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Bill Clinton: Obamacare a ‘Crazy System’ Where Small Businesses Are ‘Getting Killed’

Original Source

By T. BECKET ADAMS (@BECKETADAMS) 10/3/16 9:11 PM

Former President Bill Clinton characterized the Affordable Care Act Monday as a “crazy system” in which small business owners are “getting killed.”

“We’ve got to figure out what to do now on healthcare,” Clinton said Monday at a campaign event in Flint, Mich. “Her opponent [GOP nominee Donald Trump] said, ‘Oh, just repeal it all. The market will take care of it.’ That didn’t work out very well for us, did it? We wound up with the most expensive system in the world and we insured the smallest percentage of people.”

“On the other hand, the current system works fine, if you’re eligible for Medicaid, if you’re a lower-income working person, if you’re already on Medicare or if you get enough subsidies on a modest income that you can afford your health care,” he said.

He said that’s a good deal compared to the options that used to be available, but said it’s not a perfect system, especially if you’re a small business owner.

“The people who are getting killed in this deal are small business people and individuals who make just a little too much to get any of these subsidies. Why? Because they’re not organized and they don’t have any bargaining power with insurance companies and they’re getting whacked,” Clinton said.

“So you got this crazy system where all of a sudden 25 million more people have healthcare, and then the people are out there busting it, sometimes 60 hours a week, wind up with their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half,” Clinton added. “It’s the craziest thing in the world.”

The simplest solution, he said, would be to figure out an affordable rate and let people use that.

“[L]et people buy in to Medicare or Medicaid. Here’s why: You can let people buy in for just a little bit because, unlike where you are now, if you were on the other side of this, if you were an insurer, you’d say, ‘Gosh, I only got 2,000 people in this little pool.’ Eighty percent of the insurance costs every year come from 20 percent of the people. If I get unlucky in the pool, I lose money,” Clinton explained.

“So they overcharge you just to make sure and on good years they just make a whopping profit out of the people least able to pay it,” he said.

Bottom line, the former president continued, is that the insurance model is totally nonsensical.

“It doesn’t make any sense. The insurance model doesn’t work here,” he said. “It’s not like life insurance; it’s not like casualty; it’s not like predicting floods. It doesn’t work.”

“So Hillary believes we should simply let people who are above the line — forgetting these subsidies — have access to affordable entry into the Medicare and Medicaid programs,” Clinton said. “They’ll all be covered. It will not hurt the program. We will not lose a lot of money, and we ought to do it.”

Though Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton has proposed some changes to the current system, her characterizations of the Affordable Care Act tend to be far rosier than her husband’s (though she hasn’t mentioned the issue much at all since Labor Day (http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/byron- york-hillary-clinton-goes-silent-on-obamacare/article/2603410? platform=hootsuite)).

“[T]he fact is, we have the Affordable Care Act. That is one of the greatest accomplishments of President Obama (/section/barack-obama), of the Democratic Party and of our country,” she said in January during a Democratic primary presidential debate.

Audit: Obamacare Enrollees Had Trouble Affording and Accessing Care

Original Source

Obamacare enrollees had trouble affording and accessing health care as well as understanding how to use their plans, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office.

The top factors that Obamacare enrollees considered when selecting a plan in 2015 were the cost of premiums, deductibles, and copayments.

The auditors talked to stakeholders including policy experts, state departments of insurance, and exchange officials, and found that some Obamacare enrollees said the out-of-pocket expenses were too expensive before reaching their deductible.

“Two national surveys of QHP [qualified health plan] enrollees found that over a quarter of them had experienced financial difficulties paying for their out-of-pocket health care expenses in the prior year, with some enrollees reporting unmet health care needs due to cost,” the auditors said. “One national survey reported that in 2016, 25 percent of QHP enrollees reported higher-than-expected out-of-pocket costs after using their coverage.”

According to the report, some enrollees have been overwhelmed when trying to juggle the need to pay out-of-pocket costs on top of monthly premiums and other life expenses. Many of these enrollees have lower incomes and have been uninsured, so they may have not previously paid for health care expenses, a fact that may contribute to dissatisfaction with their plans’ affordability.

Some Obamacare enrollees said they have faced problems accessing care. The Obamacare exchanges offered 34 percent fewer providers than plans offered outside the exchanges, according to one analysis.

“Concerns have been expressed both by some experts and in literature we reviewed about QHP enrollees’ ability to obtain or continue care given the increased prevalence of QHP with narrow networks,” the auditors said. “Issuers have increasingly begun to offer narrow network plans as a mechanism to lower premiums; these plans offer coverage for services through a smaller group of physicians or hospitals than the plan has covered in the past.”

The report found that Obamacare enrollees had trouble understanding how their coverage worked. “Some QHP enrollees who obtained their coverage through the exchanges have faced difficulties understanding how to use their plans,” the report says. “About half of nationwide QHP enrollees surveyed in 2015 had a good understanding of their plan benefits and total health coverage costs at the time of enrollment.”

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services did not respond to requests for comment.

Affordable Care Act: Access to Insurance Is No Guarantee a Person Will Have Access to Care

Original Source

September 5, 2016 5:36 PM
By Steve Twedt / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Paul Vondra is just the sort of person the architects of Obamacare had in mind.

The 59-year-old Bellevue resident is a temporary worker contracted through a New Jersey agency to work as a mail clerk for a major local bank. He doesn’t own a car, so he bikes each day to his job in the Strip District.

His agency has offered him a choice of two Affordable Care Act-qualified plans. But Mr. Vondra, who makes less than $25,000 annually and has no dependents, said the cheapest plan carries a monthly premium of $165, or $800 a year, and a yearly deductible of $2,500.

Also, the plan’s co-insurance — the amount he would be responsible for after he has met his deductible — is $4,500, while out-of-pocket hospital costs are capped at $10,000.

“It might as well be $10 million,” he said.

He’s not alone. Officials at local health centers and clinics say they’re seeing more people like Mr. Vondra whose access to insurance has not translated into access to care.

Annette Fetchko, administrator at the Catholic Charities Free Health Care Center, Downtown, said the center has helped secretaries, security guards, custodians, seasonal construction workers and others who have insurance but who still can’t afford to fill prescriptions or follow through on a doctor’s referral to see a specialist.

As a result, she said, the center has broadened its mission, with a focus on ensuring access to care regardless of insurance status.

Physician Edward Kelly, the Catholic Charities center’s volunteer medical director, believes there’s a public misperception that equates having health insurance to having access to care. “Most people think, ‘We’ve got X number of people who have insurance now.’ But we’ve also got X number who can’t afford their insurance.”

The federal marketplace was designed to offer health coverage to the millions of Americans who had no insurance, perhaps due to losing a job or having a pre-existing medical condition.

That part has worked, as the government estimates 20 million people have gained health insurance since the Affordable Care Act was passed in 2010, bringing the percentage of uninsured into single digits. But in the marketplace’s opening rounds, insurers have incurred major losses on their products, so many are narrowing their networks, dropping or redesigning some plans and raising the price on others.

“I don’t think anybody was expecting deductibles of this level when we went into it,” said Denis Lukes, chief financial officer for the Healthcare Council of Western Pennsylvania in Marshall, which represents the region’s hospitals and other health facilities.

Two South Side programs — the Birmingham Free Clinic and Pittsburgh Mercy Family Health Center — help those who come in without insurance to find coverage through medical assistance or other programs. That doesn’t always mean they will get what they need.

“The large deductibles can make it very, very difficult for patients, particularly if they’re on four or five medications,” said J. Todd Wahrenberger, family medicine physician and medical director for the Pittsburgh Mercy center. “We’re constantly checking with insurers to see which drugs they cover and which they don’t.”

Mary Herbert, clinical director at the Birmingham Free Clinic, said the clinic recently had a client return after a one- or two-year absence. She’d gotten a job and had insurance — then saw her monthly premium triple in price. “She said, ‘I just can’t do it.’

“I think there’s a misconception in our society that either you have insurance and everything’s fine, or you don’t and you have access to medical assistance, and there’s all this in-between.”

Mr. Vondra said he does not qualify for a federal subsidy so he’s decided his best option is to skip the insurance and pay the expected $700-plus individual penalty next year for not buying coverage.

“I still come out ahead,” he said. But it still rankles that the penalty will disproportionately hit people like himself “who simply cannot pay all that money before we even see a doctor, and then pay all that after we see a doctor. That’s not what insurance is supposed to do.”

And if he gets sick or seriously hurt?

“I’m just hoping against hope that I can stay healthy for five or six years until I can get into Medicare.”

Steve Twedt: stwedt@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1963.

Corrections posted 9/5 and 9/6/2016: Paul Vondra’s work history was incorrectly described in a photo caption associated with this article. He has only recently become a temporary worker at a major local bank and employed by an agency in New Jersey. In addition, the health insurance plans offered by Mr. Vondra’’s employer were qualified plans under the Affordable Care Act, not marketplace plans.

First Published September 5, 2016 12:00 AM

Working Poor in Parts of Akron Shun [Affordable Care Act]

Original Source

James Schultz said he first beat cancer when he was 25.

He beat cancer a second time when was 28.

And now, at 58, the Kenmore man has no health insurance. He could sign up for a plan offered under the Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as Obamacare. But Schultz said he’d rather go without.

“I don’t want the government telling me what I need to do,” Schultz said last week at the Kenmore branch of the Akron-Summit County Public Library. “The government are dummies. Make sure you put that in there. This is not partisan. They’re just dummies.”

Has Your Healthcare Been Disrupted  By Co-op Failures?

Since the beginning of 2016, four ObamaCare co-op insurance plans have failed.  That means tens of thousands of Americans are feeling the pain, all thanks to the so-called Affordable Care Act:

A new wave of failures among ObamaCare’s nonprofit health insurers is disrupting coverage for thousands of enrollees and raising questions about whether regulators could have acted earlier to head off some of the problems.

The latest round of failures poses an even thornier problem than earlier cases because enrollees’ coverage is now being disrupted in the middle of the year. That can increase patients’ out of pocket costs and make it harder to keep the same doctors.

In Illinois, Oregon and Ohio, a combined total of about 92,000 people are being forced to find a new plan. A co-op in a fourth state, Connecticut, will last until the end of the year.

Ouch. That’s 92,000 more people who have had their health care plan unceremoniously disrupted, all thanks to ObamaCare.

Are you one of those people?  If so, could you take just a few minutes to answer a couple of questions to help us learn more about your experience with ObamaCare’s failing co-ops?

Take the survey now!