zmiller4
Well-Known Member
This is such a silly conversation.
When I went back to grad school at a large public university, I literally was blocked out of the class registration system until I had proof of currency of a bunch of different vaccines…which of course I didn’t so I took 20mins, went to the student health center, got poked and then was registering for classes that afternoon.
The university just didn’t want to have to pay for care for someone who got measles or tetanus or whatever diphtheria is.
Why would a large company that self-insures *not* require something that almost eliminates the chances of an extended hospital stay costing millions of dollars?
When I went back to grad school at a large public university, I literally was blocked out of the class registration system until I had proof of currency of a bunch of different vaccines…which of course I didn’t so I took 20mins, went to the student health center, got poked and then was registering for classes that afternoon.
The university just didn’t want to have to pay for care for someone who got measles or tetanus or whatever diphtheria is.
Why would a large company that self-insures *not* require something that almost eliminates the chances of an extended hospital stay costing millions of dollars?