Smile! You’ve Got Socialized Healthcare!

gopher

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Jun 26, 2005
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more reason to smile about socialized medicine:


States Refusing To Expand Medicaid Will Forfeit More Than $400 Billion Over The Next Decade | ThinkProgress









If the 24 states that have refused to expand Medicaid under Obamacare don’t change that stance, they’ll lose out on about $420 billion dollars in federal funding between 2013 and 2022, according to new research from the Urban Institute. The hospitals located in those states will also miss out on a projected $167.8 billion boost from the patients who could have become insured through expansion.
The health reform law, which was designed with a national Medicaid expansion in mind, specifically allocates additional funding to finance the cost of adding more people to states’ Medicaid rolls. But since the Supreme Court ruled the expansion to be optional, only half the country is actually implementing this particular provision. Health officials were initially optimistic that the “unusually generous” federal funds would help encourage resistant lawmakers to expand Medicaid; however, that hasn’t turned out to be the case for many GOP-controlled states.
Many politicians have cited financial concerns to justify their decision to reject expansion, saying that it’s irresponsible to pour more money into an inefficient government program. But since the federal government will foot more than 90 percent of the costs of the Medicaid expansion over its first nine years, the new report finds that about $13.41 in federal dollars will flow into states for every $1 they spend on Medicaid.
 

gopher

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Jun 26, 2005
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New Medicaid enrollments top 7 million under Obamacare


More than seven million Americans have gained health coverage through government programs including Medicaid since enrollment in Obamacare health insurance was launched October 1, the U.S. administration said on Friday.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said 7.2 million new participants in Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program by June brought overall Medicaid enrollment to 66 million people. […]

Two dozen states, many led by Republicans opposed to Obamacare, have not expanded Medicaid coverage. HHS said 5.7 million low-income people remain uninsured in those states.

In the states that have expanded, enrollment has increased 18.5 percent, compared to just 4 percent in the states that didn't, HHS said. This follows Gallup's report showing that Arkansas and Kentucky had the largest drop in the uninsured rate in the country, thanks to the fact that they both expanded Medicaid.



--- more lives saved every day thanx to ACA ---
 

BaalsTears

Senate Member
Jan 25, 2011
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Who would have guessed:

ObamaCare Enrollment Is Shrinking, Top Insurers Say

Aetna's (NYSE:AET) ObamaCare exchange statistics should clear up any doubt as to why the Obama Administration has been tight-lipped about enrollment since celebrating 8 million sign-ups in mid-April.
Reality, evidence suggests, could require quite a come-down from those lofty claims.
The nation's third-largest health insurer had 720,000 people sign up for exchange coverage as of May 20, a spokesman confirmed to IBD. At the end of June, it had fewer than 600,000 paying customers. Aetna expects that to fall to "just over 500,000" by the end of the year....


Read More At Investor's Business Daily: ObamaCare Exchange Enrollment Is Shrinking, Top Insurers Say - Investors.com
Follow us: @IBDinvestors on Twitter | InvestorsBusinessDaily on Facebook
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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Arkansas Sees Huge ACA Benefits, Texas Pays


Arkansas had a bigger drop this year in the percentage of its adult residents who lack insurance than any other state, a survey released Tuesday found.
The survey by Gallup Inc. found that 12.4 percent of Arkansas adults lacked insurance as of mid year this year, a drop of 10.1 percentage points compared with 22.5 percent who lacked insurance last year.

As a result, the state went from having the second-highest rate of uninsured adults in the country, ahead of only Texas, to being tied with New Hampshire at No. 22 in the percentage of adults who reported having insurance.

[…]

In a statement, Gov. Mike Beebe noted that the Gallup survey indicates the number of uninsured adults in the state fell by 45 percent.

“When we worked with the Arkansas Legislature to pass the Private Option, we said it would make Arkansas a national leader for innovative health-care solutions, and this report proves that to be true,” Beebe said. “Even though not everyone was happy with the circumstances surrounding the Affordable Care Act in our state, we showed that we could find a bipartisan path to make the best of the situation and help our people.”

Amy Webb, an Arkansas Department of Human Services spokesman, said in an email, “The Private Option is the reason Arkansas is at the top of the list.

“We can’t say exactly how many enrollees were uninsured before, but we know these people are the working poor, and it’s likely many couldn’t afford insurance or it wasn’t offered to them.”

She noted that Texas, which did not expand Medicaid, had the highest rate of adults who lacked insurance in the country last year and as of mid year this year, although the rate fell from 27 percent of adults last year to 24 percent this year.

As discussed previously, that 3 percent drop is due in large part to more people just discussing healthcare during so many heated Obamacare battles. But as Arkansas has proven, so much more is left to be done to help the people of Texas. Literally millions of people are being denied access to healthcare because of short-sighted decisions from a few Republican lawmakers in Austin.



more coverage, more lives saved
 

gopher

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Red States Pressured To Expand Medicaid As Care Contrasts Emerge - Forbes


“The thing I’m thrilled about most of all is that this is going to make Kentuckians so much more healthy over the long term, and it`s going to move our state so far up in the rankings we are going to leave a lot of these states in the dust that are refusing to face reality,” Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, a Democrat, told Chris Mathews last week on MSNBC’s Hardball.

But it’s not all partisan when it comes to spotlighting which non-expansion states are being left behind.

A report last week from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation-funded Urban Institute said states that haven’t expanded will “miss out” on more than $420 billion in federal dollars between now and 2022. In addition, the states that don’t expand are losing out on increased employment in the health care industry from newly insured patients who have help paying for services.

“States are literally leaving billions of dollars on the table that would support their hospitals and stimulate the rest of their economies,” the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Kathy Hempstead said in a report accompanying the Urban Institute report.





more coverage, more lives saved
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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health care for the sick and needy is "welfare"?

if so, what do you call the annual freebies given to elite employees of Fortune 500 companies whose employers take medical cost deductions on their 1120 corporate forms?
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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health care for the sick and needy is "welfare"?

They've always received health care.

No matter... people are finding out they are not qualifying for these subsidies they were promised by the thousands. Oh well.

if so, what do you call the annual freebies given to elite employees of Fortune 500 companies whose employers take medical cost deductions on their 1120 corporate forms?

Oh those employer plans are going to get walloped soon. The employer mandate has not kicked in yet. Why do you think Obama wants to delay it again going into November?


Massachusetts took the expansion and we're in deep **** with our health care.
 

Grievous

Time Out
Jul 28, 2014
1,009
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Whitby
What would have been a better plan for expanded healthcare coverage in the US.


I have heard a lot of criticism about the affordable health care act, some of it warranted.


What I don't hear are solutions to the problem.....just politics.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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What would have been a better plan for expanded healthcare coverage in the US.


I have heard a lot of criticism about the affordable health care act, some of it warranted.


What I don't hear are solutions to the problem.....just politics.


Expanded coverage would have been the better plan. As shown in all the links I have posted costs are going down, coverage is saving lives, and when polled the majority of Republicans (74% to be exact) said they, like Democrats, are satisfied with their new plans. It is good to know that you no longer have to be an elite employee of a Fortune 500 company to get coverage.
 

JLM

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Nov 27, 2008
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Why haven't health insurance costs decreased by an average of $2,500 per household per year as Obama promised? Was that another Obama lie?


How could it possibly? As these schemes gain popularity the list of beneficiaries increases just as a snowball gathers more snow while rolling down hill! -:)
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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Republican campaigners giving up their attack ads on Obamacare:





GOP Attacks On Obamacare Fizzle In Key Senate Races (many Americans are benefiting from the law)


Obamacare is fading as a cudgel against Democrats in key battleground races poised to determine control of the Senate, according to a new analysis by Bloomberg News.

Since the law's botched rollout last fall, Republicans have been licking their chops over the prospect of riding Obamacare failures to victory in the 2014 elections. But now that the law has recovered and is providing insurance coverage to millions of Americans, issue ads involving the health care law are slowly disappearing in key states like North Carolina, Louisiana and Arkansas.

In North Carolina, Obamacare was mentioned in 54 percent of issue ads in April; it fell to 27 percent in July, per data from Kantar Media’s Campaign Media Analysis Group.

In Louisiana, Obamacare fell to 41 percent of top five issue ads in July; in Arkansas it dropped to 23 percent, according to CMAG. The issue dominated the airwaves in both states in April.

GOP Attacks On Obamacare Fizzle In Key Senate Races


Obamacare Losing Power as Campaign Weapon in Ad Battles
Obamacare Losing Power as Campaign Weapon in Ad Battles - Bloomberg

(snip)
The shift -- also taking place in competitive states such as Arkansas and Louisiana -- shows Republicans are easing off their strategy of criticizing Democrats over the Affordable Care Act now that many Americans are benefiting from the law and the measure is unlikely to be repealed.

“The Republican Party is realizing you can’t really hang your hat on it,” said Andrew Taylor, a political science professor at North Carolina State University. “It just isn’t the kind of issue it was.”


Why Republicans Have Stopped Talking About Obamacare In Campaign Ads


(snip)
357,584 signed up for coverage the the federal exchange; 73,898 were determined to be eligible for Medicaid coverage. According to WalletHub, North Carolina’s uninsurance rate dropped by 2.96 percent from 19.64 percent to 16.68 percent.

(snip)
Arkansas
43,446 signed up for coverage through the federal exchange; 63,465 were determined to be eligible for Medicaid coverage. According to Gallup, “the rate of people without health insurance fell from 22.5 percent in 2013 to 12.4 percent in mid-2014.”

(snip)
Louisiana
101,778 Louisiana residents signed up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, but most of those enrollees already had coverage. According to one survey, “the percentage of uninsured in Louisiana dropped from 22.41 percent to 20.91 percent. That still leaves more than one of every five residents in the state with no insurance.”

Why Republicans Have Stopped Talking About Obamacare In Campaign Ads | ThinkProgress






ACA = saving lives every day - that's the patriotic way!
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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from Wally's link:







In the majority of states the increase was zero or minimal - in others the numbers do not reflect federal subsidies which make up for any rate increase therefore making coverage more affordable.

By contrast, prior to Obamacare the rate increases were far higher and fewer people were covered:









therefore, if anything, Wally's post is an affirmation of ACA


By the way, Fortune 500 companies still get their annual medical insurance cost deductions on form 1120 which means taxpayers are still subsidizing them.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Mar 18, 2013
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therefore, if anything, Wally's post is an affirmation of ACA


By the way, Fortune 500 companies still get their annual medical insurance cost deductions on form 1120 which means taxpayers are still subsidizing them.

Foolish mortal! Do you think the mighty Walter can be swayed by your Kenyan Muslim socialist facts?


 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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from Wally's link:







In the majority of states the increase was zero or minimal - in others the numbers do not reflect federal subsidies which make up for any rate increase therefore making coverage more affordable.
Wrong once again. The states which are not coloured were not included in the survey. Typical lefty cherry picking on your part.
BHOcare - bankrupting the US.