In the first place - no.The Conservative wrote:How stupid do you have to be to not think that was the entire plan in the first place?GrumpyCatFace wrote:Agreed. But there are pros as well:C-Mag wrote:Obamacare is failing.
What we were sold
1. President Barack Obama promised that his reform proposal would cut typical family costs by $2,500 annually. That, of course, never materialized. The typical family today pays about 35 percent of their income for health care.
2. Obama told America his proposal would increase competition in the health insurance markets but that hasn’t happened either.
The downward slide in competition means that in 2017, consumers in 70 percent of U.S. counties are left with just one or two insurer options on the exchanges. The 70 percent figure is way up from 36 percent in 2016.
3. Forget about keeping your plan.
Perhaps the most famous health care promise of all, Obama’s promise: “If you like your health care plan, you’ll be able to keep your health care plan.” In fact, there were 37 instances where Obama or a high-ranking administration official repeated that infamous promise to keep you plan and your doctor.
Rarely has there been such a disconnect between rhetoric and reality. In 2014, the first year that Obamacare was fully implemented, the Associated Press reported that there were at least 4.7 million canceled policies across 30 states.
4. No, you can’t necessarily keep your doctor.
Obama promised patients that they would be able to keep their doctors. For many patients, that also turned out to be untrue.
Obamacare’s rising costs, and its limited flexibility in federally fixed benefit designs, resulted in plans resorting to narrow provider networks. Narrow networks limit access to doctors and other medical professionals as a way to contain costs.
- The system is now so bad that it could spur us into single-payer or something like it
- millions more people now have coverage (even if it sucks)
- insurance company profits are through the roof.
This is how it worked out, but it was not the initial intent. The entire process was hijacked by weak leadership, and corporate lobbyists (MUH PROFITZZZZZ)
Still hoping against hope that we go single payer soon.