Skipping meals, driving and prescriptions are just a few trade-offs that a third of Americans say they're making to pay for health care.
Forgoing food. Cutting back on utilities. Driving less. Borrowing money. These are the sacrifices that tens of millions of people are making to afford their health care expenses, according to a West Health-Gallup Center on Healthcare in America survey released. https://cnn.it/4rx5Ys3
-- CNN (@cnn.com) Mar 12, 2026 at 5:00 AM
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@#3 ... Fortunately, my wife and I aren't affected by higher prices in our day to day decisions ...
Well, I filled up the gas tank of the car before the gas prices started to spike. That fill-up will last me a couple months, based upon my usage of the car.
But, there is a longer-term and wider non-oil effect of the closing of the Strait of Hormuz.
For example ... fertilizer ...
Nitrogen, Ammonia, and the Strait of Hormuz
www.science.org
... We find ourselves in a situation where chemistry is intruding on current events, and I'm referring to something that not everyone seems to have thought about: fertilizer, and especially nitrogen fertilizer. What it is, how it's used, and especially where it comes from. ...
The world nitrogen fertilizer market has really been shaken up by the situation that we have now caused in the Persian Gulf. And after those last couple of paragraphs it's easy to see why. The Gulf has extraordinary amounts of natural gas, and thus countries in that region have taken advantage of that value-added business opportunity and have become major fertilizer exporters. But not at the moment. Not right when it's needed in the Northern Hemisphere.
All that stuff comes out on huge container ships, down the Gulf and right out the Strait of Hormuz, just like the oil and the liquified natural gas. Prices for all the nitrogen fertilizers were already running high by historic standards before all of this, but now, well. Farm organizations here in the US are calling for financial help from the administration, but after all the tariff nonsense you have to wonder what they're expecting. Given the reports of mine-laying in the Strait, we might be looking at significant disruptions for some time. ...
And then there's helium ...
Helium prices soar as Qatar LNG halt exposes fragile supply chain
www.reuters.com
... Disruptions to Qatar's natural gas processing from the Iran war have driven helium prices sharply higher, exposing the fragility of a small but critical market that supports industries from semiconductors to medical imaging.
Helium spot prices have doubled since the Middle East crisis began, according to Phil Kornbluth, president of Kornbluth Helium Consulting, as buyers scramble to secure supply.
State energy giant QatarEnergy, the world's second-largest LNG exporter, announced a production halt at its 77 million tons per annum (mtpa) facility last week and declared force majeure on LNG shipments, amid the conflict.
Because helium is extracted as a byproduct of natural gas processing, any disruption to LNG output directly cuts helium supply.
Qatari Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi told the Financial Times last week that it would take "weeks to months" for deliveries to return to normal even if the conflict ended immediately.
Qatar is a pivotal supplier rather than a marginal one. ...
The ongoing Strait of Hormuz blockage will impact the semiconductor and AI industries with Aluminum, Helium and LNG shortages -- and with no timeline for re-opening, supply chains face significant challenges
www.tomshardware.com
... If you can't make the chips and you can't run the turbines, you can't run an industry. ...
Americans cutting back on all expenses to pay for healthcare
www.upi.com
... People in the United States are killing budgets, skipping meals, stretching prescriptions and driving less as they struggle to keep up with healthcare expenses, a survey shows.
Gallup found in a survey that more than one-third of Americans find themselves making "at least" one trade-off in daily expenses to make sure they can afford access to healthcare and pay its associated bills.
With the cost of health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket costs continuing to rise, and with the expiration of some Affordable Care Act subsidies and changes to Medicare and Medicaid, Gallup reported that people are cutting back on day-to-day requirements, borrowing money and putting off major decisions and long-term planning.
"Collectively, these shifts could leave millions of Americans without health insurance at a time when financial stress is already running high," the survey organization said in a press release. ...
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