3/31/2014 3:10:45 PM
3/31/2014 3:22:49 PM
When I was in Switzerland, I was amazed to find out that they have almost a carbon copy of the ACA. They require every citizen to be insured in the private market.The outcomes: The Swiss have one of the most expensive healthcare systems in the world, yet they are extremely satisfied with the coverage and are in the top 5 life expectancies in the world (they may be number 1, but I'm not going to look).
3/31/2014 4:16:50 PM
if we are copying anyone, i vote France^ you can't use subsidies to control costs, subsidies have the opposite effect and will increase costs[Edited on March 31, 2014 at 4:19 PM. Reason : .]
3/31/2014 4:18:47 PM
3/31/2014 4:44:37 PM
3/31/2014 5:26:45 PM
I'm not sure how you can say ACA isn't sustainable. All the costs were already being shunted to other insurers/the government anyway.I just had a friend tell another friend who's mom got cancer (and didn't have a job) to not even bother signing up for a insurance (even though it would likely be mostly subsidized anyway) because "the government" will just pay for things regardless (which is partially true-- the debt will just get written off by the hospitals/medicaid).All of this still happens under ACA, except there is now documentation of where these costs are going.ACA isn't an entitlement, it's a process change. It's pretty much completely incomparable to Social Security. When people get sick, they go to the hospital regardless, and they always have.
3/31/2014 5:50:48 PM
Also if you actually look inside your login for your insurance, the plan is usually paying less than 1/3 of what the provider originally bills for service. My wife just had a $4300 hospital visit get settled for around $1500 by BCBS. Explain to me how that is fair to a cash customer....What the hospitals are doing is inflating the bills 3 times over so when they get settled by a bill collector its still enough money to pay what they are supposed to get, but if you actually pay your bill like a decent human you are paying 3-4 times what an insurance company would pay. Its insane.
3/31/2014 9:29:04 PM
4/1/2014 12:27:27 AM
Bottom line, I think we can officially stick a fork in the repeal movement. It's just never going to happen at this point. By November we could be looking at up to 15 million previously uninsured Americans covered under either an exchange plan, medicaid expansion, or their parents insurance. You're always going to have the morning talk show kooks and trolls from gerrymandered districts, but no serious candidate in a competitive race will be calling for repeal anymore. At least not until the GOP proposes some sort of viable alternative.Honestly, at this point, I'd be willing to bet that within 10 years Republicans start claiming the ACA was their idea all along and that Democrats just copied it. It would be the most truthful thing they ever said about the law.[Edited on April 1, 2014 at 2:46 PM. Reason : :]
4/1/2014 2:36:04 PM
I think a lot of people don't realize that the pre-existing condition coverage mandate goes hand-in-hand with most other aspect of the healthcare law. If the republicans sweep congress and starts talking about this, they'll have to acknowledge this fact, or end up alienating the insurance companies (who would be hurt the most, sadly, under a repeal).
4/1/2014 4:22:59 PM
CNN says 7.1 million applied.
4/1/2014 4:47:09 PM
When you consider that they took the teeth out of all the mandates for now, and allowed insurance companies to continue offering substandard plans, that's pretty good.
4/1/2014 7:14:50 PM
How many will pay?
4/1/2014 7:51:29 PM
People not paying is just another myth. Those who signed up at the end of March don't have their first payment due until some time in May and figures from the state run exchanges show 85-90% of applicants have already paid.[Edited on April 1, 2014 at 8:00 PM. Reason : :]
4/1/2014 7:59:05 PM
the only reason their first payment is not due is because Obama asked the insurance companies to delay payment and still provide coverage because the site is not fixed yet, and the insurance companies luckily said okay. the reason the state funds can pay is that their sites work, the federal site doesn't work.
4/1/2014 9:29:26 PM
4/2/2014 11:10:48 PM
Insurance is the only private cost sharing mechanism, and modern healthcare system can't exist witHouT cost sharing. So you either support socialized systems, or you accept the insurance system.
4/3/2014 12:05:56 AM
most of the time you can negotiate the cost down if you are paying cash at a hospital.
4/3/2014 12:14:41 AM
True, sometimes even if you have insurance.No negotiation is going to bring a 30,000$ appendix surgery, or $400,000 cancer treatment down to where the average person can afford it though.
4/3/2014 12:17:59 AM
Which is fine; catastrophic things like that should be covered by insurance. But complaining that the hospital is gouging you over it is silly; they are just working within the confines of our current insurance system.
4/3/2014 12:28:02 AM
Yes, but now everyone will have insurance and get the negotiated rate, muahahahahahaha!
4/3/2014 8:20:19 AM
aaronburro just advocated for mandatory insurance
4/3/2014 8:49:46 AM
4/3/2014 10:37:40 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/04/04/paul-ryan-popular-parts-of-obamacare-too-costly-to-reinstate-after-repeal/
4/4/2014 6:59:09 PM
Congresspeople in general don't seem to be that bright, and few of them stand for anything in particular, I can see how 1 person saying something specific draws the respect of his peers. It's sad this is what passes for an intellectual though. This must be what makes the founding fathers spin in their graves more than anything.
4/4/2014 7:01:32 PM
4/4/2014 11:29:37 PM
Insurance is supposed to make money by deny people coverage.It originally was supposed to be a way if spreading the cost and managing risks in a pooled manner, look up the history of kaiser.
4/5/2014 12:32:11 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/one-chart-that-shows-obamacare-is-working-2014-4And Fox New's headline on this same Gallup poll:"Gallup survey suggests sign-ups under ObamaCare not as high as White House says"http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/07/gallup-survey-suggests-sign-ups-under-obamacare-not-as-high-as-white-housesays[Edited on April 7, 2014 at 10:41 AM. Reason : ]
4/7/2014 10:16:39 AM
4/7/2014 10:51:02 AM
^^http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/07/gallup-survey-suggests-sign-ups-under-obamacare-not-as-high-as-white-house-says/[Edited on April 7, 2014 at 11:04 AM. Reason : ^]
4/7/2014 11:03:54 AM
4/7/2014 12:53:16 PM
4/7/2014 1:24:21 PM
Oh look, more facts proving every single negative prediction made about the ACA was completely wrong.http://www.vox.com/2014/9/5/6108493/obamacare-premiums-lower-2015
9/5/2014 2:12:40 PM
You should post the details of that plan and its costs. Then we'll tell if you if that statement is worth anything.
9/5/2014 2:39:19 PM
Hahahahha get the fuck out of here with that bullshit.Hell, since you're apparently too lazy to click twice, I'll save you one.http://kaiserfamilyfoundation.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/8627-analysis-of-2015-premium-changes.pdf[Edited on September 5, 2014 at 2:55 PM. Reason : :]
9/5/2014 2:50:26 PM
Such harsh language. Do you kiss your mother with that mouth? I'm convinced though that most liberals are lab-generated and thus have no mothers.Anyway, how is that not a valid question? If the plan that is quoted is crap, and nobody is buying it, then of course the cost is going to go down. What about good plans? And I don't know if the plan quoted is any good or not, that is why I asked.And the response I get is useless.^I'll check it out. Right now my pdf viewer is crapping out.[Edited on September 5, 2014 at 2:57 PM. Reason : [Edited on September 5, 2014 at 2:56 PM. Reason : adobe sucks]]
9/5/2014 2:55:35 PM
I sometimes feel bad for Shrike. He wants so badly for his liberal wet dreams to make sense and work out, but they just never will. Poor guy.
9/5/2014 3:00:07 PM
None of the Obamacare plans are "crap". That was part of the point of the whole law. It eliminated junk plans that covered practically nothing with extremely high deductibles and copays. The average silver plan has a deductible ~$2000-3000, covers 80% of costs, with a maximum yearly out of pocket ~$5000-6000. Those are national averages, of course it varies state to state and city to city. Keep in mind, preventative care is covered 100% with no deductible for all plans, so most healthy people pay nothing but the premiums for their yearly doctor visits.I apologize for the "harsh" language, but the mountain of bullshit heaped onto the Obamacare debate has a reached a point where hostility is cathartic.^See like that, despite all evidence to the contrary, they still cling to their preconceived false notions that the whole thing is going to crumble onto itself. Never. Going. To. Happen.[Edited on September 5, 2014 at 3:04 PM. Reason : :]
9/5/2014 3:02:51 PM
I looked for the most unbiased source on costs I could find:http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/Downloads/Proj2013.pdf
9/5/2014 4:08:04 PM
Ok, so after a year of implementation, the number of uninsured is down and premium growth has slowed. Regardless of the overall economic picture, most of which has nothing to do with ACA or healthcare general, that's a far cry from the death spiral predictions we'd been inundated with for the better part of last year. I don't think anyone claimed that the ACA was going to fix everything for everyone, but at this point, the only honest conclusion you can come to is that's overall effect has been positive. Sounds like the real problem is GDP stagnation and anemic job growth, neither of which have been tackled by Congress because they are too busy trying to repeal Obamacare or fighting GOP obstructionism.Let's also keep in mind that overall numbers would be even better if you didn't have 24 states continuing to refuse the Medicaid expansion. The fact that the law has managed to overcome what is essentially political sabotage is another point in it's favor.[Edited on September 5, 2014 at 6:03 PM. Reason : :]
9/5/2014 5:58:43 PM
What is political sabotage?
9/5/2014 6:05:03 PM
I think it was a Beastie Boys song that came out some time ago.
9/5/2014 9:17:48 PM
[quote]Sounds like the real problem is GDP stagnation and anemic job growth, neither of which have been tackled by Congress because they are too busy trying to repeal Obamacare or fighting GOP obstructionism.[quote]One of the biggest questions and issues that I have with the Constitution. This can happen, which means any actual strong change made to the government is very difficult to achieve. The constitution, in a way, is designed so that things are functionally dis-functional.
9/6/2014 3:46:15 AM
Functionallly dos-functional can sometimes just be dis-functional. I don't see our politicians or businesses doing the right things to adapt to the rapidly changing relationship between capital, labor, and profits.
9/6/2014 1:32:53 PM
9/7/2014 4:26:34 PM
Shrike,You should read the Kaiser results instead of parroting the shit that Vox has served up. The -.8% decrease is for a pretty narrow subset of all ACA enrollees, looking at other slices and we see the premiums increasing just as they always have.
9/7/2014 7:30:28 PM
9/7/2014 9:09:24 PM
9/8/2014 12:16:00 PM