Short version: The payment your center receives for each treatment and each drug will be cut by some percentage. The centers will have to find a way to make some money even though each patient is paying less. They could get less trained staff, cut back on the drugs you get, cut back on your treatment time, try to not take the worst patients, be cheap with supplies, etc. you imagine the options. In the long run, some centers may go too deeply into the whole to survive and will close. Other centers may never open.
1. Due to some of the provisions of the ACA, the benefits provided through my employer-based health insurance have had to expand from previous levels ("free" birth control, covering "children" up to age 26 are two that I can think of off the top of my head). We already had no lifetime maximum on benefits. Our HR department, when presenting the new premiums for 2013, specifically told us that the increases in premiums were due to the ACA and its new provisions.
Sorry Bill, I am talking about premium increases. The data is clear, they have gone up substantially and will continue to escalate BECAUSE of Obamacare. Adding in the fact that health care costs had stabilized, the premium increases under Obamacare since passed in 2010 speaks to the fact that Obamacare is anything but affordable.http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/06/business/despite-new-health-law-some-see-sharp-rise-in-premiums.html?pagewanted=all
Quote from: MooseMom on July 30, 2013, 04:12:54 PMHmmm...I couldn't access that article for some reason. I have to either pay for a subscription or open an account, which I am loathe to do as it just adds to those who want to send me e-mails asking me to spend money. LOL!I'm truly not trying to get into a debate. I really am curious as to why Group Health has made your premium skyrocket. Is it really because of the ACA, or do you suspect they might be using its implementation as an excuse to raise your premium? What reason did they give you? Whenever I hear that insurance premiums are going to go up, I just can't shake off this feeling that, once again, Corporate America is doing sneaky things and blaming it all on anything other than their own greed.Sorry, I don't have those answers for Group Health. I just recently sold our CA home and now am no longer a Kaiser patient. Kaiser is paying for my Group Health as part of my health care for life benefit in my retirement package with my medical group. The $35,000 is what Kaiser is contracted to pay to Group Health. I have no clue why it has sky rocketed specifically, but the promise that the "Affordable Health Care Act" would reduce premiums has never materialized. Just the opposite in fact. By 2016, I have read that the average premium for a family will be $20,000. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/15/health-care-costs-record_n_1516380.htmlI know that when I am 65 if God willing I live that long, I will have to strongly consider giving up my Kaiser lifetime coverage and go with Medicare and Medigap coverage I will purchase if either are still available. Otherwise, I will on paper look like a wealthy retiree, when in fact, the majority of my taxable income will instead by my health care coverage alone. My accountant explained that the ACA will make that common for people who have health care benefits in one state and then move out of state where they will also be taxable income. There is a reason why Obamacare hired thousands of new IRS agents as part of the "health care" deal.
Hmmm...I couldn't access that article for some reason. I have to either pay for a subscription or open an account, which I am loathe to do as it just adds to those who want to send me e-mails asking me to spend money. LOL!I'm truly not trying to get into a debate. I really am curious as to why Group Health has made your premium skyrocket. Is it really because of the ACA, or do you suspect they might be using its implementation as an excuse to raise your premium? What reason did they give you? Whenever I hear that insurance premiums are going to go up, I just can't shake off this feeling that, once again, Corporate America is doing sneaky things and blaming it all on anything other than their own greed.
Quote from: Hemodoc on July 30, 2013, 04:38:13 PMQuote from: MooseMom on July 30, 2013, 04:12:54 PMHmmm...I couldn't access that article for some reason. I have to either pay for a subscription or open an account, which I am loathe to do as it just adds to those who want to send me e-mails asking me to spend money. LOL!I'm truly not trying to get into a debate. I really am curious as to why Group Health has made your premium skyrocket. Is it really because of the ACA, or do you suspect they might be using its implementation as an excuse to raise your premium? What reason did they give you? Whenever I hear that insurance premiums are going to go up, I just can't shake off this feeling that, once again, Corporate America is doing sneaky things and blaming it all on anything other than their own greed.Sorry, I don't have those answers for Group Health. I just recently sold our CA home and now am no longer a Kaiser patient. Kaiser is paying for my Group Health as part of my health care for life benefit in my retirement package with my medical group. The $35,000 is what Kaiser is contracted to pay to Group Health. I have no clue why it has sky rocketed specifically, but the promise that the "Affordable Health Care Act" would reduce premiums has never materialized. Just the opposite in fact. By 2016, I have read that the average premium for a family will be $20,000. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/15/health-care-costs-record_n_1516380.htmlI know that when I am 65 if God willing I live that long, I will have to strongly consider giving up my Kaiser lifetime coverage and go with Medicare and Medigap coverage I will purchase if either are still available. Otherwise, I will on paper look like a wealthy retiree, when in fact, the majority of my taxable income will instead by my health care coverage alone. My accountant explained that the ACA will make that common for people who have health care benefits in one state and then move out of state where they will also be taxable income. There is a reason why Obamacare hired thousands of new IRS agents as part of the "health care" deal.It doesn't sound like you actually read this link either. Reading is really fundamental.
Health Care Costs To Exceed A Record $20,000 Per Year For Families With Insurance, Study SaysHealth care costs for a family of four covered by workplace health insurance will exceed $20,000 for the first time ever this year -- $20,728 to be precise -- according to a new study released Tuesday. That's $1,335 more than in 2011.
Quote from: Hemodoc on August 01, 2013, 11:07:14 PMSorry Bill, I am talking about premium increases. The data is clear, they have gone up substantially and will continue to escalate BECAUSE of Obamacare. Adding in the fact that health care costs had stabilized, the premium increases under Obamacare since passed in 2010 speaks to the fact that Obamacare is anything but affordable.http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/06/business/despite-new-health-law-some-see-sharp-rise-in-premiums.html?pagewanted=allQuote from: Hemodoc on August 05, 2013, 08:53:30 PMHealth Care Costs To Exceed A Record $20,000 Per Year For Families With Insurance, Study SaysHealth care costs for a family of four covered by workplace health insurance will exceed $20,000 for the first time ever this year -- $20,728 to be precise -- according to a new study released Tuesday. That's $1,335 more than in 2011.So which is it, total healthcare spending? Or premiums? Because as the Huffpost article states the cost to the "typical" family of four is $5,114 in premiums for a preferred provider organization plan along with $3,470 in out-of-pocket costs. The article also points out "Family health care costs grew by 6.9 percent between 2011 and 2012, slower than in previous years" which is good and the news about federal healthcare costs are even better, as the links I provided report.Pick one - healthcare costs to families - about $8,500/year - or healthcare cost to society from total spending point of view or the federal/state government's point of view?
So, the cost of employee health insurance premiums to employers is unimportant and not in that mix Bill? Where is the promise of your president that premiums would go down. Not true, up every year since signing the ACA.
I was wondering what exactly the Forbes articel referenced with their quote saying the promise was premiums would be lowered by “by $2,500 per family per year.” ANd ther e is a youtube video withthe President repeting hte promise over and over again http://youtu.be/_o65vMUk5so but you'll notice all instances of him saying this was during the 2008 campaign when he was talking about his plan for healthcare. BTW his plan for healthcare didn't include a mandate either Clinton's plan included a mandate, it was the primary policy difference between the two candidates.As it turned out Congress sent a plan a lot more like Clinton's to his desk to be signed. So is that the complaint, that you wish the ACA had been more like Obama's plan that he campaigned on? In any case an average family of four that earn less than $50,000/year (average yearly household income) they'll be getting about $2,500 in subsidies though the exchanges and in the effect of slower growth in premiums.
Everyone is screaming at Medicare and begging Congress for help.Am I the only one who thinks this is crazy?
Jeannea, Amen Sister!! But, as long as you have a pulse you are a money maker for these Dialysis Centers. Hamster on a wheel generating money. Sad but true. Will these Dialysis Centers who make millions off sick people and Medicare really close their doors? We would start dropping dead after about a week. Are they really going to do this? I'm sure if they cut ALL Medicare they would close their doors and someone would step in but not in time. You know how fast Congress works. Those on Home Dialysis better start hoarding supplies. The rest of us won't have a chance.
I'm pretty sure they'll have to repeal Obamacare to get us out of this mess.The money to pay for it is coming from ESRD patient care.