Obamacare
will be unaffordable, cause Obama’s insured to go into debt, increase
healthcare’s overall costs, and in the end….less Americans will be insured!
January 5, 2014
| 7:47am Thanks NY Post
President Obama’s famous vow — “If you like
your health plan, you will be able to keep your health plan. Period.” — isn’t
the only broken promise of ObamaCare.
Now that the Affordable Care Act has
actually been in effect for a week, Americans are discovering more pitfalls
associated with the massive overhaul.
Lie #1: “Affordable” Care. Even the
president’s ideological allies — like Michael Moore — acknowledge that the
Affordable Care Act is far from inexpensive for most Americans and that it
“risks being a cruel joke.”
For average Americans, the results are
prohibitively expensive. “The cheapest plan available to a 60-year-old couple
making $65,000 a year in Hartford, Conn., will cost $11,800 in annual
premiums,” according to Moore’s math, as published in a New York Times
editorial. “If both become seriously ill, they might have to pay almost $25,000
in a single year.”
The National Federation of Independent
Businesses, an organization that represents nearly 11,000 entrepreneurs in New
York state alone, said it has yet to find a single member whose health-care
costs are going down under ObamaCare. Instead, an “overwhelming majority” of
businesses have reported increases in their insurance premiums, said Mike
Durant, the NFIB’s New York director.
Lie #2: It will prevent people from going
into debt.
Patients with cancer and conditions such as
multiple sclerosis or Crohn’s disease can now get insurance and financial but
if annual out-of-pocket costs run much higher than expected, they might have to
go into debt.
“There are certainly challenges for cancer
patients,” said Brian Rosen, a senior vice president of the Leukemia &
Lymphoma Society. These gaps “need to be addressed in order to fulfill the
intention of the Affordable Care Act.”
Caroline Pearson, who tracks the health-care
overhaul for the consulting firm Avalere Health, put it in even starker terms.
“Chronically ill people are likely to be
underinsured and face extremely high out-of-pocket costs,” she said. “While the
subsidies help, there still may be access problems for some populations.”
Lie #3: ObamaCare will lower costs overall.
The idea that people with medical insurance
go to the emergency room less, and thus, help to reduce the overall cost of
health care, isn’t necessarily true, as a study of Oregon Medicaid recipients
has shown.
Researchers compared Medicaid recipients
with those with no health insurance and found the following: Pthat people with
access to Medicaid went to the ER 40 percent more than those without insurance.
Lie #4: More Americans will be insured.
Approximately 2.8 million Americans have
signed up for new health-care plans since the Affordable Care Act went into
effect on Jan. 1. That’s less than the 3.3 million the federal government
predicted would sign up, and is also dwarfed by the 4.7 million whose insurance
policies have been cancelled as a result of the overhaul.
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