I kept my Healthcare coverage after I retired from a 25 year career. My Co-Payments are relatively low for instance, the Co-Payment for annual check ups is only 25.00 and Rx are only a few dollars. Iam very reluctant to even think about exploring the Exchange site. I have heard people talk about concerns that employer based plans may go up so high that employees may have no choice but to go through the exchange. I hope it doesn't come to that, and it shouldn't. If Obamacare pitches that it renders Healthcare affordable then it shouldn't adversely affect established Healthcare that is already affordable. Until Obamacare stands the test of time, I don't think anyone can truly predict how it will affect the future affordability of Healthcare. Originally Posted by acp5762You should expect your plan premiums to go up and your copays along with deductibles. "Obamacare" is not about "price control" ... some employers may well phase out retirement insurance and opt for paying the penalty, which will be less expensive.
I kept my Healthcare coverage after I retired from a 25 year career....If Obamacare pitches that it renders Healthcare affordable then it shouldn't adversely affect established Healthcare that is already affordable. Originally Posted by acp5762
Affordable for who? You or your former employer? Originally Posted by DooveBefore you jump down my back, i may have misread your post.
You should expect your plan premiums to go up and your copays along with deductibles. "Obamacare" is not about "price control" ... some employers may well phase out retirement insurance and opt for paying the penalty, which will be less expensive.Obamacare is not about price control, is a true statement. It is about getting the self employed carpenter, plumbers, salesman, etc insured. These people are left out of the individual market pre - Obamacare. They don't work for a large company so they are left out of the Employer based GROUP rate market. In the individual market the health insurance provider picks and chooses who he will insure. If you have high blood sugar or high triglycerides (fat) you will be denied coverage. This is how the health insurance company limits their exposure to risk pre - Obamacare. Now with Obamacare the health insurance companies can't deny coverage to someone due to pre-existing conditions. The health insurance companies will have to take on more risk, when selling policies on the individual market(1-800-number) or when they sell policies on the government exchanges. Having to take on more risk, can or will drive up the prices for some plans. On the Obama exchanges there are a variety of options from cheap to expensive. A 50 year old can get a policy at Coventry Insurance for $50 per month with a $1,500 deductible. This would be better than having no insurance. You can also find a plan that has all the bells and whistles, that will cost more. It's true that congress is exempted from Obamacare and that should be changed. If the estimate from the CBO is correct and Obamacare insures an additional 20 million people, then the program would be a success. Not all companies are selling policies on the government exchanges, Atena and United HealthCare are not selling policies on the Obamacare exchanges, they prefer to not expose themselves to taking on high risk clients who have pre-existing conditions. They are still selling insurance through the employer based group plans. It's true that those on the far left want a single payer system like Canada or Great Britain, but congress put into law a system that is more like Romeycare for Mass and the health insurance companies are still the focal point of how people are insured and claims will be paid out.
Several things are driving the "phasing out" of private insurance as we know it, one is the penalty is less than the cost of the annual premiums (which gives the incentive to opt out of covering employees); the agency regulations will increase the required coverage to a level that will drive up the cost to a prohibitive level (it's doing that now); employers are able to reduce the hours of employees to avoid compliance with the law; the use of medicare/medicade provider codes and provider payment levels in the "pool insurance coverage" will drive away the "better" providers and leave a group of providers who accept the lower income level status with a risk of inferior service and care; and some on here will soon discover that "the regulations" are shifting to REQUIRE home visits by carriers to "advise" insureds on how to live a healthier life and maintain a healthier home environment to lower the necessity of medical care (and thereby costs) for the carriers with the "home visit" data included in your "on line" medical record.
I can always buy cheaper tires for my vehicles. The question is do I want to "run on them."
You must remember that those who architect this grand scheme ...
..... want a one-horse program aka "one-payer" system with government coverage modeled after medicare/Medicaid from which .....
" the use of medicare/medicade provider codes and provider payment levels will drive away the "better" providers and leave a group of providers who accept the lower income level status with a risk of inferior service and care." It's happening right now .. left and right.
A problem is:
They (the architects) won't have the same coverage as the "peasants" .. you and me! Originally Posted by LexusLover
Obamacare is not about price control, is a true statement. It is about getting the self employed carpenter, plumbers, salesman, etc insured. These people are left out of the individual market pre - Obamacare. They don't work for a large company so they are left out of the Employer based GROUP rate market. In the individual market the health insurance provider picks and chooses who he will insure. If you have high blood sugar or high triglycerides (fat) you will be denied coverage. This is how the health insurance company limits their exposure to risk pre - Obamacare. Now with Obamacare the health insurance companies can't deny coverage to someone due to pre-existing conditions. The health insurance companies will have to take on more risk, when selling policies on the individual market(1-800-number) or when they sell policies on the government exchanges. Having to take on more risk, can or will drive up the prices for some plans. On the Obama exchanges there are a variety of options from cheap to expensive. A 50 year old can get a policy at Coventry Insurance for $50 per month with a $1,500 deductible. This would be better than having no insurance. You can also find a plan that has all the bells and whistles, that will cost more. It's true that congress is exempted from Obamacare and that should be changed. If the estimate from the CBO is correct and Obamacare insures an additional 20 million people, then the program would be a success. Not all companies are selling policies on the government exchanges, Atena and United HealthCare are not selling policies on the Obamacare exchanges, they prefer to not expose themselves to taking on high risk clients who have pre-existing conditions. They are still selling insurance through the employer based group plans. It's true that those on the far left want a single payer system like Canada or Great Britain, but congress put into law a system that is more like Romeycare for Mass and the health insurance companies are still the focal point of how people are insured and claims will be paid out. Originally Posted by flghtr65Can you, in a cogent manner, possibly explain how obligating American taxpayers to cover the costs of incidental hospital visits, pre-Odumbocare, by the occassional uninsured patient differs significantly from mandating that American taxpayers cover the costs of perpetual, annual Odumbocare subsidies for every uninsured citizen?
Obamacare is not about price control, is a true statement. It is about getting the self employed carpenter, plumbers, salesman, etc insured. These people are left out of the individual market pre - Obamacare. They don't work for a large company so they are left out of the Employer based GROUP rate market. In the individual market the health insurance provider picks and chooses who he will insure. If you have high blood sugar or high triglycerides (fat) you will be denied coverage. This is how the health insurance company limits their exposure to risk pre - Obamacare. Now with Obamacare the health insurance companies can't deny coverage to someone due to pre-existing conditions. The health insurance companies will have to take on more risk, when selling policies on the individual market(1-800-number) or when they sell policies on the government exchanges. Having to take on more risk, can or will drive up the prices for some plans. On the Obama exchanges there are a variety of options from cheap to expensive. A 50 year old can get a policy at Coventry Insurance for $50 per month with a $1,500 deductible. This would be better than having no insurance. You can also find a plan that has all the bells and whistles, that will cost more. It's true that congress is exempted from Obamacare and that should be changed. If the estimate from the CBO is correct and Obamacare insures an additional 20 million people, then the program would be a success. Not all companies are selling policies on the government exchanges, Atena and United HealthCare are not selling policies on the Obamacare exchanges, they prefer to not expose themselves to taking on high risk clients who have pre-existing conditions. They are still selling insurance through the employer based group plans. It's true that those on the far left want a single payer system like Canada or Great Britain, but congress put into law a system that is more like Romeycare for Mass and the health insurance companies are still the focal point of how people are insured and claims will be paid out. Originally Posted by flghtr65donk
I kept my Healthcare coverage after I retired from a 25 year career. My Co-Payments are relatively low for instance, the Co-Payment for annual check ups is only 25.00 and Rx are only a few dollars. Iam very reluctant to even think about exploring the Exchange site. I have heard people talk about concerns that employer based plans may go up so high that employees may have no choice but to go through the exchange. I hope it doesn't come to that, and it shouldn't. If Obamacare pitches that it renders Healthcare affordable then it shouldn't adversely affect established Healthcare that is already affordable. Until Obamacare stands the test of time, I don't think anyone can truly predict how it will affect the future affordability of Healthcare. Originally Posted by acp5762
Not providing insurance before there was a penalty was less expensive too. So why did they wait? Originally Posted by DooveBecause Obaminable announced an intention to extend the implementation of the penalty AND
Obamacare is not about price control, is a true statement. It is about getting the self employed carpenter, plumbers, salesman, etc insured. These people are left out of the individual market pre - Obamacare. Originally Posted by flghtr65What difference does it make if they cannot afford to pay for care up to their HIGH deductible and they can't pay the premiums they are ultimately charged by the CARRIERS?
If you have an individual plan, you have no choice but to purchase new insurance under the requirements of Obamacare; you do not have to go through the exchange, but your current plan will be required to meet the requirements of the ACA. Which means higher premiums for most. Originally Posted by WhirlawayWhat you just wrote is not true as to "higher premiums" ... what is actually happening (I stress HAPPENING as in not completed) .... carriers' underwriters are evaluating the REQUIREMENTS MANDATED for policies and adjusting other variables and services offered in policies previously plus RENEGOTIATING contracts with providers on a take it or leave it basis ... just like medicare and medicaid "friendly" providers .. at the "end of the day" they will adjust coverages to maintain premium levels or drop premium levels and/or raise copays and deductibles to do the same and keep providers contracted. If you talk to providers personally, not pundits on TV, you will hear nothing, but when one talks to the billing department on medicare and Medicaid you will hear about the "coding" games going on and as of mid-September the CARRIERS and PROVIDERS still didn't have a completed CODING MANUAL with which to review coverage and rates ... and they weren't to get any until years end ....