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Aca
This one of the recent articles, May, 2015, on the ACA.
It’s like Republicans are cursed by facts these days. Just days after House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) went on Meet the Press to fearmonger about Obamacare, yet another study came along to sock it to his desperate Obamacare claims. An independent health policy research program study released Wednesday showed all of his predictions about Obamacare were wrong. Way wrong. Wrong on every single fearmongering prediction and claim they made. Under Obamacare, nearly 17 million have gotten insurance coverage since the fall of 2013. Seventeen MILLION. The Rand analysis of their study revealed the facts: Insurance coverage has increased across all types of insurance since the major provisions of the federal Affordable Care Act took effect, with a total of 16.9 million people becoming newly enrolled through February 2015, according to a new RAND Corporation study. Researchers estimate that from September 2013 to February 2015, 22.8 million Americans became newly insured and 5.9 million lost coverage, for a net of 16.9 million newly insured Americans. Republicans are running on taking that insurance away? Republicans like to claim that it’s all Medicaid expansion. Survey says, wrong again. Among those newly gaining coverage, 9.6 million people enrolled in employer-sponsored health plans, followed by Medicaid (6.5 million), the individual marketplaces (4.1 million), nonmarketplace individual plans (1.2 million) and other insurance sources (1.5 million). And remember how Republicans sounded the hysteria alarms that Obama was ruining their insurance and nobody would get to keep their insurance? The study also estimates that 125.2 million Americans — about 80 percent of the nonelderly population that had insurance in September 2013 — experienced no change in the source of insurance during the period, according to findings published online by the journal Health Affairs. Republicans said Obamacare would cause private employers to stop offering insurance. Survey says, wrong again: RAND researchers say the findings that the biggest gain in coverage was from employer-sponsored insurance runs counter to predictions that many employers may quit offering insurance in response to the Affordable Care Act and suggests that regardless of whether that occurs, employer-sponsored coverage will remain the greatest source of health insurance coverage. |
And after reading the above is there a question or point to be made.
Because it was not included! |
Where are the figures regarding those that lost their insurance and were forced to purchase new insurance?
Where are the figures on the percentage that the existing insurance premiums went up? Highest increase ever. Where's the figures on how many business owners sold their business rather than go bankrupt because of Obamacare? How many were forced to purchase insurance that didn't need it? "[T]here can be no doubt that health care today is more costly than it would have been without Obamacare... Measured over two years, Obamacare's rate hikes remain toxic. And further increases are on the horizon in 2017, when some of the law's subsidies to insurance companies are set to expire... "[T]he Democrats' health care law [Obamacare] will increase the budget deficit by $131 billion over the current 10-year budget window (FY 2015–2024). This estimate is arrived at by taking the $180 billion in projected deficit reduction from the CBO 2012 extrapolation and then accounting for the lower net cost of the coverage provisions ($83 billion), the lower estimated federal health care savings under the plan ($132 billion), as well as the lower projected revenue levels when including the labor market effects of the legislation ($262 billion). The difference between the 2012 extrapolation and the current estimate of the cost of the Democrats' health law amounts to a $311 billion change in its net deficit impact." "To partially offset the ACA's new spending, the law contains spending cuts to Medicare that amount to $716 billion from 2013 to 2022. The Medicare Trustees have warned since the law's passage that if these cuts are implemented as the law requires, they will significantly impact seniors' access to and quality of care. For example, the law reduces payments in the Medicare Advantage (MA) program, the private insurance option under Medicare, by $156 billion from 2013 to 2022. These cuts are already causing MA plans to adjust their benefit packages by restricting provider networks. The end result of course is that seniors have fewer provider options and in some cases are forced to find new doctors." "According to a recent study, perhaps up to 80% of ObamaCare's new Medicaid enrollees previously had private insurance plans... One recent study found that Medicaid is not only worse than private insurance — it can be worse than having no insurance at all. Medicaid patients were 25% likelier to have an in-hospital death than those completely without health insurance. The same study also found that, compared with private insurance, Medicaid patients were twice as likely to have an in-hospital death, had the longest lengths of hospital stays and had the highest costs... These are startling results for a government-run health care system advertised as a quality substitute for private insurance. In reality, ObamaCare has created a two-tier health care system — and it's forcing millions of patients out of the top tier and into the bottom." "Perhaps one of the most troubling parts of Obamacare is the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB). The IPAB will consist of fifteen unelected bureaucrats who are granted substantial powers to reduce Medicare spending. IPAB's proposals could, for example, cut reimbursement for specific services that it determines not to be of high value… DEATH PANELS?? "Since the implementation of the ACA, the majority of member physicians have noticed an increase in the volume of emergency patients. Specifically, 47% of emergency physicians indicate slight increases in the number of patients, while 28% of respondents report significant increases in the number of emergency patients." This is big enough that many won't read it, so I will stop here. Before expounding on how great Obamacare is, you had better look at the sacrifices required to everyone. Obamacare was not well thought through and as a result it is going to cost America a great deal. It was not bipartisan and therefore, it focuses only on the socialist aspect of medicine and not how it will impact the economy. Liberals are selfish and only look at what it can do for them, and care nothing for what it will do to the American way. |
Things I don't like about Obamacare:
INDIVIDUAL MANDATE EMPLOYER MANDATE ANTI-CONSCIENCE MANDATE MEDICARE PAYMENT CUTS GOVERNMENT CONTROL OVER DOCTOR DECISIONS NEW AND HIGHER TAXES HUGE DEFICITS 159 NEW BOARDS, AGENCIES, AND PROGRAMS |
We lost our insurance. Our policy didn't meet ACA standards. Silly us, we didn't buy prenatal coverage. Thought I could do without at 58.
Our new policies were nearly the same cost, but with a $12,000 deductible, and no pharmacy coverage. None. We knew, from a common sense standpoint, the premiums were too low to be sustained. Sure enough, in 2015, Minnesota premiums skyrocketed: <snip>Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, for example, wants to raise rates an average of 54 percent on nine plans. <snip> Source: We had Blue Cross. Luckily, we were only in Minnesota for four months of 2015. We are now happily in Florida, where our premiums are lower, deductible is lower and we actually have drug coverage. |
8:12 here. can't edit, so here's the source for health care costs in Minnesota.
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You want a point. Republicans absolutely refuse to accept the fact that ACA doesn't even come close to the gloom and doom that they have peddled, since day one.
Nothing will ever change their mind. Facts be damn. Why bother to talk to closed minded individuals? People that lost their insurance! Like the one that appeared on the Sean Hannity show in 2009. They lost their insurance. A fact checker called the couple back, and they got a better policy, and it was cheaper. Or on that same show, the employer that said he was going to have to lay off people, due to the ACA. That employer had four employees, and ACA didn't apply to him. |
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Would you please provide a link? |
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Inside the Fox News lie machine: I fact-checked Sean Hannity on Obamacare - Salon.com
This is the web site. I am not sure how to bring it on this thread. Sorry. |
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What the author doesn't cover is deductibles. The deductible on many ACA policies is huge. My coverage, back in MN, had a $12,000.00 deductible. That means the first TWELVE THOUSAND dollars comes out of my pocket. Good coverage if you get hit by a bus. |
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Do you care to divulge what your deductibles are in Florida, which you said were lower? |
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I remember back to when I was a young mother. That deductible would have been killer. You're working. Both kids in daycare. Both kids get sore throats. Strep or not strep? Gotta bring 'em in. One hundred dollars per kid for the visit, another $50 to $75 for the labs. Around $300 out of your pocket because the deductible isn't met. Do you have health insurance, or health care? |
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Thanks, it's good to hear from someone who has ACA as opposed to all those with single-payer socialized medicine (commonly known as Medicare) like myself. |
It seems to me that those who advocate the ACA seem to fall into three groups: Those in congress that voted for the bill; those who's coverage is subsidized by the government, and those who do not have it.
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What I did ignore is Republicans will never be side tracked by facts. The plain and simple fact is all the dire consequences predicted by the Republicans have not happened.
thin on facts. So, you can't believe the words that came right out of the people that were interviewed mouths. |
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But, dream on and be prepared to be embarrassed if you insist on bragging about nonexistent benefits of Obamacare. |
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Will one of the dems who are bragging about the facts and merits of ACA please update us on the 500 billion dollars savings Obama commited would come from medicare to help pay for ACA.
Also while gathering all those facts look up the warnings about the cost of insurance going up once they have added all the new folks with subsidized payments from the government....after they have added all tose up to age 24.....and after they have added all those with pre-existing condotions they never carried before. The warnings were that once all these adds started to affect what the insurance companies would have to pay out that they never did before....some would collapse and go away. Those with size and assets to stay in will be raising rates to match the outflow of payments. A couple of years ago this was forecast to easily increase premiums 30 to 100%. And also garner the facts that as the patient load increases on hospitals and doctors offices....wait times will increase dramatically....quality of service/time with the doctors will decrease. Medicare premiums were also forecast to increase to cover all the new expenses (forget the 500 billion in savings....as if it was ever there in the first place!). The cheapest and best quality health care you will ever have is what you have right now. To keep the coverage you currently have you will have to take additional supplemetal policies to cover that which will be eliminated from medicare in the future. When the ACA was implemented the administrations budget office said the full cost of ACA would not be realized until 2016.....how coincidental is that. So when some are ballyhooing about all the pluses please go back and take a comprehensive look at what is really going to happen to health care costs....do not just dwell on the cherry picked talking points. |
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What the author doesn't cover is deductibles. The deductible on many ACA policies is huge. My coverage, back in MN, had a $12,000.00 deductible. That means the first TWELVE THOUSAND dollars comes out of my pocket. Good coverage if you get hit by a bus. Never said a thing about the people interviewed. Care to comment? |
Obamacare has a couple of good points that could have been easily and less expensively addressed, if the Dems really wished to confront the health care problem. However, Obamacare is so bad overall that you might compare it with a family that has a rat infestation problem in their home. They lock up all their possessions in the home, take their money out of the bank and put it under the mattress as well as taking out a loan and putting it under the mattress and then light the home on fire. The rats are destroyed, but so is the home. It solves their rat infestation, but ultimately cost them more money than they can afford.
Remember years ago when AIDS was first made public and everyone wanted to know if there was a cure for AIDS? There was a joke going around that yes, there is a cure for AIDS. It's Tylenol Extra Strength. Around that time, there was a scumbag going around and putting poison in the packages of Tylenol, and several people died. Obamacare is kind of like the Tylenol Extra Strength as a cure for the health care problem. It cures health care by killing the patient. |
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Scott Walker previewed his replacement to Obamacare. The only item that remains is insurability for all
This will cause other Republicans to open up nd offer their own health care plans. Personal Best Regards |
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