this post was submitted on 05 Dec 2025
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Honestly, I doubt that. Insurers have the actuarial tables which represent the unvarnished, apolitical, straight numbers.
If the actuarials show that there is increased mortality and more importantly for them, increased morbidity (sickness) from not getting vaccinations on schedule, they'll offer clinics to their members.
(The insurance that comes from my husband's employer offers vaccine clinics for influenza and covid still, in spite of what the government is spewing.)
They're not paying attention to the nonsense coming out of the beltway as they've got the actual numerical proof of what works and what doesn't.
Insurance is the ONE industry that doesn't deal with political fairy tales and governmental opinions.
They don't give a shit because the numbers don't lie and their profits are completely tied to them. That is all they look at.
I got a measles booster last spring since I'm old enough to have gotten the older non-viable vaccine from the mid-60's. The insurance covered it no questions asked.