WillReadmore
Verified User
Insurance companies figured that 27 year old would do EXACTLY that.I'm not for Medicare for all but I think it could fill in the gaps. I'm not sure how much of a problem we had to begin with.
This is anecdotal but I wonder how many people will relate. A friend of mine has a loser son, 27 years old and always bitching about not being able to see a doctor. He claims he can't do it, even today with the ACA...until he needed a "glaucoma" diagnosis, then he found the money and a doctor no problem at all.
That is why we have the mandate.
Insurance companies can't afford having people jump in when they're sick and then jumping out when they are NOT sick.
Without the mandate, insurance companies have to be hard core about preexisting conditions - requiring long wait periods, identifying problems that the insurance won't cover, refusing to carry people at all, charging huge sums for those who aren't well, charging way more for those nearing retirement (since the risk is higher), dumping those who get sick, etc., etc.
Before the ACA, we saw all of these.
I think the "gap" would become "all those who don't pay insurance" - that is, if you make little enough that you don't have to pay taxes, you would be on Medicare. Medicare would become better, because it would involve too many people for our representatives to ignore.