Why do these people think it is such a bad thing that I get good insurance from my employer as a benefit. Why do they want to do away with that? What benefit is there for me to uncouple the insurance from my employer? Because I sure as hell wouldn't be able to afford the extra 15k/year that my insurance would cost if I were covering it alone.And I sure as hell wouldn't qualify for any subsidies.
11/19/2014 8:20:58 PM
but but what if you were uncoupled, meybe git a raise, and healfcare wuz phree
11/19/2014 8:24:58 PM
^^
11/19/2014 8:51:56 PM
Employers could still earmark funds to go toward healthcare as a benefit, even pay their portion by direct payment to insurance company, they could even have a preferred insurer if they want. It would still be more free market because the end user would be the one making the decision who to go with.
11/19/2014 10:16:55 PM
The Burlington Free Press reported earlier today that Gruber will finish his consultant work for the state, but the paychecks will be cut off. As the state health reform chief Lawrence Miller explained, “I have told Mr. Gruber that I expect his team to complete the work that we need to provide the legislature and Vermonters with a public health care financing plan.”http://www.mediaite.com/online/vermont-to-stop-paying-gruber-for-health-care-consultant-work/
11/20/2014 2:44:57 AM
surprise that some powerful braniac is a conceded douchebag
11/20/2014 11:27:06 AM
What if it was Gruber's plan all along for these statements to leak, to force some of the reforms to be made?
11/20/2014 11:38:08 AM
Imma blow some minds here, but this is a good thing.http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/15/us/politics/birth-control-challenge-rejected-.html?action=click&contentCollection=Politics®ion=Footer&module=MoreInSection&pgtype=article
11/22/2014 7:45:30 PM
11/22/2014 8:24:43 PM
11/24/2014 12:05:56 PM
Does Puerto Rico get subsidies? Or American Samoa? United States Minor Outlying Islands? These are not states but somehow are still in the US.[Edited on November 24, 2014 at 10:37 PM. Reason : Just change the subject from 1311 1312. The horse is dead and the Courts will cook it.]
11/24/2014 10:35:00 PM
^ It seems territories are not eligible, but they also ended up be exempted from many of the provisions of the PPACA anyway. Oddly enough, they, too were defined as "States" by Section 1323 for the purpose of tax credits. Recent news articles seem to suggest that this has been rescinded, though I'm not sure how. Anyway, this, too, shoots holes in the notion that any and all references to an Exchange are defined as having been "established by a State"; otherwise, why would it need to be made explicit here?
11/24/2014 10:54:06 PM
Hahahahah figures, I honestly didn't even bother to that look that up. Poor example of the absurdity your interpretation of the law leads to, but frankly the examples I had already given written by actually law professionals were enough. Anyway, you're just contradicting yourself now,
11/25/2014 7:32:23 PM
most people are less concerned with the opinion on state run exchanges vs federal than how much their plan costs
11/26/2014 2:02:09 AM
11/28/2014 11:35:14 PM
11/29/2014 12:57:53 AM
Do you realize that there is no internal consistency to your entire argument?
12/2/2014 1:45:54 PM
tl;dr
12/2/2014 3:40:49 PM
12/3/2014 12:31:35 AM
12/4/2014 11:26:19 AM
By the way, if it were up to me, not only would subsidies in States that didn't establish their own Exchanges be disallowed, they should be exempt from the whole law. Let their residents wallow in the muck of the pre-ACA healthcare industry, until they (literally) get sick of it and replace the assholes who don't want to play along. Right now, Republican politicians can rail against Obamacare with almost no real consequences or backlash from the people of their States, since they enjoy most of the benefits anyway...http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20141203/NEWS/312039948
12/4/2014 12:14:30 PM
In terms of policy, I am not willing to accept a lower uninsured rate at the cost of increased economic inequality.
12/4/2014 12:25:14 PM
You're going to have to explain how mostly poors having their healthcare costs lowered increases income inequality. That's 90% of what this law does, make healthcare accessible to a bunch of poor people, mostly minorities. Yes, young healthy adult males have in general seen their healthcare costs increase under Obamacare, but they were doing pretty well off to begin with. That's not increasing income equality, it's just decreasing it in a way that adversely affects one specific demographic. Even that's unclear, because in the case of that healthy young adult male ever suffering a medical emergency, he'll be in much better shape today than he would have been 5 years ago.[Edited on December 4, 2014 at 12:34 PM. Reason : :]
12/4/2014 12:33:28 PM
12/4/2014 2:32:57 PM
Age matters, people our age are underwriting old people (via spending ratio caps) even though old people are better positioned economically/financially[Edited on December 4, 2014 at 3:22 PM. Reason : .]
12/4/2014 3:03:38 PM
12/6/2014 12:10:33 AM
Stop posting "Got it" at the end of sentences. You sound like an uneducated hack when you do that. Or, was that your intent?
12/6/2014 1:04:13 PM
Didn't mean to upset you. Got it.
12/6/2014 2:18:23 PM
Got it.
12/6/2014 2:48:09 PM
12/6/2014 5:10:02 PM
http://www.nationalmemo.com/republicans-still-think-youre-stupid/for those who were outraged!1!1 at that Gruber dude
12/11/2014 1:00:18 PM
I don't know if the ACA will do much of anything other but for fucks sake the present 2 payer system is just dogshit. Go to any doctors office, clinic, or hospital in America at any time and someone is in there in varying states of being mystified about the fucking insurance and payments.I have been fortunate enough to be really healthy in my first 30 years. I also had great jobs where if I did need health care the copay was low as hell so I didn't have to think about it. At my present employer the plan we have is a consumer focused high deductible + HSA, which is still a good plan but not a Cadillac by any means. Twice this year I have been burned by bullshit regarding coverage. The first was mostly my fault I suppose. We had a child this year and one of the tests were for CF and DS. The clinic folks gave us the codes to see if it was covered and I read the damn doctors clinical text of a description on Aetnas website and thought it was covered. The folks at the ObGyn said that most insurances covered the test. Well, $900 later out of my pocket it was covered. Yes, it was my fault for not calling and confirming but for fucks sake why is this shit left up to the consumer to navigate the complexities of health care? It is beyond stupid that I have to be on the god damn phone for 15 minutes in the middle of my work day and ultimately speak to an ESL on how a procedure that is recommended will cost.Example two. I tend to grind my front teeth in my sleep and the dentist recommended getting some composite added to the tops to build them back up and to provide 10-15 years of protection. They should me an estimate ahead of time that had me paying like $200 bucks and I said let's do the treatment. Afterwards I ended up paying $235, which is still a pretty good deal for 10+ years of keeping my teeth from self destructing. I get the bill from the dentist and it says "The insurance company paid $527 LESS THAN WE HOPED"? WHAT IN THE FUCK IS THIS SHIT?. Certainly, this sounds like the insurance company fucked up somewhere. Now, I get to spend who knows how many minutes playing phone roulette to figure out how this is screwed and I can guarantee you that I'll ultimately have to pay regardless because the consumer is just fucked regardless.And this shit happens over and over and over 10,000 times a day across the only industrialized nation in the world and we had idiots in DC vote how many times to try and kill the only real attempt in decades to fix this fucked up piece of shit? Holy fuck. We really are screwed.
12/13/2014 10:45:49 AM
i think it's pretty fucked up that you can get billed by 3rd parties that you had no involvement in selecting and know nothing about. if the doctor sends off stuff for lab work, the lab should bill the doctor and then the doctor should bill you; it shouldn't be a patient's responsibility to identify any 3rd parties used by the primary doctor and then have to follow up with them to make sure they have been paid. the doctor should include all of those 3rd party costs in any estimates they give, they shouldn't be a surprise to a patient who knows nothing about them. in any other industry that shit would not fly.
12/13/2014 1:22:56 PM
^^ now, imagine how much better it would have been if the dentist could have said "we charge X for this". Welcome to the stupidity of insurance "covering" piddling things.
12/14/2014 10:14:59 PM
Unfortunately I agree with burro to some significant extent. However, the rhetoric I was reading about the ACA was that burro and the ACA are also on the same page here. The logic was that higher deductibles will create a mass of consumers who will have a direct incentive to negotiate prices and shop around, and this will keep prices under control.I remain skeptical. I agree that they've likely shifted higher deductible and co-pay costs to the consumer, but it doesn't necessarily follow that doing so makes the system less byzantine. It's entirely plausible that the practices will now use even more convoluted systems because a) there's poor regulation for consumer price-awareness and b) the consumer themselves will spend less time fighting.Essentially, price transparency is unlikely to happen by just moving to a model of people directly paying for all their own health care. If businesses aren't strictly held accountable for charging what the consumer consented to, then the profit motive simply dictates that they overcharge as much as possible. Even if it comes from the patient's pocket.My own impression is that such a system isn't even compatible with the workplace culture of our medical system (or in any nation for that matter). Mandating something like signed agreements for all costs in advance would be taken as an affront to the purpose and independence of the medical profession.
12/15/2014 10:40:27 AM
wtf, BCBS. HC.gov says a plan gets XXXX coverage (drug and hospital and ER max payment) and the pdf on BCBS's website says something different, for the same plan.
12/15/2014 2:53:09 PM
12/15/2014 2:57:43 PM
^
12/16/2014 1:54:55 PM
12/22/2014 9:52:35 AM
It's just fucking stupid.I call the dentist and they say : "we don't really know what the insurance company is going to pay until we submit the charges"I call the insurance company and they say : "the provider can call in and see if a procedure is covered"I ask is that what most providers do : "well, they do it as a courtesy"And if they don't it's up to me to call : "yes sir..."And I'm supposed to know how to communicate to you what a given procedure is they are recommending : "well, you can fax in the treatment plans which should have the information we need to give you an accurate estimate"And in this case, why didn't my plan cover the procedures : "sure you have a preventative treatment plan at in network providers, like basic cleanings, but not fillings, crowns, etc"The dentist said this procedure would prevent me from grinding my teeth to a pulp and wouldn't need to be done again for 15-20 years, does this preventative treatment not count as preventative : "well sir I meant that just basic cleanings are covered"This happens every fucking day to probably 10s if not 100s of thousands of us...this is what the free market is.
12/22/2014 3:41:45 PM
even among the low bar set for insurance, dental insurance finds a way to be consistently terrible
12/22/2014 5:20:11 PM
^^^ But insurance companies aren't doing this on their own. They are doing it with the protection and enabling of the government. That enabling comes in the form of mandates on insurance coverage and a reliance on the insurance model to cover basic medical costs. I agree that it's absurd that we can't get a decent up-front estimate, and I wouldn't be opposed to fixing that, but passing a law that says doctors have to do that won't accomplish anything. You have to get rid of the layers of stupid in our healthcare system, and then doctors will gladly provide those kinds of estimates, without a law saying they have to.^^ Calling our current healthcare system a "free market" is absurd in almost every sense of the word. Practically nothing about the status quo is "free market."]
12/22/2014 10:29:14 PM
How is it NOT a free market? Are you drunk?
12/23/2014 5:57:32 PM
How is it not a free market? I dunno, for starters, the government mandated that EVERY FUCKING PERSON IN THE COUNTRY MUST BUY AN INSURANCE PLAN. In what world is forced participation a "free market?" Second, there is massive gov't regulation on both the state and federal level which mandates what each and every plan must cover, at a minimum. Third, you have two gov't run plans (medicare and medicaid) covering a large percentage of the population. Fourth, the federal gov't is forcing employers to pay for the vast majority of health insurance plans. In what way is ANY of these a "free market" at work? And these don't even begin to get in to arbitrary restrictions on the supply of doctors via residency funding, the FDA's stranglehold on medical R&D, mandating that ERs treat anyone and everyone who comes into the door, and so on and so forth. To call what we have in the US a "free market" is an insult to the intelligence of anyone who has even the most remote understanding of economics.Your argument that "if it weren't a free market, the gov't would do such and such" is patently absurd. You are suggesting that, despite the possible existence of any other intrusions into the market by the gov't, the fact that it hasn't intruded in one specific particular way that you want it to means it's a totally laissez faire system, and that's completely ridiculous. We have copious examples of shitty and ill-advised government regulation in all kinds of markets and glaring examples of sorely needed regulations that are completely absent; what makes this situation any different in your mind?And the gov't collusion has EVERYTHING to do with you not being able to get a realistic estimate. The insurers lobby the gov't for regulations that favour them, many of which obscure the true costs and others which make it impossible for a doctor to offer you a cash price. Why would insurers want to have a system where they are the middleman providing payment? I think the answer is patently obvious. If anything, the fact that it isn't a free market is why the pricing isn't clear, and is why it's so damned confusing. Neither the gov't nor the insurers have an incentive to make the costs to the consumer clear, so they don't fucking do it. If it were a free market, then you would have doctors falling all over themselves trying to provide that information so they could actually compete. Instead, they can't provide it, because they don't know what the insurers are going to do, much less what the insurers are going to do at each level of service (doctor, labs, radiology, etc).And I do think providers, if given the option and the ability to do so, would gladly provide estimates. Every other business in the world does so. Why in the hell would healthcare be any different than the rest? If a doctor can perform a procedure at price X and everybody else is doing it at the same quality but at price 2X, you can be damned sure that first doctor is going to advertise the hell out of that price. Healthcare might be different in some ways, but it's not going to buck the trend of price transparency absent any other forces making it do so. It just so happens we have massive layers of bureaucracy and red tape which insulate and hide consumers from costs, and then we walk around shocked that consumers can't find out the potential costs of a procedure.]
12/24/2014 12:38:11 AM
Hahahahaha this is great,
12/24/2014 1:53:17 PM
reminds me of when Congress promised to take away federal highway funding if states didn't criminalize alcohol for people under 21...while the motive might be more admirable in the case of ACA, the method is the same
12/29/2014 4:51:57 PM
12/30/2014 1:15:33 AM
Oh, no it is majorly different than car insurance or homeowner's insurance. Homeowner's is not compulsory, unless you want a mortgage, and then it is the provider of the mortgage who requires it, not the gov't.Car insurance, too is not compulsory, unless you want to drive a car on state-maintained roads. There are millions of people across the country who have no car insurance payment. Hell, you could buy a moped and also avoid insurance, IIRC. And then, the nature of the car insurance is not that it is covering you or your car. In fact, you can easily purchase insurance that would pay absolutely nothing if you rammed your car into a tree and totaled it (assuming the tree was not appreciably damaged). The reason we have car insurance mandates for drivers is not to cover the driver (and it's certainly not for a "greater good"), but rather to cover the damage the driver might do to others by virtue of driving a car on state-maintained roads and to force someone to be responsible for that risk. If you can't afford the insurance yourself or you can't convince someone to insure you, then you probably shouldn't be driving in the first place. It's not a matter of being noble or pushing for the "greater good." You crash your car into a school from a state-maintained road, and you better believe the state will want you to pay for it. it's the cost of having the privilege of driving on state roads. And, again, if you want to opt-out of car insurance, you can: just don't drive a car on state roads. Drive it in a field, in the woods, whatever, just don't drive it on state roads and you're good.Contrast this with health insurance, where there is no "opt-out," other than to quit breathing. The ability to choose whether to be in or out of a market is a fundamental and necessary part of a market being free. The motivation for such a mandate is understandable, but that doesn't change the fact that the existence of such a mandate makes it laughable to call our healthcare system a "free market." Plus, the only reason we might even need that mandate is due to previous gov't intrusion in the healthcare market, where, regardless of whether you think it's a good idea or a bad idea, we mandated by law that hospitals treat any and all people who come into their doors, regardless if that person pays or not. There is nothing fundamental to the work of a hospital that makes this necessary. Name me any other part of our economy where you can refuse to pay and still consume a good or service, no questions asked. Any example you come up with is most certainly NOT a free market. Again, I don't care if you think this provision was a good idea or a bad idea, it is clearly another instance where our healthcare system is nothing resembling a free market. Moreover, it shows how, time and time again, gov't intrusions into markets beget more and more intrusions due to the side effects and disturbances caused by the previous intrusions.As aside to the hospital mandate, I think it was only necessary due to previous gov't intrusions which helped entrench insurance as the primary method of payment, putting hospitals in a tough spot to price in the charity they would otherwise have performed, due to the difficulties of insurance providers and repayment calculations. We see similar problems with doctors not being able to offer discounts for patients paying cash due to the effects it has on insurance repayments. I think hospitals would gladly provide that charity if they could, and they would do it in a much better way than they now do under the mandates. Likewise, I think doctors would gladly provide similar services for free (as they have done so in the past) to the needy. And I think that the main reason that doctors and hospitals don't do it is because they can't price it into the current payment system without harming themselves, and they can't price it in because we have a market that has been so distorted by gov't intrusions, no matter how well-meaning those intrusions may have been. Likewise, I would have no problem going to a provider who priced things a little higher so that he could provide free services to those who needed it. I would likely seek such a provider out. But that is world's different than having gov't mandate such things, or attempt to do that itself through higher taxes or prices or whatnot; one is free market, and the other is not, and that affects how successful such a program could actually be.]
12/30/2014 9:00:00 PM
12/30/2014 10:46:37 PM
12/31/2014 10:39:13 AM