing this? And
little did I know that I could have negotiated that bill with
the hospital down probably to $2,000. If you go and pay in
cash, it's significantly less than if you were to pay through
your health insurance company. And so, like, I bet you other
people would be interested in this too. And so, ultimately, I
started another company, despite the fact that I said I would never get back
into healthcare, here I am again, in 2021.
So we're four years in, called Crowd Health.
And in essence, what we are is we're a community of people.
We have 10,000 people in our community
who fund each other's healthcare bills
so that I can go and pay for my healthcare directly,
as opposed to the doctor getting paid
by a health insurance plan.
And as a result of that, they don't have any administrative burden, they don't have to
wait to get paid.
It's really back between patient and doctor without health insurance plan and the government
and your employer and all these people in between, which it's, you know, I always kind
of say you work for whoever pays you.
And so the doctor is ultimately paid by the insurance company.
So that doctor doesn't work for me.
The doctor works for the insurance company.
That's a great point.
And so if I'm paying the doctor directly, now he's working, he or she is working for
me.
And we can decide what's right for my health, as opposed to having all these other intermediaries
deciding what we can
and cannot do.
So that's, you know, crowd health in a nutshell, but I'm happy to kind of go into the mechanics.
Oh, yeah.
I have so many questions about how the mechanics worked.
But yeah, I mean, you, what you just brought up, actually, I brought him up right before
we started recording my friend Brigham Bueller.
He was actually on the podcast.
Actually, we recorded in the same studio.
And we had a whole conversation about that,
about how, I mean, essentially how insurance is kind of a scam.
And like what you just said, if you had just paid cash
and you didn't even tell them you had insurance,
it would have been two grand versus eight grand.
I learned this years ago because I didn't have insurance
for like two years of my life, because I've always been
either self-employed or 1099 my whole life.
And I will never forget this when I was like 24 maybe, like I had just been taking off
my parents' insurance and I was just, you know, flying solo for like a year and finally
my dad sat me down, sat me down and he said, look, I understand like you're, because I
was already on my health journey and so I'm seeing functional doctors and I'm like, why
would I get insurance?
They don't even cover it anyways, right?
Like I'm on this preventative health root cause thing.
I never go to the doctor.
My dad sat me down and he said,
look, the reason that you need to get this health insurance
is because God forbid you're in a car accident, let's say.
You have to get life, you know, flown out on a life flight.
He goes, that would completely bankrupt your mom and I
because obviously we would pay for that.
We would want to keep you alive or it would bankrupt you.
You know, and so that really is what initially made me get
insurance and then, you know, ever since then, like many
Americans, I've been on this battle, like similar to what
you just described.
I mean, I, I, it took me back to a memory of I went and saw
a, an ear doctor.
I had like a clog or something.
I mean, I was in that office for four minutes.
He literally did a little blow gun, gone, done had like a clog or something. I mean, I was in that office for four minutes.
He literally did a little blow gun, gone, done,
like I'm out of there in 10 minutes.
And similarly, I get a bill for like $2,000.
And I was like, I'm calling them going,
I was there for four minutes, what do you mean?
Blew a little gun in my ear, you didn't even do a procedure,
at least yours was like an actual surgery.
And so, yeah, so this is something that I'm super passionate about, and I know
Americans are fed up.
They're tired of it.
There's so much corruption and just scamming going on with insurance.
And so, when my, our mutual friend, Emily, reached out to me and said, you've got to
talk to him because he's doing something really cool.
It's this concept that I'd never heard of before.
So let's get into the meat of it, because I'm sure most of my audience is probably like, I don't even understand
how this works. So I'm curious, where do we begin? I mean, how many people do you have?
And then how does the money actually work as far as using that for insurance?
Yeah, we have 10,000 people right now in the community. And we've funded about 20,000 bills over the last four years.
And those have been from little pediatric visits to, you know,
we've had two or three dozen cancer cases.
We had a guy shoot himself accidentally.
That was bills almost a million dollars.
You can talk more about that if you want.
But like, you know, we've shown that the community is able to fund,
you know, bills regardless of the size, which is great.
Because that's everybody's first question.
Like, and it's the scenario in which your dad gave you,
which is what happens if the big one happens?
This is going to bankrupt you.
Well, with health insurance, about 200,000 families every
year go bankrupt due to a medical event, even though they have
health insurance.
That's insane.
So, clearly, this is not working.
I'm thankful that no members have gone bankrupt with crowd health over the last four years
as a result of medical debt.
So that's ultimately our mission, is to not put people in financial distress if something
really big happens.
But the mechanics behind how it actually works is, if you get hurt, I'll just use the guy with the gunshot,
because it's a really interesting story.
He was in Montana fishing, and he was in bear country,
so he had a gun in his holster,
and then he caught a fish, he leaned down,
the gun fell out of his holster, hit a rock perfectly,
the bullet went off, the gun fell out of his holster, hit a rock perfectly.
The bullet went off, the gun went off, bullet went into his calf, out the back of his calf,
into his thigh, out the top of his thigh, into his chest and out the back.
Oh my God.
And he said he looked down and he saw green stuff, which I think is bile, coming from
his chest.
And he was like, I think I'm dead.
Because he was two hours from the closest hospital.
So he had to get medevaced out.
This helicopter landed basically in the middle of a stream to get him out of here.
And he was in a coma, went into sepsis.
So this is almost a million dollar bill.
So what happens in that scenario is that he goes to the hospital.
Great thing is the hospitals can't treat you differently depending upon what type of insurance
or no insurance you have.
So that's not to, nobody needs to worry about that.
They have to take care of you.
It's a federal law.
He gets all the bills in the mail.
He goes to his app.
He takes a picture of the bill.
We have a negotiations team on the backend who actually negotiate that bill down.
So we got that nearly million dollar bill down to somewhere between 200 and 250,000.
So then we send that bill to the community of these 10,000 people and saying, hey, somebody
in Montana got a gun injury, are you willing to help?
And if they say yes, then money goes from their account to this guy, his name is Michael,
his account, and at the end of the day, you have all the money in your account to then go and pay this hospital bill directly.
And so, we ask every member of the community once a month to help somebody else out in
the community.
So, it's not like we're pelting you with, you know, 10 requests every day.
It's once a month.
And you can decide, are you going to give to that person or are you not going to give
to that person?
And then, is there a set amount when you agree?
Like is it kind of where you're like, hey, we need X amount, so if you're willing to
pay, you're going to have to pay like 10K or whatever it is?
Or do they just give whatever they want?
So for each individual, we will only ask you for up to $140.
So a family of four or more, it's up to $420.
So it's somewhere between 140 and 420
that we'll ask you on a monthly basis.
The interesting thing is that every month,
we only ask for what we need.
So this month, for example,
we're only asking for 85 of the 140.
And that means the 55 you get to keep.
We're not gonna take it from you,
we'll never ask you for it. You can
do with it whatever you want. But the bills are so low that we only ask for what the community needs.
And so if the community does well, you do well. Whereas in the insurance space, if the community
does well, the insurance company profits. So it's totally flipping this on its head.
And like I said, we've done this 20,000 times over the last four years,
and 99.9% of the time that we send these bills to get funded,
they get funded.
And so you might be like, OK, so what is the 0.1%?
The 0.1% is when Michael submits his bill to the community
for his gunshot wound.
We'll see, has Michael helped bill to the community for his gunshot wound, we'll see, has Michael
helped others in the community?
So the last 10 times that Michael was asked, has he said, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, or has
he said, no, no, no, no, no?
Well, as you can probably imagine, the people who are like, yes, yes, yes, you're a good
member of the community.
Yes, you want to help them.
If you said no, no, no, it's like, dude, look, you're asking from us?
When we ask from you, you said no, no, no, it's like, dude, look, you're asking from us. When we ask from you, you say no.
And so it's kind of a community policing thing that makes this work.
And so it is voluntary, but people do know whether you're being generous or not.
And so that incentivizes people to be generous to the community.
So is there, and is there a fee also that you're paying every month to go into it or is that just considered to be your
The fee when you come and ask people to pay
Yeah
I mean the crazy thing about health insurance is that you pay a premium and then they pay all the medical expenses and the difference
Is their profit?
Right, and so they actually have an incentive to decline your bills because it's more profit
have an incentive to decline your bills because it's more profit. The way we wanted to do it was, hey, we don't want any incentive to decline or whatever
bills and so you just pay us a subscription fee every month.
So you as an individual would pay us $55.
This is $55 a month?
$55 and that's what we use to pay the bills.
And then we'll ask you this month, on top of that,
$85 to help somebody else out in the community.
So you total would be, what is that math?
$140 this month for you, which is half or a third
of what you would pay for a health insurance plan.
Well, I was just gonna say, I'm paying $420 a month
right now just for my individual health insurance.
And then I just got a letter in the mail that I'm now, it's going up to
$4.75 a month.
So I'm already paying $4.75 a month.
And then on top of that, we haven't even gotten into the fact that in order for a lot of the
stuff that, I mean, I barely use it anyways, but like, let's say that I needed some treatments
or whatever that are actually covered under insurance, I have to meet a deductible and
then I also have to meet whatever, what's that other one that you have to meet too?
It ends up being like-
Oh yeah, out of pocket maximum.
Yeah, so it ends up being like $7,000 that I have to pay on-
Or coinsurance, yeah.
Yes, on top of the $4.75 a month I'm already paying, and then I'm listening to you saying,
well, you could just be paying like $1.40 a month, and then I'm also helping people
in the community get their bills paid off.
I mean, this is so incredible.
And I was thinking too, what we talked about earlier about where if you were just to go
to the hospital and say, I don't have insurance, they're just going to bill you like flat out
what the fee was versus if you say I have insurance, we know that they're stacking on
like added fees on there.
So that a million dollar bill that that man had for his bullet wound probably would have
been if he billed the insurance, probably would have been like $8 million or that that man had for his bullet wound probably would have been,
if he billed the insurance, probably would have been like $8 million or something like,
you know?
I mean, multiple millions.
Yes.
I think what you said is important, people need to understand this because you pay a
premium every month.
What did you say?
It's $475?
It's going to be $475.
You have a deductible, which is what?
$2,000 or $3,000?
I think it's like $3,000.
$3,000, which means you have to pay $3,000 for the insurance plan to pay a dollar.
So you're basically out, what is that, $8,000 a year before the insurance plan pays a dollar.
And then on top of that $3,000, they call it co-insurance.
So if you get to hit your $3,000 max, then you're responsible for-
I think it's like half.
10 or 20% probably, up to the next $7,000.
And so there's a really funny kind of meme that went around last year.
It was like, yeah, health insurance is great because I pay a lot of money every
month so that when something else happens, I get to pay a lot more money before a
health insurance plan will pay anything.
And you're like, yeah, this is crazy.
But with us, we just ask you to pay the first $500 of a health event.
So if you go to the ER, you pay $500.
If you break your arm, it's $500.
And the point behind that was like, not a lot of people have $8,000 or $10,000 or
whatever in their bank accounts to do this.
And that's why people are going bankrupt.
Because they don't have the money to pay their deductible.
And so, and then on top of that, we don't have any networks.
So you go to whoever you want. they're deductible. And so, and then on top of that, we don't have any networks. So, you
go to whoever you want. We don't really care if you go to your naturopathic or your holistic
or your integrative or whatever. And so, we don't have any networks that require you to
go to like X, Y or Z doctor in town. You go to the doctor that you want to go to and we're
totally fine with that. And even if you have a health event, you can do acupuncture if you want to do acupuncture.
You can do chiropractic if you want to do chiropractic.
We think that you're the best at taking care of your health.
It should be between you and your doctor.
And so we don't get into any of those decisions
between you and your doctor.
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That's amazing. So I was going to ask you about that too.
I wanted to bring up another point also just to really reiterate how amazing this is because
right now, as someone who doesn't use my insurance, hardly ever, I mean, there's rarely any times
ever need to use it.
It's basically just there for, like I said earlier, God forbid something crazy happens.
So I'm essentially paying, what is it like after everything else, like $8,000 a year
for just in case if something crazy happens versus what you just said where if somebody
has to go to the ER, they're only paying $500 for that event.
And that's like, these are, most of the time, hopefully for people, are pretty rare events
that maybe will happen once or twice in your lifetime.
So you're paying maybe $500, $1000 versus $8,000 a year just in case something happens
and then they still deny you.
Yeah, and they still deny you and it's still up to them whether or not they're going to
pay for it.
So it's a centralized system that the health insurance plan, which is incentivized not
to pay, is deciding whether or not it's going to pay, which is just an absolute crazy system
to me. I mean, it's nuts. So, which is just an absolute crazy system to me.
I mean, it's nuts.
So I'm curious, and I'm sure everybody listening is too, has there ever been a situation where
you're just like, oh my God, this is too much, this is too expensive, like we're out, like
has there ever been a situation like that?
You've always been able to take care of the bills.
Yeah, always been able to take care of the bills to date.
Wow.
So 100% of the bills submitted by people who have been generous to the community have gotten
funded.
Again, the only ones that haven't gotten funded, and I don't think there's been any more than
any bill greater than $1,000 that hasn't gotten funded, but those are people that are takers
and not givers.
And so the community decided, not us, the community decided like, look, you're a taker
and not a giver.
You're not a good member of the community.
We're not interested in helping you with that.
So it really is a kind of a community component of that, which is really, really neat.
You know, the other thing I would say is, one of my favorite part about the community is
I know exactly where my money is going now.
You know, if Michael got injured because he had this unfortunate accident fishing in Montana,
my money is going directly to Michael,
where we don't get into the middle of it.
So it's a peer-to-peer transaction.
I would rather do that than sending my money to UnitedHealthcare every month.
You're like, I actually feel good about helping somebody else out this month.
In fact, we get situations all the time.
Our number one expense are babies.
We just have lots of babies.
And it's fun.
And unfortunately, with that comes miscarriages.
And so we send that out to the community like, hey, we have a community member who has miscarriages.
Will you help them with a hundred bucks?
And they're like, man, I know what this family is going through.
I know the pain that they're feeling.
Instead of a hundred bucks, can I give 200 bucks?
And it's just like, wow, it almost brings you to tears
being like people are actually wanna help others
in the community as opposed to sending their money
to this big mega corporation.
And that's a pretty cool component of our community.
You know exactly where your money is going
and who you're helping.
I mean, that's incredible.
And so how does that actually look like? So let's just use
Michael's an example with the gunshot wound because it's an easy example. When that happened,
was there just an email that just got sent out to everybody in the community and just
said, hey, look, this is what happened. This is what we're looking for. Like, how do you
get that? Did it just kind of tell the story?
We sent it out to, I think, a couple thousand people
to help him.
And it's just like, for HIPAA reasons,
we don't say it's Michael.
We just say, there's a guy in Montana who had a gunshot wound.
Are you willing to help?
Here's how much we're asking, $100 or whatever it was.
And then, yeah, you can say yes or no.
But I think on that one, 99% of the people said yes.
And if we have people say no, then we just move on to the next person.
So we'll just keep going until it gets funded.
So that's how that works.
Wow.
This is so, this is blowing my mind right now.
And I guess there's nothing really that's too big or too complicated that you guys will
cover because I'm assuming, so let's say somebody in the community gets a cancer diagnosis and they have to do
radiation and chemotherapy.
Those are notoriously, like, you know, bankrupting
situations.
So then you guys can pay for all that and.
Yeah, I mean, like I said, we've had somewhere between
two and three dozen cancer cases today.
You know, we had a member in, I think in Denver, who
had lymphoma, and her medication was going to be $40,000 a month.
And so we actually went back to the pharmaceutical company
and negotiated that down to $2,500 a month.
So we can negotiate with pharmaceutical companies too
to get these bills down lower.
And so, you know, what I say is the only reason
that healthcare is expensive
is because of health insurance companies. Like they're the ones that are making this expensive.
It's way less expensive if you pay directly.
Oftentimes, 70, 80, or 90 percent less expensive because these doctors don't want to deal with
health insurance companies.
They actually spend two days a week fighting with health insurance companies.
I've heard the story.
So, can you imagine, like, of your five days a week,
two of them, you're just fighting your employer, right,
to get paid?
Like, nobody would want to do that.
No.
And they just tell them what to do, right?
What if somebody was sitting on your shoulder right now
and say, ask this question, ask this question?
Like, you're like, dude, like, this is what I'm good at.
Like, let me do my job.
Yes, like, let me do my job.
And so, doctors are so annoyed with health insurance,
I kind of joked that like, the only people who are,
who love
crowd health more than the members are the doctors.
So we have dozens of doctors, oftentimes per week,
reach out to us and are like,
can you please have people come our way?
Because we want to get away from UnitedHealthcare
and we want to get paid in cash.
So we're trying to build a community
of these independent doctors who are typically better
than your hospital system doctors, from my
perspective. To allow them to be cash pay as opposed to relying
upon UnitedHealthcare and Blue Cross Blue Shield and all these
other plans.
Well, you brought up a great point. You know, there's a,
thank God, I feel like we're having this kind of revolution
in America right now where people are really starting to
wake up to the corruptness of big insurance, big pharma, you know, our healthcare systems.
And you know, unfortunately in the process, a lot of doctors have been kind of vilified
because and look, you know, rightfully so and I'm not fully putting it on the doctors
because a lot of this is what they've been trained in, but then they're also shackled
by the insurance companies.
Yeah, totally.
But the complaints that so many people have and why they're seeking out root cause, preventative,
you know, functional medicine, integrative medicine is because they will go into their
doctor with a slew of symptoms and their doctor will say, well, the blood work looks great,
we're just going to throw you on this medication, send you out the door.
And then that's it.
And a lot of them, they've been trained this way, but also too, they're shackled by, I
don't think a lot of people understand how shackled they are by their insurance companies
because they have to be able to code everything under specific codes
and if it doesn't have a code for it, they don't really have a way to like bill and then
they get stuck with the bill or you get stuck with the bill and it's like this whole mess
and basically the insurance companies are telling them like you have to, you know, hit
your quotas with your vaccines and you have to hit your quotas with your medications and
you got to hit these quotas and they're sitting over there being like, well, I just like, how can I treat my
patient bio-individually because everybody's not the same and I need to be
able to actually like do what I want to do with my patient.
But the insurance companies are dictating a lot of that.
Yeah.
And the insurance companies are like pressing the local doctors, these
independent doctors a lot.
And so they're not making a ton of money.
Yeah.
And so, you know, I think
the average primary care visit's like 10 minutes now. It's 8 or 10 minutes. They have no time to go
into root cause. And so, they are forced to go the pharmacological route, which is because I want to,
you know, address your symptoms. And you never get down to what is the root cause of what's going on
here. And so, again, with crowd health, you can go to whoever you want.
We don't really care.
And health insurance companies won't pay for that extra care, which we think in the long
run that's going to save the community money.
Oh, for sure.
Absolutely.
And another thing that I heard Brigham say once on a podcast that really, and I was actually talking
about this with my parents this morning,
because I'm trying to get my parents to understand
that they need to do more preventative type stuff.
My mom's good about it.
My dad's been really resistant about it.
But you know, Brigham said,
we need to start looking at health insurance
as the same way that we look at car insurance,
which is like, it's there for like something catastrophic that happens. It's not gonna pay for, you know, the same way that we look at car insurance, which is like it's there for like something catastrophic that happens.
It's not going to pay for, you know, the tire rotations.
It's not going to pay for the oil change.
And it's kind of the same model with insurance versus like if you want to go in for getting
preventative care, like if you want to do hyperbaric chamber, IVs or, you know, whatever
it is.
So my question is, since that is the general standard health insurance model now, where
most of us know like if we're going to go see an integrative doctor, that's not going
to be paid for.
How does crowdsource balance the line of that?
Because for me, let's just say for me, for example, I get a lot of alternative therapies
and I'm not, like, in a catastrophic issue right now.
Like, you know, I got an IV two days ago.
Is this something that crowdsource, or sorry, Crowd Health, or it's called crowd health? Why did I think crowd source? Crowd
health would cover or is that more just I need to treat it like emergency insurance?
Yeah. And so kind of two components of that. One is we give you up to 300 bucks a year
to you can use on preventative. And so you can use it for whatever you want that's preventative.
So if it has labs, I use it for labs, You know, I get labs a couple times a year. And
by the way, labs, if you pay them directly in cash, are wickedly less expensive than
health insurance. You know, I get labs, you know, in a full panel, and it's a hundred
bucks or something like that every, you know, six months. And if I did it through health
insurance, it would have been $750.
And so that's what I use mine for.
So you can use that for anything.
And then other than that, like, if you have a health-related event, then you're responsible
for the first $500.
So anything else under $500, like Brigham was saying, like car insurance, like we don't
pay for oil changes.
You know, car insurance doesn't pay for oil changes
and windshield wipers and tires and things like that.
Those things can be on you, but what we're trying to do
is get this so low and less expensive than health insurance,
you now have the extra money so that you can decide
how to use that as opposed to, you know,
a health insurance plan deciding how you can use that.
So that's the key is my family saved like $20,000 last year on using CrowdHealth.
And so now we have an extra $20,000 to go and spend it on,
if I want to do hyperbaric chambers or I want to do,
I don't know what else is out there, but like those types of things,
like go for it, you can use that.
That's not eligible for funding from the community, but you can use that. You know, that's not, you know, eligible for funding from the community, but you can use
that.
And if you have a health event that you think a hyperbaric changer could help, then that
is a part eligible.
That's what I would have said.
So it's more like maintenance is you.
Big health event, the community will help you with.
And then within that kind of health event, you should go and do what you want to treat your condition because you know
you're bothering better than we do. And there's, you know, we
don't fight you too much on that.
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I mean, this is so cool.
So I'm trying to think of all the different things that people utilize insurance for,
and I want to talk this through so people can really get an understanding.
So let's, you brought up a prescription drug that a cancer patient needed.
So let's say somebody's on prescription meds that they have to get every single month.
Do they just go and pay that directly through the pharmacy and then they give you a bill
back or how does that work?
And we have access to really inexpensive meds.
So you can use, you know, our little card that
we can use or you can go to GoodRx which is pretty good too. But we, and if
they're really expensive, then we can find you these meds at a much lower price.
But yeah, you just go, you pay for them, you go to our little app, you take a
picture of the receipt and then we'll get it funded through the community and you have the money then for that med.
We averaged about seven days in Q1.
So seven days later,
that money will show up in your bank account
and you're good to go.
So you do have to float the little stuff for a week,
which is not the big of a deal.
Any of the big stuff,
so let's just say you're playing pickleball
and you tear your ACL and it's $15,000 surgery,
we can fund that upfront so that you don't have to front
the money to get that procedure done,
but then you'd have $15,000 to pay the orthopedic surgeon
when you show up.
And now that orthopedic surgeon is gonna give you
a huge discount because he or she's getting paid immediately
and doesn't have to fight for it.
And they don't have to fight with insurance.
And they don't have to fight for it.
So, we had a woman who had that exact situation where she tore her ACL, went to the hospital.
The hospital tried to get their orthopedic surgeon to do it.
I think it was $24,000.
She calls us.
We know a great orthopedic surgeon in town who is great, wants cash.
He does a lot of the joints, work for UT athletics,
University of Texas athletics, and we know he's good. And he did it for like $11,000.
So that's more than a 50% discount because he's getting paid at the point of care and doesn't
have to fight and get it six months later and all this kind of crazy stuff.
That's so amazing. That was something else I was gonna ask you,
because obviously you don't have like
in and out of networks or whatever,
but do you, if somebody comes to you and says,
hey, I mean, you know, I have to get an ACL surgery
or I'm dealing with cancer.
Do you guys have any sort of network of doctors
that you can send people to or?
Yeah, it's not a network.
It's just, we have a database.
I think we're up to like 30,000 doctors
or something like that in our database now.
And we know whether they're cash pay friendly or not, whether they're a bit big discounts
with cash and things like that.
So we've got this database.
So in most major metropolitan areas and most secondary suburban areas and things like that,
we have great doctors in your area.
Not that you have to go to them, but if you call us, we've got this database.
We're like, we've got a great doctor who will give you a great price, you know, so just as high or
maybe probably more likely higher quality than the doctor you would go to through the hospital
system and a much lower price.
Just call us and we'll help you do that.
You know, I unfortunately, you know, had to go get a colonoscopy and I was looking around
on my own.
I couldn't find anything for under $4,000.
And then I, you know, said, I was like, who do we have in our database?
And it was like $800.
And same guy, GI, same everything.
It's just, if you pay in cash, it's $800
as opposed to going through health insurance.
So the really cool thing about it too,
and one of the things I hated about my health insurance
experience was that every time I called them, I was stuck in some call center, you know, it was like
in India or somewhere, you know, trying to explain to them what was going on with my
health care.
And they're like, oh, we're the wrong, you know, department.
You have to call this department and you have to wait on the line for 20 minutes and then
call this department.
You're like, I hate this.
And so at Crowd Health, you actually are assigned a care advocate when you sign up.
So you have one person internal who will walk you through it.
So whatever's going on in life, you can call that person and you don't have to get bounced
from person to person.
It's like that person is responsible for you.
So you don't have to call into a call center.
You actually can schedule a call with her or him or her.
I'm like, hey, you know, let's get 30 minutes so I can walk
through what I'm going through and they can help you
navigate all of that.
I mean, just all of this, this is blowing my mind.
This is so amazing.
I'm just thinking, I have all these memories,
just these horrible situations I've had with my healthcare,
you know, and then everybody dreads calling their healthcare.
Because it usually takes me 30 minutes to get somebody
on the phone and then they can't-
Through a phone tree, press one, if this, two, you're like, oh. And then I finally get somebody on the phone. And then they can't- Through a phone tree, press one, and if it is two, you're like, ugh.
And then I finally get them on the phone,
and then they can't help me,
and they have to transfer me to another department.
And like, it's like an hour later when I finally,
and then you finally get them on the phone,
and more than half the time,
they can't even tell you if they can cover you or not.
I had a situation like years and years and years ago
that I got a copper IUD,
and I had to call like four days in a row because it
was the same thing.
They'd like, they'd transfer me to someone else and then they'd get somebody else on
the phone and nobody could ever tell me if they were even going to cover it.
Like, they just, I would finally get somebody on the phone, they'd be like, well, I don't
know, we'll see.
Like, they'd just be like, well, we'll see, like, go get it.
And then I went and got it and then I got a bill for $800 afterwards and was like, okay, first of all, I wasted hours on the
phone trying to even see if they would cover it in the first place and they couldn't even
give me a definitive answer.
And I can't tell you how many times that's happened to me, where a doctor's office won't
even be able to tell me if they can cover something because they're like, well, your
insurance is like telling us they're like, not sure.
They basically have like told my providers like several times that I have to wait until
after I get this thing,
whatever it is done, and then they'll tell me what I owe.
It's insanity.
It's like, hey, here's your new car,
and by the way, we're not gonna tell you
what the price of the car is until afterwards.
You're like, what the hell?
And then you get the bill in the mail,
these explanation of benefits,
and you're like, this makes no sense.
The math doesn't even add up.
No, it's such a, it's honestly a scam.
Yeah, and the reason why honestly is because
healthcare is a business to business transaction.
It's between hospitals and insurance companies.
And so you're just the product of that.
If you're not paying for the product, you are the product.
So we are just products in this healthcare system.
We think we're patients that everybody's
really cares about us.
It's like, no, no, no, like this is a business to business
transaction, that's why all the UI that you see, UX, is terrible.
Because they're like, we don't even care that you know what's
going on.
And in fact, it's better for the insurance companies and the
hospitals that you have no idea what's going on.
Yeah.
Because then you're like, there's nothing I can really do
about it, I guess I just have to pay it.
Right?
And so I'm like, it's BS.
It really is.
So if Apple or whatever was running the healthcare system, the user interface would be way, way
better because it's a direct to consumer relationship where the consumer can leave if they're not
happy.
Whereas in insurance, you can't even leave if you're not happy.
And many times you have to just stick with it
until the end of the year,
because there's no other place to go.
With Crowd Health, start today, start next week,
end the following week.
I mean, you can start and stop whenever you want to,
so we don't have these open enrollments
or anything like that.
So it's great.
This is so cool.
So is there, how do you kind of safeguard,
do you have any safeguards in place
that prevent any sort of like abuse or overuse? Is there, what do you kind of safeguard, do you have any safeguards in place that prevent
any sort of like abuse or overuse?
Is there, what do you guys do about that?
Yeah, there's a couple of policies that we have that we kind of learned over the last
four years are valuable.
You know, we'll let anybody in the community accept people who are obese, smokers.
What do you guys classify as obese?
It's a BMI thing. So I think it's kind of widely accepted BMI.
So if you're obese, we give a little bit of leniency to people,
but it's like if you are obese, that's, you know, you need to work on that
before you're joining us.
Get that figured out.
Smokers, so if you're a smoker, that doesn't work for us.
And then for regulatory reasons, over the age of 65, we can't do yet.
Just because you're on Medicare population
And there's some weird federal laws that don't allow us to do that, you know, otherwise you're good
the only other rule that we have and we learned this kind of early is that
We don't want people to given you can jump in and jump out whenever you want
What we really don't want is people jumping in, getting their money replacement, and then leaving.
And so you've got to be a member.
If you have any pre-existing stuff,
you gotta be a member for two years
before you can share that with the community.
So, you know, some people don't like that,
but it's the only way we could figure out
like how there's not a perverse incentive
to go in and do it, then jump out.
Like we really want to build a community.
And to be a part of the community,
you gotta have a little bit of an initiation
into the community.
So that's just for pre-existing conditions.
And so we actually have a lot of people
join us with type 1 diabetes.
And what they told me, and I had these conversations,
I was like, why are you here with type 1 diabetes?
They're like, I'm saving so much money every year
that I can, and I know you guys can find me insulin
and all the products way less expensive,
that it just makes sense for me.
I'm still saving tons of money,
even though I have to pay for my insulin and my supplies.
So it's not like we don't want them to join.
It's just, hey, if you join, just know
if you have a preexisting condition, then you own that for the first two
years, and then after that, the community will help you out.
So, those are the only little things that we have that may
not make it great for everybody, but for the vast
majority of people, it works great.
I mean, that's great.
And that was kind of, yeah, that was a concern that I had.
But I think that, you know, as someone who I'm so interested in joining, that makes me
feel better because, and that makes sense to me, like that, yeah, if you, you need to
make sure that they don't bounce and get all their money or take all the money.
So that makes perfect sense.
The only other thing that's a little weird rule is, you know, pregnancies are a little
bit different.
So if you, you have to join and then get pregnant
to have that pregnancy eligible.
So that's the one, you know, weird one.
And then, but we do allow-
Can I ask you about that?
Pretty much anything for pregnancy.
So a crazy, crazy fact is, and I'll ask you
if you have any ideas on this, but do you
have any idea how many babies, what percentage of babies are born at home in the United States
every year?
I know that it's going up.
I don't know.
I actually don't know.
It's 1.6%.
Really?
It's that low.
Well, in March, I haven't looked for April yet, but for March, more than 50% of our babies
at Crowd Health were born at home.
Oh my God, that's awesome.
See, that's what I want to do.
We have a group of people who just want nothing to do with the kind of allopathic system and
want to do it on their own and treat this as just a biological thing as opposed to a
medical treatment and don't want the hospital know, the hospital forcing them to get, you know, the vaccines at 20
minutes into their life, you know, and all these things. And so, we've just got a
group of people who are just, I don't want to be a part of that. I don't want to be a
part of the system. I want to be outside of the system. And so, we do really, really
well with people who want to be outside, remove themselves from the system. And we
kind of built a little parallel system that works, from my perspective,
way better than the existing system.
Yeah.
This is epic.
I'm glad that you brought up pregnancy, because that is something I hope to be pregnant by
the end of this year.
I'm getting married in June, going on my honeymoon.
Really hope I don't get pregnant before I get married married because I'm trying to fit in my wedding dress.
But at this point, I feel like I'm past that window
and I'm good.
But yeah, so that would be my question is like,
let's say I wanted to join in the next couple of months
and then, I mean, hopefully I'm pregnant by like August.
Like would that be something that would be okay
or would that go into that preexisting condition?
No, as long as you are, you know, so the way we look at it
is we don't wanna fight with you over when you, you know,
had that moment of conception.
So the way that you're like, when did you exactly
prove it to me?
Like those are awkward conversations.
And so, you know, we asked that if your due date
is under 300 days from when you start,
which is basically your pregnancy time plus a couple weeks,
that those are not eligible.
So your due date just has to be 300 days away.
So if you are, think you're gonna get pregnant
in the next three or four months, like join now,
because when you do, then you'll be totally fine.
And the only reason we put on that extra two weeks
is again, I don't wanna fight with you over, you know,
it's the time. Of course.
And you don't want somebody coming in and taking advantage.
Exactly.
Which this, I love this because it, all of this safeguards the community in general and
helps everybody.
We're not trying to keep people out.
What we're trying to do is not have these perverse incentives where people just jump
in to take advantage of the community.
So that's our primary goal.
Like I said, our number one expense is babies.
So it's not like we're not trying to have babies.
It's like, we love funding babies.
Babies is number one and active injuries is number two.
So, you know, our money, that's where most of our,
75% of our dollars are going to is those two things,
which is like, I love funding babies.
I love funding people who are out and doing stuff
and being active and just
Have a mountain biking face plant or something bad happens like I get that
Yeah, I just looked at insurance yesterday because one of my members asked 70 percent of your dollars with insurance is going to chronic conditions
So these are these are
And as we know I I know, you know, like the vast majority of these chronic conditions are because of lifestyle issues. So I don't really want to pay for people who've made bad
decisions over 20 or 30 years and now they're expecting
somebody else to pay for their chronic conditions.
We've got a group of people, our average age is 34, who take
care of themselves, they don't have chronic conditions, and a
neat component of this too is we actually give discounts to
crowd health if you have visceral fat levels in the And a neat component of this too is we actually give discounts to
crowd health if you have visceral fat levels in the bottom 25% or you have a
fasting insulin, I think it's below 5 or 5.5 or something like that.
So we're actually trying to incentivize people to be metabolically healthy and
you get up to a 20% discount if you have visceral fat and
fasting insulin levels that are metabolically healthy.
And you can't do that with health insurance.
Oh, no.
I mean, I just, like I just said earlier,
I just got a letter that my insurance is going up again.
And I talk about this every time I get those letters,
it makes me so mad.
Because I'm over here, you know, paying and doing all this stuff
for preventative root cause.
And I exercise every day, you know, I get good sleep,
I buy all organic food, I'm putting so much of my money
and effort and time into really taking care of my health.
And it quite frankly pisses me off that I'm over here
paying for somebody that's eating McDonald's
and not taking care of their health at all.
Yeah, 25% of your dollars are going to diabetes alone.
Oh God, it's just maddening.
So, you know, the vast it's just maddening.
The vast majority of that is type 2.
And type 2 is a lifestyle issue.
100% lifestyle preventative, like no questions.
You can change if you just start, I'm a carnivore, so I just eat meat.
My fiance is on that right now, too.
Yeah, it's great. I feel great.
And if you just put somebody on a carnivore diet with diabetes,
their type 2 would go away in weeks,
literally weeks.
I actually was just on a panel with a doctor a couple days ago,
and he's so amazing. He's just awesome.
I'm going to have him on the podcast at some point, too.
And he told the crowd that he had one diabetic patient
in particular that came to mind that he was able to reverse it
in three weeks.
And this person had it for like seven years.
Yeah. Dr. Sean Baker is the one that I watched and followed.
He's so great.
He was awesome. And he says, look, six to eight weeks,
most of these people can reverse this.
And three weeks is incredible, but you can do it.
So you just got to make those hard decisions.
And I don't want to, I want to help people
who make those hard decisions and make the right decision.
I don't particularly wanna subsidize people
who make the wrong decision over and over and over again.
And that's just what you're doing with health insurance.
I always tell my people like,
one thing if I can get prices down,
like that's a win.
But man, if you can get prices down
and get your people to be more healthy,
like that's like gold,
right?
Because I want my members to be 80 years old and playing wiffle ball in the backyard with
their grandkids.
Like that to me is thriving.
And so how do we build a community that incentivizes thriving, not just today, but 30 or 40 years
from now, when it really starts kicking in?
So that's my kind of big vision, and we're, you know,
taking steps to get there, but that's ultimately where we want to go.
That's so amazing. And I love those incentives,
because I can imagine somebody, you know, maybe somebody listening that's like,
oh, I'd love to join that, but I don't hit all of those markers right now.
And it's an incentive for them to get healthier so that they can join.
It's really cool.
Well, we've had people who were obese,
and they wrote me and they're like,
look, Andy, I'm telling you on X, they wrote me,
you know, DM me, it's like, I'm too,
I'm overweight right now,
but I want to be a part of this community.
And he sent me a picture of him,
like it was six or nine months later of him and his wife
at the end of a triathlon that they had just done.
And he had just became a member
because he had lost the weight,
he had made the lifestyle changes,
he started working out,
and it was clearly that was the incentive
to be a member of our community.
I was like, that's pretty awesome, that's pretty cool.
So we need to figure out a way to incentivize.
You know, if you're a driver, right?
Like, and you want to go get car insurance,
you plug something into your car,
or you have an app or whatever,
and it'll tell you if you're a good driver or not.
You get better rates if you're a good driver.
You get worse rates if you're a bad driver.
That doesn't happen in health insurance.
It's actually illegal.
You can't do that with health insurance.
Really?
Yeah.
You can't.
Wow.
You stratify people based upon their lifestyle.
Everybody's got to pay the same.
So with us, we're not health insurance.
And so we can do some more things that incentivize people to get healthier.
And I think that's the way.
Absolutely.
I should not be paying the same when I'm doing all this
and I'm in the best way, but like fighting
to like take care of my health
and somebody that's not at all, like, I'm sorry,
but it's not fair.
Like they shouldn't, they should be paying more than me.
Well, what it is, it's welfare, not healthcare.
Yeah, oh, that's exactly.
Because in essence, what you're doing is you're giving to people who need help because they've
made really bad decisions.
That's welfare, not healthcare.
And so what I think we need to do is healthcare, which is a group of people who are like, yeah,
I'm on.
I'm on board with this.
I'm going to take care of my body, and I want to be a part of that community.
Me too.
So I'm assuming, because it sounds like this is a very healthy, like-minded group of people,
but let's just say if somebody in your community that's already in and had hit the stipulations
initially and then maybe they gained a bunch of weight, how do you guys handle that?
Yeah.
I mean, the thing that happens when you have a big health event, before we send it to the
community, we will pull your send it to the community,
we will pull your medical records to make sure,
one, it wasn't a pre-existing condition,
and then two, we will see, like,
were you actually a smoker?
Were you actually larger than you said you were?
And if you're not, then those bills aren't eligible
because you're not following the rules of the community.
We also ask you every year to update your weight
and your status and things like that.
And so if you lie, then, you know.
Find out.
We'll find out.
So don't lie.
And so, you know, are there some people
that probably slipped through the cracks?
Probably it's not perfect, but I would say, you know,
95% of people are, you know, following the rules.
And the worst thing for them is why would you pay
all this money and then
have a health event in which we find out you actually have been lying and that health event
is not eligible, like, why would you do that?
That doesn't make a lot of sense.
You know, so we'll find out.
No.
Well, it's lying.
It's, you know, it's bad.
It's lying.
So I'm curious about more about the pregnancy stuff because you said you guys have a lot
of babies and you said you have a lot of home births.
So you guys will pay for all of that, right?
Like if I wanted to get a midwife and a doula and I want to do a home birth and all of that.
Yeah.
The community will fund those births.
And like I said, the majority of our births are that.
You can have a doula, you can have a midwife, the supplies, like all of that stuff is eligible
for funding.
So yeah, that's is eligible for funding.
So yeah, that's a part of it.
God, I wish my fiance is actually on this trip
with me right now, and he's been sitting in
on all my podcasts, but his parents got in yesterday,
and so he didn't sit in for this one,
and I wish he was here, because I am about to go back
to him and be like, okay, hey.
You can watch it later.
I know, I know.
It's just so hard later to get him to listen to stuff
when I'm like, you know,
hounding him. He will, he'll listen to it. But, but I'm like- He can call me if he has any questions.
I'll personally answer his questions for him. Okay, because- We'd love to have you on board,
that'd be fun. I would love it. I'm so sold. And so now I'm about to go, I'm actually, I'm about to
go back to my parents, his parents, and him and just be like, guys, we're on board. We got to get
on this. Although our parents wouldn't be eligible, but this is such a cool program.
Wow.
I'm trying to think, I mean, I pretty much got through
all of my questions.
Oh, actually, my fiance will love this.
I think I saw something about, do you guys take Bitcoin?
Or do you incorporate it?
Yeah, I mean, we have a huge group of Bitcoiners.
So like I said, our community is really fun and interesting
because it's a lot of people who want to exit the system, right? And so it's exit the food
system. So we have a lot of carnivores.
Love that.
Exit the kind of the allopathic, you know, healthcare system. So we have a lot of people
who are naturopathic and, you know, integrative and all that kind of stuff. And then we have
a lot of people who want to exit the monetary system.
Yeah, that's my fiance. And so we have a lot of Bitcoin who want to exit the monetary system. And so we have a lot of Bitcoiners.
There's probably 20 or 25% of our community is Bitcoiners.
And so that allows them to do is,
as I mentioned earlier, the max we'll ask is 140,
but this month we're only asking 55.
And so what our Bitcoiners do is they actually submit
all 140, but the 55 gets converted to Bitcoin.
And so they almost have like their little Bitcoin HSA
that's hanging out there that they can use.
And they don't have to use it for healthcare.
And it's not like a real HSA,
but it's kind of like this little pile of stash of Bitcoin
that they can have on the side that they can stack.
And so we do it because we love Bitcoiners
and they're a huge part of our community. And so we allow them to do that.
That's so smart.
Yep.
Wow. This is so cool.
Well, is there anything else that we haven't covered as far as CrowdHealth goes
that you think is important for people to hear?
No, I think questions were great or right on.
I think we got most of it.
If people have questions, we actually have people who can talk to you.
You know, you can go to joincrowdhealth.com.
At the very bottom of the page, there's a little calendar.
You just pick a time that you can talk to us
and walk you through any questions and things like that.
But yeah, joincrowdhealth.com.
We'd love for you to join us.
Okay, I actually do have one more thing I want to bring up
because, you know, there's these stories that we tell ourselves and all of us have been so trained, like, you need health
insurance.
In case of an emergency, like, you know, you're fucked without a health insurance.
So there's this story in my brain right now where I'm super excited about joining CrowdHealth,
but I'm also admittedly a little bit nervous, like, oh, my God, I'm going to let go of my
normal health insurance.
What would you say to somebody like that?
Yeah, you've been conditioned.
We've all been PsiOpt in a way to think that health insurance is the way.
It's not too different from, you know, we've all been conditioned to think that if we have
high cholesterol, we have to have statins.
We've all conditioned to think that if you don't go to your regular run-of-the-mill doctor,
then, you know then you're doing,
and you're going to this wackadoodle functional person.
I think the people who really like crowd health
are the ones that are like, look,
the narrative I've been told for my whole life is not true.
Let's use some cognitive ability here to figure out
what is true and what is not as true.
And look, fear is like baseline on Maslow's hierarchy
of needs, right?
Like it's a fearful response.
And so I totally get that.
But all I can say is, we've done millions and millions
and millions of bills, 20,000 of them,
and they've all worked.
And how is health insurance working for you?
Like, are you fearful when you have a big health event
that your health insurance is actually gonna pay for it?
Yeah, for sure.
I think most people are.
And in fact, you know, one in five medical bills
are denied by your health insurance company.
So you got a one in five chance.
I unfortunately was the one, and I've been fortunate.
I have the $8,000 to pay it.
I would be more scared being on health insurance
than I am with crowd health. I don't have health insurance than I am with Crowd Health.
I don't have health insurance, I just have Crowd Health.
When somebody gets hurt, what do they say?
They're like, now I gotta go fight my health insurance
company to get this paid, whereas Crowd Health is like,
hey, you and I, we're gonna go into battle with each other
as allies to fight this system so that you don't have
to pay that egregious bill, right?
And so I think it's just getting over that hurdle and also recognizing that we've been
conditioned for a long, long time with just falsities.
And I think fortunately, our culture is getting to this place.
Like we just got through COVID.
Like if you can't, you know, acknowledge that the system has told us one thing that
wasn't true, if you can't get past that, then you're probably not right for crowd health.
Like, you know, it's just, and that's okay, like, continue with health insurance.
Exactly.
But if you can look at things like that and be like, no, like, the government, who's supposed
to be there to protect us, are not actually doing that.
We've been told lies.
And so I think health insurance, from my perspective, falls into that. We've been told lies. And so I think health insurance from my perspective
falls into that. It's just a lie that's like, it's going to be there when you need it. When
in reality it's not, if you look at the data. It's just not oftentimes there when you need
it. So that would be my response. And that's why I started the company, because I was that
person. I thought they were going to be there. They didn't show up.
They weren't. Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Well, thank you so much for creating this, and I just want you to give the opportunity
one more time to tell people where to go and where they can find it.
Yeah.
On all the social media platforms, X and Instagram are kind of our biggest, is Join Crowd Health.
So we'd love for you to join us there.
We give you total transparency about what's going on with the organization.
You'll see all the bills that we got from the community and how they were funded.
We give you all the data that you want to see because we think transparency is the best.
Instagram too, we give you all that stuff.
So joincrowdhealth.com is that website, but joincrowdhealth is our handle on all social
media platforms.
And Andy actually has a fun code for you guys.
If you want to go and join Crowd Health, how can they do that?
Yeah, join CrowdHealth.com and then use the code realfoodology and you will get 99 bucks a month
for the first three months. So that's about 40 to 60 percent off depending upon, you know, who you are.
And so, and again, you can join whenever you want, you can leave whenever you want.
And so it's 99 bucks. Give it a try. And if you like it, stick can join whenever you want, you can leave whenever you want. So it's 99 bucks, give it a try.
And if you like it, stick around.
If you don't, it was 99 bucks.
But I would say vast majority of people really love this.
And you can go check out our reviews too,
like go to Google and just type in crowd health reviews,
and you will see, you know, most reviews are like,
it was great.
We have people who have paragraphs and paragraphs
and paragraphs about how we walked with them through, you know, we had a member who lost their baby right
after she was born. And so we walked through her like that. We gave her, sent
her gift packages and things like that, just really love her well. And so I think
you'll see the love for our members, you know, in some of those reviews. So go
check those out as well.
Yeah. So go check that out. Use the code, join. We can be all in a community together,
taking care of each other. It's really cool. Thank you.
Thank you so much for listening to the Real Foodology Podcast. This is a Wellness Loud
production produced by Drake Peterson and mixed by Mike Fry. Themesong is by Georgie. You can
watch the full video version of this podcast inside the Spotify app or on YouTube. As always,
you can leave us a voicemail by clicking the link in our bio. And if you like this episode, please rate and review on
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The content of this show is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute
for individual medical and mental health advice and doesn't constitute a provider-patient
relationship. I am a nutritionist, but I am not your nutritionist.
As always, talk to your doctor or your health team first.
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