Quote from: cariad on January 25, 2010, 09:40:23 AMQuoteNice cariad. One quibble you need work credits when you reach 65 too. If you ever want to blog dialysis reimbursement you'd be welcome on DSEN.Thanks, Bill, I'm enormously flattered. I am not back on dialysis, and have a 2nd transplant scheduled for March, but if you ever need a strongly worded opinion piece on transplant, I do believe I'm your gal. Work credits even at 65? Man, it's even worse than I thought.Kimcanada, monrein, thank you for your insight. Yes, the emotional toll can be immense, having to work up the courage and the self-esteem to advocate for yourself while ill is beyond the abilities of many people. I also imagine that it is no picnic for the providers. I have seen my GP - a lovely man, and my favorite doctor - turn people away for lack of a co-pay or cash to pay upfront. My GP is certainly cheaper than an ER, and will be able to deliver much better service, but he also occupies the bottom income rung for physicians and has to look after his own practice. Quote from: kellyt on January 24, 2010, 06:46:09 PMUSA will not turn you away, and there are ways to get amounts lowered or even written off in full. Drug companies will help you with medications, as well.I couldn't disagree with this statement more. I guess it depends on what you place under the "health care" umbrella, but I have heard of plenty of people turned away, especially with severe mental health issues. I have said this before, but in my decades of post-transplant life, I have had all but zero success getting help with prescription drugs. Having medical bills written off on your record affects all aspects of your financial life - ability to get loans, sometimes even ability to get jobs. I went to UW-Madison in 2002 for an appointment with a transplant nephrologist, after two separate calls to my insurance to make sure I was covered there. The reps said yes, absolutely. This was before those messages warning "even if the rep says you're covered, we might just surprise you." Well, United Healthcare took so long to process the claim, that I ended up going a second time 6 months later before getting a letter in the mail from the hospital saying "you were never covered here, and you now owe us $5000 for your two visits". We appealed it to the ends of the earth, finally were forced to settle for $3000, and it went on my husband's credit report as a settlement, since the insurance was group through his work. It is only now falling off his record. Murf, Bassman is right, it is impossible to discuss this without a political argument springing up. There are people here who work just as hard as anyone else, cannot get or afford insurance, pay taxes which include taxes for Medicare, pay toward the salaries of government employees (who almost always have excellent coverage) and then are allowed to fall into bankruptcy or worse when they need medical care. It is very political and very personal.I was talking about the ER mainly. I didn't even think as deedp as mental health. You're right. You may sit in the ER for hours, but you will eventually be seen. Good or bad. That's why most people with no insurance go to the ER for a cold and those with insurance pay for it. But you are right, Cariad.
QuoteNice cariad. One quibble you need work credits when you reach 65 too. If you ever want to blog dialysis reimbursement you'd be welcome on DSEN.Thanks, Bill, I'm enormously flattered. I am not back on dialysis, and have a 2nd transplant scheduled for March, but if you ever need a strongly worded opinion piece on transplant, I do believe I'm your gal. Work credits even at 65? Man, it's even worse than I thought.Kimcanada, monrein, thank you for your insight. Yes, the emotional toll can be immense, having to work up the courage and the self-esteem to advocate for yourself while ill is beyond the abilities of many people. I also imagine that it is no picnic for the providers. I have seen my GP - a lovely man, and my favorite doctor - turn people away for lack of a co-pay or cash to pay upfront. My GP is certainly cheaper than an ER, and will be able to deliver much better service, but he also occupies the bottom income rung for physicians and has to look after his own practice. Quote from: kellyt on January 24, 2010, 06:46:09 PMUSA will not turn you away, and there are ways to get amounts lowered or even written off in full. Drug companies will help you with medications, as well.I couldn't disagree with this statement more. I guess it depends on what you place under the "health care" umbrella, but I have heard of plenty of people turned away, especially with severe mental health issues. I have said this before, but in my decades of post-transplant life, I have had all but zero success getting help with prescription drugs. Having medical bills written off on your record affects all aspects of your financial life - ability to get loans, sometimes even ability to get jobs. I went to UW-Madison in 2002 for an appointment with a transplant nephrologist, after two separate calls to my insurance to make sure I was covered there. The reps said yes, absolutely. This was before those messages warning "even if the rep says you're covered, we might just surprise you." Well, United Healthcare took so long to process the claim, that I ended up going a second time 6 months later before getting a letter in the mail from the hospital saying "you were never covered here, and you now owe us $5000 for your two visits". We appealed it to the ends of the earth, finally were forced to settle for $3000, and it went on my husband's credit report as a settlement, since the insurance was group through his work. It is only now falling off his record. Murf, Bassman is right, it is impossible to discuss this without a political argument springing up. There are people here who work just as hard as anyone else, cannot get or afford insurance, pay taxes which include taxes for Medicare, pay toward the salaries of government employees (who almost always have excellent coverage) and then are allowed to fall into bankruptcy or worse when they need medical care. It is very political and very personal.
Nice cariad. One quibble you need work credits when you reach 65 too. If you ever want to blog dialysis reimbursement you'd be welcome on DSEN.
USA will not turn you away, and there are ways to get amounts lowered or even written off in full. Drug companies will help you with medications, as well.
Quote from: BigSky on January 25, 2010, 08:04:33 AMThe problem is people wanted reform and this bill was not reform.Instead it was 1000's of pages that was loaded with legal mumbo jumbo that was wide open to interruption down the road instead of being specific. The idea of taxing people health care benefits was probably one of the most harmful things to come up in the whole thing.They should have did a single payer system (something Baucus refused to even be truly heard) and also eliminated earned income credit. Use that money that is given out in earned income credit towards health care instead.Why not tax health benefits? I know my union insurance would be good enough that it would result in some tax but why not? They tax everything else provided through work - why not insurance? It's all pay to me.
The problem is people wanted reform and this bill was not reform.Instead it was 1000's of pages that was loaded with legal mumbo jumbo that was wide open to interruption down the road instead of being specific. The idea of taxing people health care benefits was probably one of the most harmful things to come up in the whole thing.They should have did a single payer system (something Baucus refused to even be truly heard) and also eliminated earned income credit. Use that money that is given out in earned income credit towards health care instead.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 25, 2010, 08:40:46 PMQuote from: BigSky on January 25, 2010, 08:04:33 AMThe problem is people wanted reform and this bill was not reform.Instead it was 1000's of pages that was loaded with legal mumbo jumbo that was wide open to interruption down the road instead of being specific. The idea of taxing people health care benefits was probably one of the most harmful things to come up in the whole thing.They should have did a single payer system (something Baucus refused to even be truly heard) and also eliminated earned income credit. Use that money that is given out in earned income credit towards health care instead.Why not tax health benefits? I know my union insurance would be good enough that it would result in some tax but why not? They tax everything else provided through work - why not insurance? It's all pay to me.That is kinda like saying they should tax medicare and medicaid benefits.
Medicare is funded by employment taxes (and premiums) - Medicaid isn't tied to employment. Why is receiving $2,000 a month in insurance benefits - company paid premiums - different from receiving a car and driver for personal use?(see Tom Daschle) Or a $24,000 year end bonus?
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 27, 2010, 12:38:20 PMMedicare is funded by employment taxes (and premiums) - Medicaid isn't tied to employment. Why is receiving $2,000 a month in insurance benefits - company paid premiums - different from receiving a car and driver for personal use?(see Tom Daschle) Or a $24,000 year end bonus?Receiving $2,000 in government insurance benefits is no different than receiving it via the private sector. Fact is it doesnt matter if its tied to employment or not as people can work and receive medicare and medicaid.
Because it cost so dang much! ...kidding...Speaking from an until-now self employed person, we pay too much dang taxes anyway! IF they made that taxable too employers would have to pay EVEN more. The 6.2 and 1.45, not to mention the state and the federal unemployment ATE MY LUNCH buddy.
So Bill, are you saying that in your opinion one of the reasons health insurance costs so much is that it is tax free?
I think you're confusing premiums and benefits. Under the Senate bill premiums were going to be subject to tax, not benifits. If my employer, as part of my employment, paid my Medicare premiums - or my FICA obligation for that matter - why not treat it as income like everything else I'm paid (although Medicare premiums would be below any threshold being discussed in Congress). My employer is writing a check to an insurance company on my behalf. They don't write the check unless I work. That sounds like pay to me. Why shouldn't it be taxed? How is that different than if they write the check to me and I pay the insurance? If they paid my mortgage would that be nontaxable income? - I don't think so. Why should health insurance be some special category of benefit?
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 27, 2010, 02:56:40 PMI think you're confusing premiums and benefits. Under the Senate bill premiums were going to be subject to tax, not benifits. If my employer, as part of my employment, paid my Medicare premiums - or my FICA obligation for that matter - why not treat it as income like everything else I'm paid (although Medicare premiums would be below any threshold being discussed in Congress). My employer is writing a check to an insurance company on my behalf. They don't write the check unless I work. That sounds like pay to me. Why shouldn't it be taxed? How is that different than if they write the check to me and I pay the insurance? If they paid my mortgage would that be nontaxable income? - I don't think so. Why should health insurance be some special category of benefit?There is no confusion. What you say is no different for medicare. Employers pay half of social security you owe and half of medicare you owe. They are writing a check to the government on your behalf. They dont write the check unless you work. You benefit from it, they do not.Why not tax medicaid. Anything of value given can be taxed. Why not something worth several thousand dollars a year.
FICA isn't quite the same as Medicare premiums - FICA and Medicare premiums are independent of each other - but it is an interesting example. FICA is a withhold, you see your gross pay and then you see that FICA was taken out of your pay. Employers match what you pay but everone knows about FICA and how much it is costing them each month. Compare that to insurance through work.There isn't a line below your gross pay that shows what your insurance premium was the previous month. The sort of high end plans the Senate Bill would tax are the ones that cost $500 or more a week. That would get people's attention if the $500 showed up on their pay stub, was taxed as pay and then deducted. I don't think as many people would have sky's the limit insurance plans if they knew what they cost and could pocket money not spent on these high end policies.What you'd expect is that employers would provide insurance up to whatever threshold was taxed and beyond that people could top off the plan with their after tax income but the good thing about this is that people would begin to pay attention to what their insurance is costing and would act to keep the cost down if they received the benefit of their actions. I'm not sure what you're trying to say about FICA and Medicaid. If you have Part B you owe premiums, that's not the FICA tax that employers withhold. The FICA tax is prepaying insurance or qualifying you to buy Medicare. Paying FICA isn't a benefit in the same sense paying your insurance premium is a benefit. There are people paying FICA while they also pay Medicare Part B but I and people like me are the exception. If you're below the age threshold and you get cancer you can't decide to use Medicare, even if you've been paying FICA for 20 years. But you should be able to immediately use your employer paid insurance.Medicaid is need based, as is all public assistance. Taxing public assistance doesn't make sense. You can't get blood from a rock but it is true SSDI, food stamps, et al are income of a sort. Sure ... If it amounted to more than $30,000 a year for an individual it should be taxed. It doesn't, so it isn't.
bigsky -- employers do not pay half of the ss and mc you owe.......they MATCH what you pay. Whatever you pay they have to pay the exact same thing.