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  <title>What Could Possibly Happen?</title>
  <link>https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/2015/01/30/what-could-possibly-happen</link>
  <description><![CDATA[<p>I have lived a lot of life, most of it on the go, and always an adventure. Challenging myself and pushing limits. From 25 to 35, I worked hard and lived with that sense of freedom, full of fun and exploration, believing every year would only get better and better. In that decade, I took some chances &ndash; moved to three different cities where I didn&rsquo;t know anyone, and I took jobs I wasn&rsquo;t sure about. I was always confident things would work out, or at least I could figure it out how to make it work.</p>
<p>I was lucky. Things did work, and my life in that time was wonderful. I deepened friendships and made even more great friends, completed graduate degrees, traveled the world, saw my nephews born and grow, helped elect a Senator and then a President, lived my dream of improving policies to help others, and even fell in love with the most incredible woman. I remember thinking, here I was in my mid-30s truly living the ultimate adventure, living life to the fullest every day &ndash; but also knowing the best years of my life were still in front of me. What I didn&rsquo;t know during those 10 years was how uncertain my future really was, and how much control I was about to lose.</p>
<p>Two months after my wife said yes to being my adventure partner for life, I was diagnosed with Stage IV cancer. In the same decade I spent building my life, the cancer had been growing, and silently threatening to tear it down. Right at the dawn of my future. Literally, the worst news, at the worst time. Like any good sports fan, I turned to statistics to understand the odds. Only the numbers were no help. For the stage and type of cancer I have, my chances of seeing my 40th&nbsp;birthday were only about 10 percent.</p>
<p>Fortunately I had been paying out of my paycheck for health insurance through my employer. I&rsquo;d never really given the choice of buying health coverage much thought. I never thought that one day the small choice to get covered would be one of the most important things to keep me alive. Insurance helped me do two things that greatly improved my chances &ndash; it helped me get diagnosed, and it helped me begin my treatment quickly.</p>
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<p>Technology has made treating cancer more personal, and more effective, but it is still costly. So far, it&rsquo;s cost more than $1 million to treat my disease. Thanks to my health insurance, I&rsquo;ve only had to pay a small fraction of that amount from my own pocket. When the unimaginable happened, insurance kept me from going bankrupt just to stay alive.</p>
<p>Today, thanks to the Affordable Care Act, affordable health coverage is a reality for millions more young people. In fact, with the financial assistance available through the Health Insurance Marketplaces, many 26- to 34-year-olds can get covered for less than $100 a month. That&rsquo;s about what I paid through my employer, and it is less than what many people pay for a cable or cell phone bill. To say I am beyond grateful for insurance is an understatement. Insurance helps me live, and I got some control over my life back. Insurance helps me dream about the future, and it has given me a chance at living without destroying my family and me financially.</p>
<p>I can&rsquo;t imagine what life would be like if we were looking at a future of not just dealing with ongoing treatment, more surgeries, and fighting for survival, but also having to pay down more than a million dollars&#39; worth of medical debt. Thankfully, because of health insurance, I don&rsquo;t have to. I can still have the future I imagined over a decade ago. Life is still an adventure, and you never know what could possibly happen. Insurance is an investment in your future and in yourself, and all lives are worth investing in. Get covered.</p>
<p><strong>For more information on how to get covered, visit <a href="http://www.healthcare.gov">HealthCare.gov</a> or call 1-800-318-2596.</strong></p>
<hr />
<p><strong>You should also see:</strong></p>
<ul>
	<li>
		<a href="/blog/2015/01/06/faces-health-care-steve-p">The latest post in our &quot;Faces of Health Care&quot; series</a></li>
	<li>
		<a href="/share/issue/health-care">Shareable health care videos and infographics from the White House</a></li>
</ul>]]></description>
   <pubDate>Fri, 30 Jan 2015 13:34:32 -0500</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>&lt;a href=&quot;/blog/author/michael-robertson&quot;&gt;Michael Robertson&lt;/a&gt;</dc:creator>
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  <title>It Shouldn’t Have Happened to Me, But It Did</title>
  <link>https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/2013/12/04/it-shouldn-t-have-happened-me-it-did-0</link>
  <description><![CDATA[<p><em>Ed. note: This post was updated March 21, 2014.</em></p>
<p>&ldquo;You have stage IV cancer.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Well, how many stages are there? Five, six, ten?&rdquo;&nbsp;</p>
<p>&ldquo;There&#39;s only four.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Two months after proposing to my wife and just three months before my 36th birthday, those were the first words spoken to me by my oncologist.</p>
<p>A check-up with my family doctor only days before spawned a whirlwind of appointments, scans, and tests. I sat, listening in awe, trying to wrap my head around the reality of balancing fear and uncertainty with wanting to fight, but not really knowing how. I learned that I was now a stage IV, metastatic colorectal cancer patient. A cancer that usually afflicts those 65 and older wasn&rsquo;t just inside my body, it was growing and making its way through my body, spreading from my colon to a tumor in my liver and another one in my lungs.</p>
<p>I was otherwise healthy my whole life &ndash; 35 years old, an athlete into college, professionally doing important work I&rsquo;d only dreamed of, and finally about to be married and start my own family. Fighting to survive a catastrophic disease was NOT part of my plans.</p>
<p>Thankfully, I was fortunate enough to have insurance through my employer and my cancer was treatable and curable, they said. Thankfully, because I had insurance, they said, if I gave them the next year for treatment, they&rsquo;d give me back the rest of my life.</p>
<p>But imagine if I&nbsp;didn&rsquo;t have access to health insurance through my job. Until that week, just 20 months ago, I could have made the case that I almost didn&rsquo;t &ldquo;need&rdquo; to spend money on health insurance. Technically, with only yearly check-ups and mostly needing only over-the-counter medicines, I could have afforded to pay for my health care needs myself. &nbsp;</p>
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<p>However, if I hadn&rsquo;t already had insurance the day I had that conversation with my oncologist, I would probably never be approved for insurance in the individual market, or I would have had to pay outrageous premiums just for access to the same services that would save my life, because I didn&rsquo;t just have cancer, I now have a preexisting condition.</p>
<p>When you get sick, getting better is hard. I mean really hard. And it&rsquo;s hard enough to focus on fighting the disease and still maintain your ability to work enough to provide for your family. Add to that battling through medical statements and fielding calls from hospital billing centers in order to just get in a place where you can get the medicine to fight. All the while knowing that, once you survive, you could face a lifetime of high premiums and difficulty getting insurance coverage. Until you&rsquo;ve read a medical bill from a hospital bed, it&rsquo;s hard to understand the insecurity that millions face every day. But now, for the first time ever, all Americans will have access to quality, affordable health care, that can&rsquo;t be denied because of preexisting conditions.</p>
<p>People diagnosed with cancer have a 70% greater chance of being alive five years after they are diagnosed if they have health insurance at the time of diagnosis. To date, saving my life has taken 20 months &ndash; including eight months of chemo, six surgeries, and radiation &ndash; and has cost over $900,000. Of that I have only paid a little over 1% out of pocket because I had health insurance when I was diagnosed. Without that, I would have bankrupted my family just to stay alive and with the limitations on preexisting conditions and lifetime caps that existed before Obamacare, there&rsquo;s no telling what life would have been like for us moving forward.</p>
<p>Expanding access to affordable health care has always been personally important to me and it&rsquo;s part of why I moved to Chicago in 2004 to work for then-State Senator Barack Obama. Since then I&rsquo;ve watched the country change and heard Ted Kennedy speak about his life&rsquo;s work and his support for the President&rsquo;s vision for health care at the 2008 Democratic convention. Four years later I watched the 2012 convention while undergoing chemo treatment, and I saw the country reelect President Obama and ensure the legacy of Obamacare while lying in an intensive care unit after my first surgery. It&rsquo;s been a decade since I first heard the President declare that it makes all our lives poorer when one American doesn&rsquo;t have access to affordable health care, and it&rsquo;s been an even longer path to get the country to where we are now, affordable care for all &ndash; but I know it has never been more important to America&rsquo;s future.</p>
<p>Access to affordable health insurance should not depend on luck or economic status; it should be available to everyone. Surviving catastrophic illness should not be an option for only a few; everyone should have that opportunity. Before Obamacare, millions of Americans who were uninsured&nbsp;or underinsured,&nbsp;gamble was their daily reality. Now, for the first time ever, all Americans will have access to quality, affordable health care, and they can&rsquo;t be denied coverage for preexisting conditions or have their coverage cut off because they&rsquo;ve hit a lifetime cap on medical expenses. This is a fundamental change in our country and a foundational shift in the health care and economic opportunities that are afforded individuals and families. This is wonderful progress and the American people deserve no less.</p>
<p>Shop for coverage or just learn more about how you can get covered by visiting <a href="http://healthcare.gov">HealthCare.gov</a>.</p>
]]></description>
   <pubDate>Wed, 04 Dec 2013 22:40:41 -0500</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>&lt;a href=&quot;/blog/author/michael-robertson&quot;&gt;Michael Robertson&lt;/a&gt;</dc:creator>
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