A General Outline of What is to Come

The Patient Protection and Affordable Healthcare Act, more commonly referred to as the "healthcare bill", has taken over a year to craft and has been a lightning rod for political debate because it effectively reshapes major facets of the country's healthcare industry.
Here are 10 things you need to know about how the new law may affect you:
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1. Your Kids are Covered
Starting this year, if you have an adult child who cannot get health insurance from his or her employer and is to some degree dependent on you financially, your child can stay on your insurance policy until he or she is 26 years old. Currently, many insurance companies do not allow adult children to remain on their parents' plan once they reach 19 or leave school.
2. You Can't be Dropped
Starting this fall, your health insurance company will no longer be allowed to "drop" you (cancel your policy) if you get sick. In 2009, "rescission" was revealed to be a relatively common cost-cutting practice by several insurance companies. The practice proved to be common enough to spur several lawsuits; for example, in 2008 and 2009, California's largest insurers were made to pay out more than $19 million in fines for dropping policyholders who fell ill.
3. You Can't be Denied Insurance
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Starting this year your child (or children) cannot be denied coverage simply because they have a pre-existing health condition. Health insurance companies will also be barred from denying adults applying for coverage if they have a pre-existing condition, but not until 2014.
4. You Can Spend What You Need to
Prior to the new law, health insurance companies set a maximum limit on the monetary amount of benefits that a policyholder could receive. This meant that those who developed expensive or long-lasting medical conditions could run out of coverage. Starting this year, companies will be barred from instituting caps on coverage.
5. You Don't Have to Wait
If you currently have pre-existing conditions that have prevented you from being able to qualify for health insurance for at least six months you will have coverage options before 2014. Starting this fall, you will be able to purchase insurance through a state-run "high-risk pool", which will cap your personal out-of-pocket expenses for healthcare. You will not be required to pay more than $5,950 of your own money for medical expenses; families will not have to pay any more than $11,900.
6. You Must be Insured
Under the new law starting in 2014, you will have to purchase health insurance or risk being fined. If your employer does not offer health insurance as a benefit or if you do not earn enough money to purchase a plan, you may get assistance from the government. The fines for not purchasing insurance will be levied according to a sliding scale based on income. Starting in 2014, the lowest fine would be $95 or 1% of a person's income (whichever is greater) and then increase to a high of $695 or 2.5% of an individual's taxable income by 2016. There will be a maximum cap on fines.
7. You'll Have More Options
Starting in 2014 (when you will be required by law to have health insurance), states will operate new insurance marketplaces - called "exchanges" - that will provide you with more options for buying an individual policy if you can't get, or afford, insurance from your workplace and you earn too much income to qualify for Medicaid. In addition, millions of low- and middle-income families (earning up to $88,200 annually) will be able to qualify for financial assistance from the federal government to purchase insurance through their state exchange.
8. Flexible Spending Accounts Will Become Less Flexible
Three years from now, flexible spending accounts (FSAs) will have lower contribution limits - meaning you won't be able to have as much money deducted from your paycheck pre-tax and deposited into an FSA for medical expenses as is currently allowed. The new maximum amount allowed will be $2,500. In addition, fewer expenses will qualify for FSA spending. For example, you will no longer be able to use your FSA to help defray the cost of over-the-counter drugs.
9. If You Earn More, You'll Pay More
Starting in 2018, if your combined family income exceeds $250,000 you are going to be taking less money home each pay period. That's because you will have more money deducted from your paycheck to go toward increased Medicare payroll taxes. In addition to higher payroll taxes you will also have to pay 3.8% tax on any unearned income, which is currently tax-exempt.
10. Medicare May Cover More or Less of Your Expenses
Starting this year, if Medicare is your primary form of health insurance you will no longer have to pay for preventive care such as an annual physical, screenings for treatable conditions or routine laboratory work. In addition, you will get a $250 check from the federal government to help pay for prescription drugs currently not covered as a result of the Medicare Part D "doughnut hole".
However, if you are a high-income individual or couple (making more than $85,000 individually or $170,000 jointly), your prescription drug subsidy will be reduced. In addition, if you are one of the more than 10 million people currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan you may be facing higher premiums because your insurance company's subsidy from the federal government is going to be dramatically reduced.
Conclusion
Over the next few months you will most likely receive information in the mail from your health insurance company about how the newly signed law will affect your coverage. Read the correspondence carefully and don't hesitate to ask questions about your policy; there may be new, more affordable options for you down the road.
 
11. We are all socialists now.
12. your insurance company shall soon go under
13. your country is going down the tubes

Correction:
11. We are all monetarists now.
12. Your insurance company will soon downsize and also cut your commissions.
13. Your country will crank up the printing presses and "Walla"... no more money problems!
 
14. If you are a single young mother and pop out a kid your college will be paid for and the government will give you all kinds of stuff.

If you are a young single female and don't get pregnant then you will have to pay for most of your college. It's called punishment for keeping your legs closed.
 
14. If you are a single young mother and pop out a kid your college will be paid for and the government will give you all kinds of stuff.

WIC program.
Medicaid for you and the child.
Food stamps.
Rent subsidized.

Then....
child #2.

Then....
child #3.

Oh yeah, Pell Grants. I'm sure I'm leaving numerous other things out you get rewarded for for being poor w/kids.
Oh yeah...you get daycare subsidized too, when the kids get old enough to get on your nerves and you don't want to "babysit" them all day.
 
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NEXT THE MEXICANS, THEN THE GUNS....are you guys gonna fight back??

I wonder at what point GW thought, "its time to fight back"...

I'm on a pretty decent consruction forum for contractors and if this amnesty Bill paseess or whatever it is, a lot of small contractors and big ones to come are going out of bisiness. These are the types of folks who actaully buy insurance, Mexicans don't.

Imagine lots of Mexicans coming into the insurance business and doing your job for half what you get paid now. That probaly won't ever happen but that's what these guys are up against. Also, the quality of work is not nearly as good, especially the technical stuff by the Mexicans, ect.

I think there will be DIY tv shows ect. for conumers to figure out how to use the exchange and Ehealth sponsored by those two entities.

Used car lots will also be a thing of the past and taken over by auctions. Auctions have been suffering with the exclusive relationship they have had with dealers and are moving consumer direct in some markets.

Some people are gonna do really well. Some will just get by. Some will just fall by the way side. Is the sky falling? I would say yes and no. The landscape is definately changing and sometimes that is all it takes, forget about the sky.
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I can safely say that agents are the last people on the list that the big wigs are thinking about.
 
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...Also, the quality of work is not nearly as good, especially the technical stuff...

That seems to be something the general public no longer cares about. Everything today seems to be all about what can I get for free or who has the cheapest service or product available regardless of the quality.

I see people buying pure crap today and then wondering why it doesn't work properly or bitching because it didn't last more than a couple of months. Until the public once again learns to appreciate quality more and more junk will continue to be available.

Just like health care. Everyone is looking for the cheapest available, doesn't matter if it is good or not because we all "know" that "bad things" only happen to others. There is only one thing that is going to guarantee that we all have the best quality of life available and that is unlimited access to the best quality of health care available. Not just in a city or state, the best available in the country.

Why would anyone jeopardize their health just so they can make payments on a new car? Yes, I have seen that happen a lot.
 
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