Tom Sovilla was cycling in Huntington beach back in May last year, when he was hit by Jack Keith's truck at approximately 60mph. Keith told KTLA 5: “It happened so fast, I don’t know where everything was, but all I remember was Tom flying through the air, like 30 feet, and I just freaked out.”
Sovilla had a month-long stay in hospital and was treated for a fractured back, broken pelvis, torn knee ligaments, bruised intestines and two brain blood clots; during which time he formed an unlikely friendship with Keith, chopsing to forgive him: “Holding on to things just eats away at you. It doesn’t necessarily hurt the other person. I think if people can understand that, then people would learn to forgive, because forgiveness is a big part about your own mental and physical health.”
After Sovilla was left with an extra $7,000 medical bill, Keith set up a GoFundMe to make up for the shortfall. He wrote on the page: "Well as a lot of you know I was driving on PCH and hit a cyclist going 60 mph... me, him and his family have been in contact and have had multiple visits.
"Thank God he is gonna recover, but his road to recovery is gonna be a long one. My insurance paid out the max which wasn't much. His insurance has paid the bulk of the hospital bills. But he is stuck with 7000 dollars having to come out of pocket. God has had his hand over him and all of us involved. I pray that my friends will help me in covering his bills so that he can recover without any more stress or worries. I thank all of you for your support."
The total is at $4,250 and counting - you can find the page here.
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The Strava article in the Guardian was interesting...
As I've gotten older/less fit/slower I'm taking a lot less interest in Strava. I know I will never get close to times I achieved 7 yrs ago as a 40yr old in peak fitness just back from the Alps.
I still upload everything out of habit, but no longer slavishly look at the data. I know it will be, umm, disappointing.
A challenge for Strava is keeping people interested as they naturally age and get worse.
Im wondering about starting a new profile, as I want to keep all my old rides and achievements as a record, but start from scratch for comparison purposes!
And I don't like the non chronological feed!
That Cycliq vid is terrifying, and it looks like the driver was perfectly aware of the width of his trailer, but was more concerned about not hitting oncoming traffic than killing the cyclist. Was this reported and were there any consequences for them?
There is something very wrong in a country where a man with medical insurance is hit by a man with motor insurance and despite both policies paying out he's still left with a $7000 bill!
It is weird, the majority of British people would crawl over broken glass to protect the NHS even though it is not perfect. Whilst the majority of Americans would do the same not to have a national health system.
But who's laughing when it comes to having broken glass removed from their knees without being bankrupted?
The effects of propaganda. On both sides.
My son was born prematurely (this was a few years ago), and he was in special care for a month or so before he could come home. UK, so NHS treatment.
I read an article recently about an American couple, same circumstances and they've racked up something like $1 million in medical bills and are facing bankruptcy.
Ah, the free market, eh?
Indeed, over 60% of bankruptcies are medical related apparently.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/14/health-insurance-medical...
It won't be a problem here, as Boris the Liar and the lying party have promised to protect the NHS.
Is that before or after they've wrapped up 600 of "the easiest trade deals ever" over lunch on Xmas Day 2020?
My cousin is American, and their daughter was very ill with kidney failure. They had full medical cover for the family, so all was well and she recieved good care until the question was asked as her condition deteriorated that as the insurance cover limit was approaching fast... how did the family intend to meet ongoing bills?
Americans seem to have a selfish attitude to healthcare in as much as they don't see why they should pay for other people's healthcare who don't have insurance. However, these people probably don't realise that their cover is not infinite, and the limits closer than they think. Naked capitalism is all very well until you find yourself on the other end of it through no fault of your own.
Whilst I appreciate that all is not well with the NHS, its still a million times better than the alternatives.
It's better than an alternative.
If you look at any statistical indicator of healthcare the chances are the NHS is underperforming relative to most other advanced economies (With the exception of the US).
Is it better than the US system? Mostly.
Is it better than the Australian system? Definitely not.
It's no surprise that travel insurance premiums rocket for the US, compared to anywhere else in the world.
I had something like that trailer thing happen to me, oncoming bus too. If I hadn't bailed into the verge I would have been hit hard and fast.
The driver of the white van didn't seem to appreciate the vocal criticism of his awful driving either.
And a long time ago another bail out caused by idiots towing a boat.
Both times I think I was more aware of the presence of the trailer than the driver was.
Not sure why the idea of somebody wearing normal clothes is considered newsworthy. OTOH, if you pitched up in Copenhagen during rush hour wearing lycra you'd probably make the news, so fair enough I suppose.
So did Mr Sovilla's medical insurance co get to claim off Mr Keith's motor insurance? Setting up a Gofundme is all very well, but US medical bills...?
Are those numbers right?
2,800 Singapore dollars for damaging a vehicle (ripping off a wing mirror)
But only 500 SGD for ramming someone off the road?
So a cyclist's life is worth a sixth of a wing mirror? Actually, sounds about right. As you were people.
Yeah, but 'mischief'