> You’ll be asked to take a diagnostic not knowing whether it will cost $10 or $15000
I feel this in my bones and it makes me irrationally (or maybe it's rational actually) angry. Find me any other industry where you can get away with not telling how much something will cost (or even a realistic range) before services are rendered.
I had a medical procedure a year or so ago and when I asked how much it would cost I got an eye roll, a lengthy and exasperated lecture, and in the end the number they quoted was wildly different. I knew I was going to hit my out-of-pocket maximum so I gave up after a while and moved on but it makes me so mad. I _wish_ I could "vote with my wallet" but good luck doing that unless you have unlimited time and energy. By the time I finally got to asking about the price I had been through multiple appointments that took forever to schedule, were weeks or months in the future, all while I needed relief. After being strung along for 6 months I gave up and rolled the dice even though I disliked how they treated me when I asked for the price.
People talk about how you need to be an informed customer but I have to assume those people are lying snakes, have never used the system, or just too stupid to understand that it's impossible.
"I don't know" should _not_ be a valid answer when asking how much something costs, it's ridiculous.