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#1
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![]() 2nd year of paying the tax. It was cheaper than one month's premium. Haven't had health insurance in 26 years.
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#2
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![]() Brilliant decision
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#3
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![]() Yes it was. By not paying for something I don't use, I paid off my mortgage early and am debt free. And I can afford to go to the doctor because I am not paying huge health insurance premiums. Ironically if I had the insurance, I couldn't afford to go to the doctor. Not having insurance is my choice. I would think that would be fine for all the pro choice people.
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#4
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I never met my deductible due to illness...til last year. Two herniated discs in my neck, had to be fused because of how bad they were. And now, at the end of may a full hysterectomy...and hubby already hit his this year too, with a bout with high blood pressure. So, teo years in a row for me, and him this year too... So, the older you get, the more the odds swing. So, be careful gambling. All it takes is to wait just a little too long. You might want to get with a financial adviser.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#5
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#6
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Health insurance with the highest deductible would give you catastrophic care, so that if god forbid you had an emergency, it wouldnt completely wipe you out. Look outside of the exchange, which only unhealthy or subsidized people should shop thru. Any insurance companies not jnvolved in the exchanges can rate accordingly, whereas those who are in the exchanges have to keep pricing the same in or outside of the exchange.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#7
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#8
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#9
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![]() With the deductibles it's worth the "risk".
Especially when you know the economy is going to crash and burn. It's really weak to just give in and pay $400-$800 month for practically nothing. The poverty line is so low on it that if you make north of 25k you're not getting a subsidy at all. It's not fair. It's a disaster. I read comments of people supporting it and I just think these people have been conditioned to be dupes.
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RIP identity politics 1965-2016 |
#10
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__________________
Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#11
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#12
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There are a lot of folk out there who confuse being lucky with being smart. So far, you've been very, very lucky. May you continue to be so. Medical debt is the number one cause of bankruptcies in this country.
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Gentlemen! We're burning daylight! Riders up! -Bill Murray |
#13
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David Seltz David Seltz, executive director of the Massachusetts Health Policy Commission, spoke to health care and business leaders in Worcester on Tuesday, the 10th anniversary of the Massachusetts health care reform law. Seltz, who helped write the law, is holding the Boston Globe from that day in 2006. (Michael D. Kane | MassLive) Print Email Michael D. Kane | mkane@masslive.com By Michael D. Kane | mkane@masslive.com Follow on Twitter on April 12, 2016 at 4:28 PM WORCESTER -- Ten years after Massachusetts signed into law Chapter 58 of the Acts of 2006 -- which called for affordable health care for all -- the state is still struggling with how to deal with the cost of a law that has insured nearly everyone, but one that has also created the highest premiums for families in the country. Today's issues with costs were not unexpected 10 years ago, according to the state's healthcare expert, David Seltz, who spoke before the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Seltz heads up the Health Policy Commission, and independent state agency with a mission of developing policy to both improve patient care and control costs in the state. As the chief health care advisor to then-Senate Therese Murray, Seltz helped write the 2006 health care reform law, particularly when it came to financials. Holding up a copy of the Boston Globe from 2006, when the law passed, Seltz noted the Globe noted the "joy" and "worries" of the law. "We could write the same headline today," he said, noting the proponents of that 2006 law understood the difficulties the state faced trying to make sure all of its residents had health insurance. In 2016, Massachusetts has the lowest rate of uninsured residents in the country and it consistently ranks highest among public health quality surveys, Seltz noted. But it also has the highest family premiums in the country, and health insurance costs are outpacing wage growth. A family of four in Massachusetts, earning two times above the federal poverty level, spends roughly 40 percent of their income on health insurance premiums and co-pays, he said. Seltz's numbers are also reflective of two earlier studies of Massachusetts' health care reform. A 2012 report on the state of Massachusetts healthcare by the Kaiser Family Foundation found Massachusetts per capita spending on healthcare was 15 percent higher than the country's average and that Massachusetts consumers paid the highest premiums in the country. However, the same report noted rising costs in healthcare was not unique to Massachusetts. A 2014 (taken from a late 2012 survey) study found many positives in the law, including increases to the number of people insured and the number of people who had access to places to go other than emergency rooms when sick. Also, fewer Massachusetts residents reported having trouble finding a primary care doctor in 2012 than in 2008, and the 2012 number is Massachusetts was better than the national average. However, 40-percent of non-elderly respondents also told Blue Cross that health care costs had been a problem in the year prior to the survey. More than 16 percent of those surveyed said they had gone without needed care because of the costs. Being insured did not eliminate problems with costs, with almost 39 percent of the insured polled reporting problems with health care spending in the prior year. Problems arising from costs were felt more by those with lower incomes, according to that study. The Blue Cross report noted that part of cause was the shifting of costs onto employees by employers, including so-called high-deductible plans and requiring more services be paid for out-of-pocket. Overall, the quest to accomplish sustainable, universal healthcare, is a group effort, and one that is beginning, Seltz noted. Among the drivers of cost in Massachusetts is both the rising cost of medicines and more people seeking treatment at hospitals in places like Boston for routine services that could be provided in lower-cost markets. "Many equate price with quality, saying 'it costs more, it must be better.' But that is not the case in healthcare," he said. Among the actions being taken by the Health Policy Commission is offering innovation grants to groups who have come up with an innovative idea to reduce the cost of medical treatment. Among the requirements is that the applying agency must have a partner. Partner agencies do not have to be health care providers, but they must be able to be part of the solution. While Seltz expected about 40 groups to apply for the grants, more than 100 have sent letters of interest, 400 unique partner organizations have been identified. They include law enforcement agencies, specialty courts, housing agencies and employers, among others, he said. Seltz said he is also advocating for the same type of coalition of government, healthcare providers, insurers and business/employers that helped write the 2006 law to reconvene to tackle the problems of costs.
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#14
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![]() In liberal parlance . . . "pro choice" . . . I do not think it means what you think it means.
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#15
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Hey, its a free country, you can do what you want. Hope it works out for you
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#16
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![]() It's not free to not take health insurance, biggun.
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RIP identity politics 1965-2016 |
#17
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![]() Since I have now been informed that this is a horse racing blog (I thought it was the political section ![]()
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Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |
#18
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![]() I like Rachel's Valentina, Land Over Sea and Lewis Bay, but really feel like this race is wide open and look for one or more of the current longer shots like Go Maggie Go to hit the board. But wait, I like Cathryn Sophia and Weep No More, too... ![]() |
#19
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__________________
Hillary Clinton 2016: The "Extremely Careless" Leadership America Needs! |