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stopbush

(24,396 posts)
Wed Jun 21, 2017, 06:07 PM Jun 2017

How will YOU be impacted by tRumpcare?

We don't know everything, but with the CBO score of the House bill and the Senate Rs saying they want to keep 80% of the House version, we know enough. Sadly.

So, how will tRumpcare impact you and your family?


12 votes, 0 passes | Time left: Time expired
We will most likely lose our current healthcare entirely
7 (58%)
We will be able to maintain health insurance, but at a much higher cost
1 (8%)
Insured through work, but worried about pre-existing etc not being covered
1 (8%)
Insured through work, do not anticipate major changes
1 (8%)
Insured through work, expect our coverage to improve
0 (0%)
Buy my own insurance, expect my costs and premiums to go down under tRumpcare
0 (0%)
Currently uninsured, will remain uninsured
1 (8%)
Currently uninsured, expect to get insurance under tRumpcare
0 (0%)
Other
1 (8%)
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
How will YOU be impacted by tRumpcare? (Original Post) stopbush Jun 2017 OP
I seriously have no idea JustAnotherGen Jun 2017 #1
Unknown n/t RKP5637 Jun 2017 #2
Since I will be turning 60 this year, and I have a pre-existing condition... MiniMe Jun 2017 #3
No effect as I have VA.and Medicare Kaleva Jun 2017 #4
I was without insurance for several years until the ACA kicked in Cal Carpenter Jun 2017 #5
Worried about husbands employer kicking him off because he had early stage kidney cancer nt maryellen99 Jun 2017 #6
You left out "dead" and "$50K tax break" L. Coyote Jun 2017 #7
Can I read it first? GeorgeGist Jun 2017 #8

MiniMe

(21,716 posts)
3. Since I will be turning 60 this year, and I have a pre-existing condition...
Wed Jun 21, 2017, 07:55 PM
Jun 2017

I figure that it will cost me an arm and a leg. We will see. Nobody knows for sure at this point since it is all being done in secret

Cal Carpenter

(4,959 posts)
5. I was without insurance for several years until the ACA kicked in
Wed Jun 21, 2017, 08:06 PM
Jun 2017

Thanks to the subsidies, we now can afford insurance. We've had to downgrade our plan twice due to rising costs, and if we had a real health problem/emergency we'd be fucked by our co-insurance and deductible, but at least we can afford basic wellness care now. Thank goodness we're healthy.

Without knowing the details of the bill, it's hard to say for sure, but given the numbers that have been thrown around about millions losing their insurance, I have to assume we'll be among them. Our income is very low and without significant subsidies or some major cost controls we can't afford it.

(This is not meant to be a sob story. My spouse and I have no kids and very low living expenses - used cars we own outright, a very short commute to work, etc. Aside from the healthcare issue, our basic needs are more than met. But the hundreds and hundreds of dollars a month a premium would cost without subsidies is impossible for us.)

What we need is single payer. The ACA has been helpful for some, but not for all, and not as much as it may seem on paper. It is unconscionable that the so-called wealthiest country in the world has the most expensive health care providing worse outcomes to fewer people than nearly any developed country in the world. The entire health care conversation is framed wrongly and is being treated as a ball in a sport being tossed around by the two parties at the expense of the health of our nation. (Diatribe over)

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