Here's my proposal. No one can talk about Obamacare, except on this thread. People on both sides have very strong feelings. Express them here, and keep them out of other threads.
I personally have benefitted from RomneyCare, so I am willing to give Obamacare a chance.
If it were, really were, a free market, then healthy comparatively affluent responsible middle aged (if I may say so without offence) adults should be extremely attractive to underwriters and your premiums should be accordingly low. It *should* be easy for insurers to offer you good terms, on the grounds that you're comparatively unlikely to cost them anything much. God willing, spit-spit-spit, and so on.
But between providers thinking they can think of a number and double it, basically, when the costs are being borne by insurers, and governmental restraints and impositions on the market, and the necessity to provide insurance for large numbers of people who are, in pure market terms, uninsurable, for all sorts of reasons... it's just a mess.
Stay well, Whirled. Can you get sensibly priced eye care and dental care and similar plans, and cover the essentials that way?
Rationing has been on the scene to my certain knowledge for over thirty years. Nurses have been threatening to leave nursing, and junior doctors have all said they're going to Australia, for the same length of time. The NHS is a cross between a bargain basement and a nuthouse. *But it always has been.* And *every year* its continual crises, financial and operational, are described as "unprecedented." In the nineties, Mr Mandela asked us to stop nicking South African nurses. In the noughties, there were scandals about poor English language skills, and tests were introduced, and then - surprise! - there was a scandal about exam-passing scams in the Philippines. ERs turning away patients and wards being shut down because of flu outbreaks are annual rituals, like the Christmas lights and roughly at the same time of year. Pre-Brexit, we were warned that the NHS depended on a quarter of a million EU citizens who'd chosen to come and work here out of the goodness of their hearts - nobody pointed out that represents a quarter of a million professional careers we have disgracefully failed to invest in. Nor that we steal even more of our overseas doctors from the Indian subcontinent anyway.
So all in all, no, it can't go on. But, God knows how, it does...
It is amazing what can be accomplished if no one worries about who gets the credit or the blame.
CountryMouse, to answer your question, we pay out of pocket for eye and dental care as well. It's cheaper than paying the premiums.
My BCBS plan was grandfathered in before Obamacare. I pay $459/month for a PPO plan. My deductible is $5K. This exact same plan in the Obamacare market place would have cost me $680/month with a $10K deductible that includes services not applicable to my health and severely limits the pool of doctors I can see. Living in the USA, I don't want to be limited to see a doctor when I need to and I don't want to wait for months upon months for non-cancer surgery if I was living in The UK. I just don't want to be restricted in choices when it comes to my health and this is what the US healthcare system offers - though it's not perfect and has multiple hiccups - but it's a lot better than most of other countries. I know of multiple US residents living in Canada but will not renounce their US citizenship because come back to the US for their healthcare.
I'm all about insurance covering pre-existing conditions and us consumers subsidizing this cost. But 90% of our astronomical healthcare cost are simply not due to genetic conditions like Type 1 diabetes, epilepsy, Down Syndrome, etc, it's due to management of chronic diseases like cancer, Alzheimer's, Type-2 diabetes and all of its wide-ranging lifelong associated costs. The CDC just reported that 40% of cancers are due to lifestyle choices. Treating a patient with cancer and all of his lifelong complications is a lot more expensive on the healthcare system in the long run than treating a patient with any genetic condition for his lifetime. The overall cost of a chemotherapy drug from concept to research to development to marketing easily is a cost of - one billion dollars because it's a minimum of ten to twenty-year process from start to finish. The pharma company wants all of its investment back plus interest. I'm definitely not saying eating kale and grass every day will prevent cancer because there way too many variables involved in development of this disease, but it's been clinically proven that there is a link of cancer to obesity and to smokers. This is why I see many insurance companies in the next decade offering discounts to individuals who take responsibility in actively managing their health.
Thus it sounds like the come back of "junk" health insurance where a person gets very inexpensive health insurance policy only to find out when they are in the hospital that the insurance covers just a tiny portion of the cost, and the rest is out-of -pocket. The ACA had put a squash on those types of policies as it didn't meet the ACA guidelines.
There was also mention yesterday of Federal/State subsidies that helped lower-income enrollees pay for health care, that the subsidies might end. Let's hope not.
I haven't heard if pre-existing conditions will remain as a coverage or will be tossed out. I remember decades ago trying to get health insurance back when doctors thought I had a wheat allergy, I was denied coverage, but eventually found a higher premium policy. Guess the insurance company thought I would OD on a loaf of bread :P
I had visions of insurance companies doing a history on each patient and if your parents had heart problems, cancer, diabetes, you could inherit those problems, thus be pre-existing.
Haven't heard if the "cap" would come back, meaning your health insurance would only pay up to a certain amount for your care. Thus if you have a major health issue and the cost had reached $200k, sorry you reached the "cap" limit. Let's hope not.
This will be a wait and see approach as to what will be coming down the pike.
But even folks benefiting from the ACA were convinced by all the propaganda that it was some kind of evil government overreach.
Trump and his swamp critters are dismantling the remnants of ACA as I write. Making America great again.....
Windyridge, did you even READ my posts? And millions more can now no longer afford insurance!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Obamacare is just a swap out, HOW IS THAT ANY BETTER??!? This is the kind of head in the sand thinking that drives me crazy!! I swear, if I hear just ONE more time, "Well at least other people have insurance now!" I'm going to lose my mind.
Just having fun. I respect your right to say what you please.
But, it also seems that many folks in your boat actually had not very good insurance back then, with many exclusions (at least that's what I've gathered from the folks I talked to; they had very basic plans that didn't cover much except catastrophic illnesses)
I have to say that I really, really believe that the only solution to this issue is a single payer system, with folks who are wealthy able to pay for "Rolls Royce" care in a private system if they care to. It's what exists in Western Europe and in Israel.
I have heard there can be a long wait time for elective surgeries in Canada, but not for needed surgeries. It seems to run about as good as a universal system can. I've heard that Australia and Japan are even better.
And I'm guessing - not to mention stereotyping - but I'll bet Japan benefits from the world's most compliant patient population. Still haven't got over the little old grandmother rescued at Fukushima that I saw on the news - she kept trying to get off her gurney to bow to her rescuers, Lord love her and bless her.
I am optimistic about today’s changes. I’m willing to support reform of the ACA as it wasn’t working. Monthly premiums are exorbitant; deductibles even higher.
The countries that have Universal don’t come close to the US population which is one reason single payer will never occur. It would be too expensive.
Poor people always had/have healthcare - it’s called Medicaid.
No one is denied care in US hospitals.
Why should the government pay subsidies to insurance companies? There are only about 3 now.
I think free market exchanges will be great. Competition is always good for the consumer.
She said last year they paid out of pocket over $40,000.
Obama care has nearly bankrupted them but they cannot do without it. They have a son with a heart condition and he MUST have yearly scans, etc.
My daughter has her own business, and every cent she makes goes towards paying premiums.
I am also self employed. I think much depends on which state a person lives in.
Both parties need to work together on this instead of one side or the other constantly bickering and stonewalling. Say what you want about our current President, he has focused on what he promised to do and is taking action & willing to give him a chance.
Wow Jessebelle, that is awful about the mammogram! This breaks my heart...
If I were a politician & had to chose to spend Federal/State monies on either free birth control or mammograms, I would choose the latter. Birth control pills are relatively cheap, a screening mammogram that can save a woman’s life is priceless.
************
SMOKERS AND OBESE FACE INDEFINITE SURGERY BAN
The NHS will ban patients from surgery indefinitely unless they lose weight or quit smoking, under controversial plans being drawn up by officials.
[Really? Goodness! Tell me more...]
The restrictions in Hertfordshire last night came under attack from the Royal College of Surgeons. Ian Eardley, the senior vice-president, called for an "urgent rethink" of policies that he said were "discriminatory" and would leave patients in pain and misery. "Singling out patients in this way goes against the principles of the NHS," he said.
In recent years, patients in some areas have been given time to lose weight or quit smoking, but ultimately allowed surgery regardless. But the rules drawn up by clinical commissioning groups in Hertfordshire say that obese patients "will not get non-urgent surgery until they reduce their weight" at all, unless the circumstances are exceptional.
The criteria, revealed in the 'Health Service Journal', also means [sic] smokers will only be referred for operations if they have quit for at least eight weeks.
East and North Hertfordshire CCG and Herts Valleys CCG said the plans were aimed at encouraging people "to take more responsibility" whilst "freeing up limited NHS resources for priority treatment."
Joyce Robins, from Patient Concern, said: "This is absolutely disgraceful - we all pay our taxes; we did not agree to a two-tier system."
****************
So, indefinite surgery ban? Really?? No, not really. As you were.
The trouble is that each political party believes that the electorate is so tearfully attached to an all-caring all-embracing health care system that it can't add. And so far, they have been proved correct.
In my opinion, the PPACA should have been kept much more intact than it was when they even passed a version of it, and there should be no such thing as medical bankruptcy or people choosing between rent and food versus health care they need in a wealthy nation such as the USA.