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“Without the Affordable Care Act, I simply could not have retired at 62.”

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Donald L., Palm Coast, FL

Health Care Blog

  • Affordable Care Act: Increasing Certainty for American Businesses, Economic Growth

    Cross-posted from the Treasury Department's blog.

    This week the House will vote on a bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010.  Repeal of the Affordable Care Act would deny 32 million uninsured Americans access to health insurance.  Repeal would mean children with pre-existing conditions could once again be denied coverage, young adults would be thrown off their parents’ policies, and the chronically ill who have already enrolled in pre-existing condition insurance plans would have their coverage cancelled.  This would be a major setback for the tens of millions of people affected and would harm economic growth as a result. 

    Repealing the Affordable Care Act would be bad for business and bad for the economy.  We are at a crucial stage of the economic recovery.  While the private sector has expanded payrolls for 12 straight months, the unemployment rate remains at an unacceptable level.  Given where we are, we must do things that help bolster the recovery, and repealing the Affordable Care Act would be a step in the wrong direction.

    The ACA helps businesses and the overall economy by eliminating hidden costs that currently contribute to higher health care premiums charged to businesses and the government.  For example, health care costs for the uninsured are currently passed on through higher premiums to those to those who pay for health insurance – an estimated cost of an additional $1,000 per worker with family coverage each year.  Expanding health insurance coverage to nearly 95 percent of Americans will help to bring down premiums by removing this added cost.

  • Voices of Health Reform: Cathy’s Story

    For too long, too many Americans struggled in the health insurance marketplace. Double digit premium increases with no recourse or accountability made it difficult for families to afford the cost of care but also left them with no other option. Americans could be denied coverage if they had a pre-existing condition or have their coverage cancelled or capped when they got sick. And high costs were making it difficult for businesses to expand and create jobs, and to compete in a global economy.  

    If you haven’t struggled in the health care system yourself, you’ve probably met someone who has – seniors who struggled to pay for their prescription drugs, families whose children were denied coverage for a pre-existing condition and business owners who wanted to provide high benefits to their employees, but just couldn’t afford it.

    Thankfully, the Affordable Care Act is already changing all of this.  And over the coming days, you’ll have a chance to hear directly from some of those Americans who are already benefiting through a new online feature, Voices of Health Reform. Every day, you can hear from average Americans about how the new law is making the health care system better for them.  

    Today, we’re highlighting Cathy Lynn Howell Allen from Marblehead, OH. Cathy is a healthy and energetic small business owner, but before the Affordable Care Act became law, she couldn’t get insurance because she had a pre-existing condition. Considered “uninsurable” because of a history of Systemic Lupus, Cathy had been denied private insurance several times though she has required very little medical treatment over the last two decades.

    Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, Cathy recently purchased private health insurance for the first time in many years. She is now enrolled in the Ohio High Risk Pool – a new program created by the health reform law that provides affordable private insurance options for people with pre-existing conditions between now and 2014. And in 2014, discriminating against ANYONE with pre-existing conditions like Cathy will be illegal.

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    Cathy now has peace of mind and less worry about losing her business or retirement because of the financial instability that goes with being uninsured.

    And Cathy is just one of the millions Americans with more freedom and control in their health care choices thanks to the Affordable Care Act. Thanks to the law, families are freed from worrying about losing their insurance or having it capped unexpectedly if someone is an accident or becomes sick. The health reform law frees Americans from the fear of insurance companies raising premiums by double digits with no recourse or accountability. And it frees Americans from discrimination when insurance companies deny women health insurance because they are pregnant, or refuse to provide coverage to children who are born with disabilities.

    Be sure to check back each day for more Voices of Health Reform and to learn more about the Affordable Care Act, visit www.WhiteHouse.gov/HealthReform.

    Note: Today, the Department of Health and Human Services released a new report indicating that anywhere from 50 to 129 million (19 to 50 percent of) Americans under age 65 have some type of pre-existing condition and would be at risk of losing coverage or not getting it at all without the Affordable Care Act. Read the full report.

    Stephanie Cutter is Assistant to the President for Special Projects.

  • Fighting Flu in Every Community

    On December 18th, more than 180 people came together at the Sri Siva Vishnu Temple in Lanham, MD as part the work by HHS to promote seasonal flu vaccination related to National Influenza Vaccine Week (NIVW).  Among them were members of the temple, health professionals, and also a group of Bhutanese refugees. 

    More than 60 flu shots were administered, and Dr. Anand Parekh, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health at HHS, spoke about the importance of annual flu vaccination.  Dr. Siva Subramanian and Anju Bhargava of Hindu American Seva Charities coordinated the event, and the Prince George’s County Health Department administered the vaccine clinic.  Everyone at the event shared in the Bhutanese culture, and presentations and information provided in the new resource Faith & Communities Fight Flu were translated into Nepalese. 

  • Repealing the Affordable Care Act will Hurt the Economy

    The House Republican Health Care Plan to repeal the Affordable Care Act and take away all the new freedom and control it gives the American people over their health care and give it back to insurance companies will not only raise costs for individuals and businesses, but it will hurt our economy.  

    Since the President signed the Affordable Care Act into law last March, the economy has created over 1 million private sector jobs, including the 113,000 private sector jobs created in December announced today.   So, at a time when our economy is getting stronger, repealing the law would hamper that important economic progress by increasing costs on individuals and businesses, weakening the benefits and protections that Americans with private insurance are already enjoying, and adding more than a trillion dollars to our deficits.  

  • Cabinet Members Write to Congress to Discuss Implementation of Affordable Care Act

    As you may have seen, Republicans in the House of Representatives unveiled a bill this week that would repeal the greater freedom and control the law will give all Americans over their health care decisions.

    For people with insurance, the law introduces new insurance market rules that ensure greater transparency and accountability, including better value for premium dollars, as well as important new consumer protections.  For people seeking insurance, the law helps make sure you have ways to access it.  

    These new reforms halt the worst insurance industry abuses, and provides much needed relief that would be taken away under a repeal.

  • New Year, New Estimate, Same Result

    The new year starts with a renewed focus on the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which the President signed into law last year and has already delivered a host of consumer protections and benefits to millions of Americans.

    Yesterday, the House Republican leadership introduced a bill to repeal the ACA. Today, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) sent a letter to the Speaker of the House giving its assessment of the budgetary effects of a repeal: it would increase the budget deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade. The CBO letter notes that “over the 2012–2021 period, the effect of H.R. 2 [the repeal of ACA] on federal deficits … is likely to be an increase in the vicinity of $230 billion.”  This result is not surprising since CBO scored the ACA as reducing the deficit by more than $100 billion through 2019 and by more than $1 trillion in the decade after that.

    To be fair, CBO is clear that this is a preliminary estimate that does not take into account a host of changes in the economy, technical matters, and the effects of the implementation to date. But even after a more comprehensive analysis, we should expect the same outcome: the deficit would increase substantially if ACA were repealed. As CBO Director Elmendorf wrote in his blog today, “those developments will probably not have a major effect on the overall budgetary impact of repealing the legislation.”

    For those in both parties who care about the deficit and our future fiscal course, the repeal of the ACA should concern them deeply. Rising health care costs are the biggest driver of our long-term deficits, and getting them under control is crucial for the fiscal health of the nation and to keep our economy growing, creating jobs, and competing in the world economy. Beyond that, we need to keep in mind that repealing the ACA also would roll back what the bill already has done to help millions of Americans -- from the families benefitting from the end to lifetime dollar limits on essential benefits to the young people now able to join their parents’ policies and the seniors who now are able to afford their prescription drugs. And repeal would deny an estimated 32 million American citizens health insurance in years to come.

    Jack Lew is the Director of the Office of Management and Budget