Loyal Obama Supporters, Canceled by Obamacare

StormX

Banned
San Francisco architect Lee Hammack says he and his wife, JoEllen Brothers, are “cradle Democrats.” They have donated to the liberal group Organizing for America and worked the phone banks a year ago for President Obama’s re-election.

Since 1995, Hammack and Brothers have received their health coverage from Kaiser Permanente, where Brothers worked until 2009 as a dietitian and diabetes educator. “We’ve both been in very good health all of our lives – exercise, don’t smoke, drink lightly, healthy weight, no health issues, and so on,” Hammack told me.

The couple — Lee, 60, and JoEllen, 59 — have been paying $550 a month for their health coverage — a plan that offers solid coverage, not one of the skimpy plans Obama has criticized. But recently, Kaiser informed them the plan would be canceled at the end of the year because it did not meet the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. The couple would need to find another one. The cost would be around double what they pay now, but the benefits would be worse.

“From all of the sob stories I’ve heard and read, ours is the most extreme,” Lee told me in an email last week.

I’ve been skeptical about media stories featuring those who claimed they would be worse off because their insurance policies were being canceled on account of the ACA. In many cases, it turns out, the consumers could have found cheaper coverage through the new health insurance marketplaces, or their plans weren’t very good to begin with. Some didn’t know they could qualify for subsidies that would lower their insurance premiums.

So I tried to find flaws in what Hammack told me. I couldn’t find any.


Hammack recalled his reaction when he and his wife received a letters from Kaiser in September informing him their coverage was being canceled. “I work downstairs and my wife had a clear look of shock on her face,” he said. “Our first reaction was clearly there’s got to be some mistake. This was before the exchanges opened up. We quickly calmed down. We were confident that this would all be straightened out. But it wasn’t.”

I asked Hammack to send me details of his current plan. It carried a $4,000 deductible per person, a $40 copay for doctor visits, a $150 emergency room visit fee and 30 percent coinsurance for hospital stays after the deductible. The out-of-pocket maximum was $5,600.

This plan was ending, Kaiser’s letters told them, because it did not meet the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. “Everything is taken care of,” the letters said. “There’s nothing you need to do.”

The letters said the couple would be enrolled in new Kaiser plans that would cost nearly $1,300 a month for the two of them (more than $15,000 a year).

And for that higher amount, what would they get? A higher deductible ($4,500), a higher out-of-pocket maximum ($6,350), higher hospital costs (40 percent of the cost) and possibly higher costs for doctor visits and drugs.

When they shopped around and looked for a different plan on California's new health insurance marketplace, Covered California, the cheapest one was $975, with hefty deductibles and copays.

In a speech in Boston last week
, President Obama said those receiving cancellation letters didn’t have good insurance. “There are a number of Americans — fewer than 5 percent of Americans — who've got cut-rate plans that don’t offer real financial protection in the event of a serious illness or an accident,” he said.

“Remember, before the Affordable Care Act, these bad-apple insurers had free rein every single year to limit the care that you received, or use minor preexisting conditions to jack up your premiums or bill you into bankruptcy. So a lot of people thought they were buying coverage, and it turned out not to be so good.”

What is going on here? Kaiser isn’t a “bad apple” insurer and this plan wasn’t “cut rate.” It seems like this is a lose-lose for the Hammacks (and a friend featured in a report last month by the public radio station KQED.)

I called Kaiser Permanente and spoke to spokesman Chris Stenrud, who used to work for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He told me that this was indeed a good plan. Patients in the plan, known as 40/4000, were remarkably healthy, had low medical costs and had not seen their premiums increase in years. “Our actuaries still aren’t entirely sure why that was,” he said.

While many other insurance companies offered skimpier benefits, Stenrud said, “our plans historically have been comprehensive.”

Kaiser has canceled about 160,000 policies in California, and about one third of people were in plans like Hammack’s, Stenrud said. About 30,000 to 35,000 were in his specific plan.

“In a few cases, we are able to find coverage for them that is less expensive, but in most cases, we’re not because, in sort of pure economic terms, they are people who benefited from the current system ... Now that the market rules are changing, there will be different people who benefit and different people who don’t.”

“There’s an aspect of market disruption here that I think was not clear to people,” Stenrud acknowledged. “In many respects it has been theory rather than practice for the first three years of the law; folks are seeing the breadth of change that we’re talking about here.”

That’s little comfort to Hammack. He’s written to California’s senators and his representative, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., asking for help. “We believe that the Act is good for health care, the economy, & the future of our nation. However, ACA options for middle income individuals ages 59 & 60 are unaffordable. We’re learning that many others are similarly affected. In that spirit we ask that you fix this, for all of our sakes,” he and Brothers wrote.

Consumer advocate Anthony Wright said it’s important to remember the way the insurance market worked before the act was passed, when insurers could deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions. “It’s impossible to know what the world would have looked like for these folks in the absence of the law,” said Wright, executive director of the group Health Access.

“We certainly had an individual market, especially in California which was the Wild Wild West, where there was huge price increases, cancellations, a range of other practices.

“That doesn't mean that there were certain people who lucked out in the old system, who wound up in a group with a relatively healthy risk mix and thus lower premiums,” he added. “The question is: Is health insurance something where people get a rate based on the luck of the draw or do we have something where we have some standards where people who live in the same community, of the same age, with the same benefit package are treated equally?”

Wright said discussions should focus on how to provide consumers like Hammack with assistance if they barely miss qualifying for subsidies.

So what is Hammack going to do? If his income were to fall below four times the federal poverty level, or about $62,000 for a family of two, he would qualify for subsidies that could lower his premium cost to as low as zero. If he makes even one dollar more, he gets nothing.

That’s what he’s leaning toward — lowering his salary or shifting more money toward a retirement account and applying for a subsidy.

http://www.propublica.org/article/loyal-obama-supporters-canceled-by-obamacare

:rofl2:

This must be what it’s like for Democrat voters to get their ObamaCare insurance cancellations / physician cancellations / sticker shocks, and then to realize that they have been betrayed by the President whom they adored and worshipped.
 
you do realize these companies are Lying about the AHA to get people to spend more on their policies right?

If they had a Cadillac plan then it would have met the ACA standards you fool
 
If you lost your current health-care plan under Obamacare, you have the President’s sympathies.

President Obama told NBC News that he is "sorry" that he did not keep his repeated promise that anyone who wanted to keep their present insurance plan could do so under the Affordable Care Act.

"I am sorry that they are finding themselves in this situation based on assurances they got from me," Obama said in the interview, conducted at the White House.




http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/president-americans-losing-health-care-article-1.1510222#ixzz2k3mUfICy
 
:rofl2:

The fools are the people that believed they would be able to keep their policies like Obama promised.
 
where the fuck do you think this idiocy is taking you asshole?


no the fuck where


racists will have to leave this country soon if they don't want to be scorned in every corner of life.
 
People who buy insurance on their own are at risk of being booted from their current policies because their plans don't meet the standards of the new law.

Obama has previously argued those affected can buy better, and often cheaper, insurance under Obamacare. But he had failed to address claims by Republicans and even many members of his own party that he mislead Americans in the push to win passage of the Affordable Care Act.




http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/president-americans-losing-health-care-article-1.1510222#ixzz2k3mzVC4s
 
you do realize these companies are Lying about the AHA to get people to spend more on their policies right?

If they had a Cadillac plan then it would have met the ACA standards you fool

Are you saying the people didn't really like them? So you and Obama know what is best for everyone and are willing to share your compassion on the rubes? How noble of you
 
where the fuck do you think this idiocy is taking you asshole?


no the fuck where


racists will have to leave this country soon if they don't want to be scorned in every corner of life.


:rofl2:

Your usual incoherent ramblings are even more so today, I have no idea what the fuck you just said.
 
where will you get voters from next election?


lies about deathpanels and this crap is not going to win you new voters
 
where will you get voters from next election?


lies about deathpanels and this crap is not going to win you new voters


From all those who got their insurance policies cancelled by Obamacare and are paying twice what they used to pay.
 
:rofl2:

The fools are the people that believed they would be able to keep their policies like Obama promised.


My wife and I, along with millions of others CAN keep our current policy as Obama promised.

WHOOPSIE!!

People are having to look for new policies because the INSURANCE COMPANIES forced them out.

Angry Righties blame Obama for the actions of PRIVATE CORPORATIONS.
 
My wife and I, along with millions of others CAN keep our current policy as Obama promised.

WHOOPSIE!!

People are having to look for new policies because the INSURANCE COMPANIES forced them out.
Angry Righties blame Obama for the actions of PRIVATE CORPORATIONS.

:rofl2:

Being on welfare and getting Medicaid does not qualify you as having to pay for a real health insurance policy.



Covered California requires that insurers doing business on the exchange cancel existing contracts at the end of this year -- rather than renew them -- if they don’t meet the requirements of the act.

Janice Rocco, the department’s deputy commissioner for health policy and reform, said she anticipates that by year’s end, between 900,000 and 1 million Californians will see their individual health insurance policies canceled.
 
My wife and I, along with millions of others CAN keep our current policy as Obama promised.

WHOOPSIE!!

People are having to look for new policies because the INSURANCE COMPANIES forced them out.

Angry Righties blame Obama for the actions of PRIVATE CORPORATIONS.

As you've mentioned before, you're both covered by your wife's employer-provided policy. That has nothing to do with the current crisis, the "individual mandate."

Come back next year when the "employer mandate" kicks in.

You really don't even have the most rudimentary comprehension of the issue at all. You should just sign off and lurk for a year or two, and come back when you have a clue.
 
As you've mentioned before, you're both covered by your wife's employer-provided policy. That has nothing to do with the current crisis, the "individual mandate."

Come back next year when the "employer mandate" kicks in.

You really don't even have the most rudimentary comprehension of the issue at all. You should just sign off and lurk for a year or two, and come back when you have a clue.


If you had even the most basic grasp of the discussion you'd have responded with FACTS and not more petty ad homs.

Sadly, you opted for the choice that at once highlights your stupidity as well as your inability to counter anything I said.
 
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