Harry Reid Goes Around the Bend on Obamacare

The disgraceful Harry Reid, one of America’s most corrupt politicians, a man who has mysteriously gotten rich as a public employee, is losing his grip. This has been going on for a while; remember his insane claim during the 2012 presidential campaign that Mitt Romney doesn’t pay any taxes? Today the subject was Obamacare. Reid, probably because he sees his position as majority leader slipping away on account of popular revulsion toward Obamacare, went on a hysterical rant against those who criticize the Democrats’ signature legislation:

Across the country Americans who were once denied insurance because they suffered for something like cancer or as simple as acne have been able to buy affordable health insurance they could afford and could trust. Despite all that good news, there’s plenty of horror stories being told. All are untrue, but they’re being told all over America.

Got that? Every “horror story” about Obamacare is a lie! With more than five million people already having been booted off their existing coverage by the ACA, that’s a whole lot of liars.

The leukemia patient whose insurance policy was canceled could die without her medication. Mr. President, that’s an ad being paid for by two billionaire brothers. It’s absolutely false.

Harry Reid is obsessed by the Koch brothers. He rarely speaks in public without denouncing them. The leukemia patient he is referring to is Julie Boonstra, whom I wrote about here. There is nothing false about the Americans For Prosperity ad in which she appears; she lost coverage with which she was happy, against her will, because of Obamacare, and a key medication that she relies on to stay alive is not covered by her new, high-deductible Obamacare exchange policy.

Or the woman whose insurance policy went up $700 a month, ads paid for around america by the multibillionaire Koch brothers, and the ad is false. We heard about the evils of Obamacare, about the lives it’s ruining. The Republicans’ stump speeches in ads paid for by all the magnates, the Koch brothers. but in those tales, turned out to be just that: tales, stories made up from whole cloth, lies distorted by the Republicans to grab headlines forming political advertisements.

Reid went on to rant hysterically against the Koch brothers for another ten minutes or so, as though it is their fault that Obamacare is a disaster. But that is par for the course. What was remarkable was Reid’s assertion that every claim to have been harmed by Obamacare is a “lie.” Of course, only a tiny proportion of the many millions who have lost their health insurance coverage or been forced to buy more expensive insurance because of the ACA have spoken out publicly. But the Senate Republicans took the trouble to compile a partial list of Americans who have spoken out, based on their personal experiences. Here it is; there are links in the original, but I have omitted them here:

ALABAMA WOMAN: ‘Facing Higher Deductibles For Almost Twice The Price’

AL Woman: ‘It’s scary. … oh no, I didn’t get to get my insurance plan … it went up!’ Casey Heaps: ‘This is not affordable at all, this is a very unaffordable care act’ Reporter: ‘That’s Gainesville medial assistant Casey Heaps.’ Heaps: ‘I don’t know what this world’s coming to. It’s scary. … oh no, I didn’t get to get my insurance plan I had. I had the one I liked, the one that worked for me, the one I could afford, but no I didn’t get to keep it, it went up!’ (WAAY-AL, 11/26/13)

AL Woman: Reporter: “Mary Elizabeth Comulada of Huntsville is still in sticker shock… the family health insurance policy she uses with her two children and her husband has been banned under the Affordable Care Act and [her insurer] offered her a different plan that complies with the act with higher deductibles for almost twice the price.” Comulada: “Then how can my premium double per month, how can our deductibles go up on every single family member and yet you’re providing me the same plan.” (WAFF-AL, 11/21/13)

AL Woman: “We were at $352 a month with our premium, our individual deductible was $1,500 for a family it was $4,000… at this point $796 a month, $6,350 deductible.” (WAAY-AL, 11/26/13)

ARIZONA WOMAN: ‘I Cannot Afford’ Obamacare

AZ Woman: “‘I cannot afford to pay $200 more per month,’ said Pedersen, 54, who added that the cheapest alternative policy she’s found with the newly established federal government exchange would more than double the $186 monthly premium she paid in 2013. ‘We’re more than halfway into November, and my insurance broker is telling me it takes up to 45 days to get on a plan. I just feel like this situation did not have to happen.’” (“After Obamacare Fix, Consumers Remain Uncertain,” USA Today, 11/17/13)

AZ Man: “My son is 1-1/2 and he has a preexisting condition. It’s a heart defect. My wife and I received a letter this week that his cardiologist group is getting dropped from our health care provider on November 1st… being forced upon them by Obamacare.” (“Victim of Obamacare Loses His Doctor,” The Rush Limbaugh Show, 10/31/13)

AZ Man: “For me and my lifestyle, doubling and more than doubling my [premium] costs is absurd. It’s insane.” Reporter: “President Obama’s Affordable Care Act isn’t so affordable… company is opting out and dropping Lee.” Lee: “It’s frustrating, it’s challenging, it makes you really question what’s really going on.” Reporter: “With no coverage, Lee says he had no other choice than to find out what was going on with Obamacare, but when he did he couldn’t believe what he was told.” Lee: “Your rate right now is $268 dollars. If you go to Obamacare it will go to $563 for the same type of care you have. … For me and my lifestyle, doubling and more than doubling my costs is absurd. It’s insane.” (KTVK-AZ, 11/13/13)

CALIFORNIA WOMAN: ‘Doctors … Can’t Treat Her Because They Won’t Take Her [Obamacare] Insurance’

CA Woman: ‘The health plan she’s paid for through the Affordable Care Act keeps sending her to doctors who say they can’t treat her because they won’t take her insurance’ REPORTER: “Beth Kramer says she’s running out of options.” PHONE: “The expected wait time is approximately one hour.” REPORTER: “And out of time. The disabled mother of two says she’s out of medication for an auto-immune disease, she’s run out of antibiotics for a painful internal infection, and the health plan she’s paid for through the Affordable Care Act keeps sending her to doctors who say they can’t treat her because they won’t take her insurance.” KRAMER: “I’m out of medication. I’m sitting here with an infection that I’m out of antibiotics [for] and symptoms are coming back and I have no idea when I can go to a doctor or where.” REPORTER: “Kramer signed up for healthcare under the Affordable Care Act through Covered California…” (KCBS-CA, 1/22/14)

CA Woman: Left in ‘cold dread,’ ‘had to pay $630 for an ultrasound on Thursday after failing to get an [insurance] ID card’ “In Los Angeles, Hilary Danailova, who is almost eight months pregnant, said she had to pay $630 for an ultrasound on Thursday after failing to get an ID card or any confirmation of coverage from her new insurer… Ms. Danailova, 38, said she signed up just before Christmas and sent her first month’s premium of $410 by overnight mail on Jan. 3. … ‘At this point I am facing the cold dread of not knowing whether Anthem ever recorded my enrollment at all,’ she said.” (“Enrollees At Health Exchanges Face Struggle To Prove Coverage,” The New York Times, 1/10/14)

CA Man: ‘Existing $773 monthly premium for his family of four will more than double’ “Among those suffering sticker shock is Livermore real estate broker Larry Waelde. Like many others, he believed Obama when the president said people could keep their existing plans if they liked them. But Waelde said his existing $773 monthly premium for his family of four will more than double, based on rates he has reviewed on the state’s online insurance exchange. ‘The damage has been done,’ said Waelde…” (“Furor Continues Over Cancellation Of Individual Health Care Policies,” San Jose Mercury News, 11/12/13)

CA Man: ‘I’m paying more and getting less… It is fundamentally a worse plan’ “Walter Niles is one of them. The self-employed biotechnology consultant with a doctorate in neuroscience was notified in September that his policy was being canceled. The coverage offered through Covered California, his state’s new insurance exchange, has left him unsatisfied. ‘I’m paying more and getting less,’ said Niles, 59, who leans Republican yet also says he voted twice for President Barack Obama. ‘It is fundamentally a worse plan.’ … A single man, Niles said his monthly premium will go from $367 to $507, even though he sees the coverage as less comprehensive and flexible.” (“Angry Self-Insured Voters Dim Democratic Takeover Plans,” Bloomberg, 12/5/13)

CA Woman: Deductible is ‘nearly double’ “‘However you look at it, the son of a gun lied to us,’ said Janette Ramsey, a Bakersfield business owner with a weekend home in Ventura. She’s losing her current coverage and expects to pay $50 more a month for a policy with nearly double the deductible.” (“Many In Middle Class Say They’re Squeezed By Health Reform,” Ventura County Star [CA], 12/7/13)

CA Man: ‘Elected to drop’ plan over cost hike “I was paying 165.50 per month for basic coverage. BCBS sent me a letter saying that the plan I have does not meet the requirements of the ACA. So the plan in its place will be 425.00 per month. I have elected to drop it. I am 63 years old.” (“YOUR STORIES: Insurance Plans Cancelled Due to Obamacare,” Heritage.org, 10/30/13)

CA Woman: “Debra is a registered Democrat who has voted for Obama. She thinks ‘the healthcare changes are a disaster.’ Her health insurance plan will be cancelled at the end of the month, and the least expensive option offered to her is double her current coverage. Debra says, ‘This is a massive bait and switch perpetrated on the American people. If this was any other consumer purchase, it would not be tolerated–but as tax payers we have no protection at all from this fraud.’” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

CA Woman: “57 year old stay-at-home mom; insurance cancelled Dec. 31; new plan 59.6% higher premiums, $2,000 higher deductible; higher co-pay; at least $2466.24 more than last year.” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

CA Man: A $5,000 deductible ‘sounds really high’ “In Santa Cruz, Calif., where the exchange is run by the state, Robert Aaron, a self-employed 56-year-old engineer, said he was looking for a low-cost plan. The best one he could find had a premium of $488 a month. But the annual deductible was $5,000, and that, he said, ‘sounds really high.’” (“On Health Exchanges, Premiums May Be Low, But Other Costs Can Be High,” The New York Times, 12/9/13)

CA Woman: “‘So, in a nutshell,’ Holroyd said in an e-mail, ‘we are now, once again, being forced into a lower coverage plan, for more money.’ …her situation has been miserable. ‘I’m losing faith in our administration.’” (“Four Stories: After Obamacare ‘Fix,’ Many Are Still Left Out,” CNN, 12/11/13)

· “Holroyd supported the Affordable Care Act when it was passed in 2009. … Everything changed in October, when Holroyd was notified by her insurer that her plan could not be renewed in 2014. The comparable plans offered to Holroyd featured a 29% increase in premiums and higher co-pays, as well as significantly higher prescription costs. … ‘we had no idea that the premiums were going to be what they are.’” (“Four Stories: After Obamacare ‘Fix,’ Many Are Still Left Out,” CNN, 12/11/13)

CA Woman: Finds Obamacare ‘a phantom network’ “Maria Berumen, a tax preparer in Downey, was uninsured for years because of preexisting conditions. … She jumped at the chance in early January to visit a primary-care doctor for long-running numbness in her arm and shoulder as a result of bone spurs on her spine. The doctor referred her to a specialist, and problems ensued. At least four doctors wouldn’t accept her health plan — even though the state exchange website and her insurer, Health Net Inc., list them as part of her HMO network. ‘It’s a phantom network,’ Berumen said. It was no surprise to her family doctor, Ragaa Iskarous. She has run into this problem repeatedly with other patients in the last month, the doctor said. ‘This is really driving us crazy.’” (“Obamacare Enrollees Hit Snags At Doctor’s Offices,” Los Angeles Times, 2/4/14)

CA Woman: ‘longtime pediatrician’ for her sons ‘does not accept’ Obamacare plan “The biggest blow came last week, when she went to get influenza vaccines for her sons, Diego and Luca, only to be told by their longtime pediatrician that the private practice does not accept the government-mandated health insurance she picked. … Redamonti started calling around, only to find more and more doctors who said they won’t accept Covered California. Some said they would, only to reject it in person. ‘I don’t even know if we have coverage here in Chico,’ she said.” (“Chico Family’s Health Care Struggle Shows Unaffordable Side Of Covered California,” Chico Enterprise-Record, 1/25/14)

CA Woman: ‘I can’t sleep at night’ “Aliso Viejo resident Danielle Nelson … was diagnosed last year with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and discovered a suspicious lump near her jaw in early January. But when she went to her oncologist’s office, she promptly encountered a bright orange sign saying that Covered California plans are not accepted. ‘I’m a complete fan of the Affordable Care Act, but now I can’t sleep at night,’ Nelson said.” (“Obamacare Enrollees Hit Snags At Doctor’s Offices,” Los Angeles Times, 2/4/14)

COLORADO WOMAN: Facing A 100%+ Premium Hike

CO Woman: Facing a 100%+ premium hike “The cheapest new policy I can get is $645 a month. My current policy is $293 a month.” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

CONNECTICUT WOMAN: ‘Forced To Postpone Surgery’

CT Man ‘isn’t getting answers’: “Bill Fries enrolled way back in October in order to be covered by January 1, but to this day he hasn’t received his insurance card and he isn’t getting answers from his new carrier… ‘At this point I’m trying to find out, am I covered?’ said Fries.” (“New Obamacare Enrollees Waiting For Coverage,” NBC Connecticut, 1/10/14)

· “Fries completed the process on the state health exchange in months ago. He even received a bill in December … for $600 in which he thought he paid. Despite confirmation e-mails from the health insurance company, his credit card was never charged. To this day he hasn’t received an ID card or paperwork showing he has insurance.” (“New Obamacare Enrollees Waiting For Coverage,” NBC Connecticut, 1/10/14)

CT Woman ‘beyond frustrated’: “Red tape and echoes of Obamacare’s early technological failures have created a potentially life-threatening crisis for a Connecticut woman forced to postpone surgery because her insurance coverage is in doubt. …Handler doesn’t want to risk a six-figure hospital bill by going through with the surgery while her coverage is uncertain.” (“Obamacare Glitches Forced Woman To Postpone Cancer Surgery,” Huffington Post, 1/10/14)

· “The trouble for Handler began even before her possible cancer diagnosis last month. In the fall, she got notice … that her previous policy wouldn’t be renewed for 2014 because it didn’t meet the Affordable Care Act’s standards…” (“Obamacare Glitches Forced Woman To Postpone Cancer Surgery,” Huffington Post, 1/10/14)

· “K.C. Handler, 43, of New Canaan got troubling news from her doctor in early December: Tests revealed a growth on her left lung that might be cancer, and she needed an operation as soon as possible to have it removed. Handler had an appointment Thursday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. She couldn’t keep it. … [Her insurer] has been unable to confirm her enrollment into a new policy she purchased with the help of an insurance broker through her state’s insurance exchange, AccessHealth CT, in December. The delay in her treatment has been made worse by the bureaucratic nightmare Handler has endured in the long days since she signed up and paid her premium. ‘Six weeks after I was told what the protocol should be and what I needed to have done, I still have not had surgery; and, you know, with cancer, every day counts. So I am beyond frustrated,’ Handler said. ‘I was very anxious that I was waiting this long, and then to have it postponed is devastating to me.’” (“Obamacare Glitches Forced Woman To Postpone Cancer Surgery,” Huffington Post, 1/10/14)

CT Man: “Losing his insurance plan is a big financial blow for [Dr. Martin] Klein. … Klein says he would have to pay 50% more to get a plan that he deems comparable to the one he is losing. Klein says he cannot afford a comparable plan, so he has decided to purchase an HMO with a $12,700 deductible for himself and his family. What concerns him most about the plan is that it limits him to a narrow network of providers, all of which are in Connecticut. This prevents him from keeping some of his doctors in New York City. … The self-proclaimed ‘lifelong Democrat’ is frustrated with his insurance company, the president and the law itself.” (“Four Stories: After Obamacare ‘Fix,’ Many Are Still Left Out,” CNN, 12/11/13)

CT Woman: “Got letter from child’s pediatrician, practice will no longer accept any insurance because of the ACA, and will operate as a fee-per-service practice.” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

CT Woman: ‘It broke my heart’ Reporter: “On Friday, a Waterford woman told us her doctor’s office would not take her insurance.” CT Woman: “It broke my heart. I have to say, I’ve been waiting a year and a half, this is my favorite doctor.” (WVIT-CT, 2/10/14)

FLORIDA MAN: Insurer ‘Will Drop All Eight Of His And His Wife’s Doctors’

FL Couple ‘waiting weeks to resolve a problem’: “Matt and Nancy Parisi were waiting weeks to resolve a problem… Matt Parisi, 63, a fisherman, who had to pay $40 out-of-pocket to get his high blood pressure medication. ‘It’s very uncomfortable to think that if we had to go to the hospital right now, we could face a quarter-million [dollar] bill…’” (“Help! I Can’t Use My Obamacare Benefits,” CNN Money, 1/12/14)

FL Senior: “The AARP managed care network [George Smith] had relied on for years will drop all eight of his and his wife’s doctors as of Jan. 1. ‘I couldn’t believe it. I have my house and car and everything insured through AARP,’ said Smith, 73. ‘I thought, “They are not going to drop me. I’ve been a member for years.”’ … Patients have received letters telling them to seek new physicians if they want to stay on the plan. Doctors … have learned that AARP plans will stop paying for their services next year.” (“Patients Scramble After AARP Medicare Advantage Plans Drop Providers,” Tampa Bay Times, 10/21/13)

FL Senior: “A Medicare Advantage plan that covers 35,000 beneficiaries in Southwest Florida is dropping at least 300 doctors and hard-to-find medical specialists from its Southwest Florida network… Cape Coral resident Joseph Ryan said his 92-year-old mother will lose access to her regular dermatologist, orthopedist and gastroenterologist, among others. He’s heard similar stories involving scores of doctors from others. ‘That’s an awful lot of doctors and an awful lot of people who are going to have to figure out what to do in January,’ Ryan said. ‘It’s not just one or two doctors.’” (“United Healthcare Dumps Doctors,” The News-Press, 10/18/13)

GEORGIA SURVEY: ‘Premiums Are 80- To 100-Percent Higher’

GA Insurance Agent: “Carol Hill in Duluth, Ga., just outside Atlanta, said premiums are 80- to 100-percent higher than those under current policies that offered wider networks.” (“Survey Finds Doctors Rebelling Against Obamacare, Famous Hospitals Declining To Join,” Washington Examiner, 11/27/13)

HAWAIIANS: Face Premium Hikes

Hawaiians face premium hikes ‘to cover higher medical expenses, taxes and fees anticipated under the Affordable Care Act’ “The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Tuesday the state Insurance Division approved increases of 9.2 percent for 11,000 individual plans and 5 percent for 26,300 small business plans administered by Kaiser. HMSA will be allowed to increase rates on 14,300 individual plans by 7.5 percent. HMSA increased small business rates by 6.8 percent for 118,000 members earlier this year. Insurers say the increases are necessary to cover higher medical expenses, taxes and fees anticipated under the Affordable Care Act.” (“Hawaii Approves Higher Rates For HMSA, Kaiser,” AP, 1/2/14)

IDAHO MAN: Deductibles So High ‘It Defeats The Purpose Of Having Insurance’

ID Man: ‘We’re going to go from $770 a month … to about $1,300’ “A small business owner in the Treasure Valley says the Affordable Care Act has made his family’s health care coverage much more expensive. … ‘We’re going to go from $770 a month which we were paying up until October, to about $1,300. I don’t see how this helps,’ said Lund. Lund says he was shocked to hear that the most comparable plan would cost almost double. ‘From an emotional point of view, I don’t think you can really prepare yourself for it,’ said Lund.” (“Sticker Shock: Health Insurance Costs Nearly Double For Boise Man,” KTVB, 12/4/13)

· ‘Most plans under the new law cost at least 20 percent more’ “Insurance agent Jenna Ortiz says Lund’s story is common. ‘We have a lot of clients who are small business owners, so for them if their business is doing well, they don’t get help but they’re paying astronomical amounts for monthly premiums,’ said Oritz. Oritz says most plans under the new law cost at least 20 percent more…” (“Sticker Shock: Health Insurance Costs Nearly Double For Boise Man,” KTVB, 12/4/13)

ID Man: ‘the deductibles were so high — $4,000 to $6,000 a year — that it defeats the purpose of having insurance’ “Mark A. York, a 60-year-old freelance writer in Hailey, Idaho, said he began shopping after he received a letter saying that his current insurance policy would be canceled because it did not meet the requirements of the health care law. In the exchange, he said, he found policies with premiums similar to what he is now paying, $440 a month, but ‘the deductibles were so high — $4,000 to $6,000 a year — that it defeats the purpose of having insurance.’” (“On Health Exchanges, Premiums May Be Low, But Other Costs Can Be High,” The New York Times, 12/9/13)

INDIANA WOMAN: ‘Obamacare Is Not Affordable’

IN Woman: ‘I don’t care how they spin it, Obamacare is not affordable’ “‘It will hurt everybody in the long run,’ said Cat Ping, 55, of Indianapolis in a follow-up interview. Ms. Ping, who does not have insurance, added: ‘I don’t care how they spin it, Obamacare is not affordable. It’s wrecking our total economy.’” (“Broad Skepticism On Health Care Law,” The New York Times, 12/18/13)

ILLINOIS FAMILY: ‘Washington, You’re Killing Us Out Here’

IL Family: ‘Washington, you’re killing us out here’ “IL family of 4. Both parents & a 23 yr. old canceled. We’re scrambling to replace coverage by Jan. 1st at a 80% increase in premiums. Washington, you’re killing us out here.” (“YOUR STORIES: Insurance Plans Cancelled Due to Obamacare,” Heritage.org, 10/30/13)

IL Insurance Agent: ‘These are really scary numbers’ “Agent Larry Pahlke’s Chicago customers are seeing monthly premiums increase from $425 to $750. ‘These are really scary numbers for a guy like me,’ Pahlke said.” (“Survey Finds Doctors Rebelling Against Obamacare, Famous Hospitals Declining To Join,” Washington Examiner, 11/27/13)

IL Woman: “The cost /threat of Obamacare has cost our family more than $1000 in increased cost of the above listed insurances. I had to go to the doctor last month and paid $725 out of pocket expenses because my doctor no longer accepts our insurance.” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

KENTUCKY WOMAN: ‘My Deductible Has Doubled Along With My Premiums’

KY Man: ‘my current doctor is NOT a part of the “IN GROUP” of the new coverage provider listing’ “‘You can keep your doctor’ statements are lies. KY ACCESS who I have my current policy with is closing… Using shop Kentucky site gives me another plan that is within the same price point of existing insurance policy but with MUCH HIGHER out of pocket prices to me for expected services and prescription medication required over the next twelve months. OH! and my current doctor is NOT a part of the ‘IN GROUP’ of the new coverage provider listing.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Man: ‘My premium payment has increased by 37% and my deductible went from $2500 to $10,000.’ “As my Congressional representative, you need to know how ObamaCare is harming my life and health care. I guess …my premium payment has increased by 37% and my deductible went from $2500 to $10,000. I liked my healthcare plan, but wasn’t allowed to keep it.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: ‘As a senior, I am furious. As a democrat, I feel deceived’ “I am 69 and continue to work as I have done for 55 years. My deductible on my medical insurance from my healthcare employer has increased 7 fold. I have Medicare which will not pay a dime until this deductible is met. … As a senior, I am furious. As a democrat, I feel deceived.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: ‘I do NOT have any more money to pay for this, so what am I supposed to do?’ “I did have insurance. I carried medical, dental, and life insurance….and got it for $140.00 a month. I have now received a letter informing me as of December 31, 2013 I will no longer have medical insurance with the company. I went to see what my affordable healthcare was going to cost me, and found the CHEAPEST with $5000.00 deductible would be $435.00 a month! … I do NOT have any more money to pay for this, so what am I supposed to do?” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Man: “My health plan that I’ve had for 10 years just got cancelled, and the least expensive plan on the exchange is a 246% increase–that means hundreds of extra dollars per month we don’t have.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail, 11/7/13)

KY Couple: “We have not found out exactly how much the premium is going to rise but have been told to expect between 150% to 300% increase per paycheck. We do know for certain that our deductible will raise from $5,000.00 annually to $8,500.00.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Man: “Dentist Aaron McLemore of Louisville, Ky… The 31-year-old’s current policy is being canceled. A new policy from the exchange will more than double his monthly premium and nearly double his yearly out-of-pocket maximum.” (“How The Affordable Care Act Pays For Insurance Subsidies,” NPR, 11/7/13)

KY Woman: “I am deeply upset… The President promised that if you had health care, you would not be impacted. The sad truth is that like my co-workers, my deductible has doubled along with my premiums. The only way to be able to adjust, is for us to either reduce or stop our 401K contributions. This is hardly affordable health care.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Man: “A policy that has similar coverage to what we had would cost us around 1100.00 a month. This is a 100% increase for me and my wife.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: “My family cannot afford the $1100 plus dollars a month the website says we will need to pay for health insurance. That is more than our house payment and car payment combined. We are just average Kentuckians working and living paycheck to paycheck without any assistance from government programs. I really don’t know what we will do if we have to pay that amount out for insurance. We might lose our home, our transportation, my daughter might have to drop out of college, the list just goes on and on. What are we supposed to do?” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Man: “According to the health care exchange in Kentucky, my insurance cost is going to go from under $400 to over $700 with zero subsidies available. …we don’t need Obamacare!” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: “My premium health care at premium cost to me is being canceled. I paid a very high premium to have a major medical plan. I am now forced into the exchange for a lesser plan with more exclusions and higher deductibles. I will most likely never reach those deductibles. How does this help me? … What a disappointment this administration has caused.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: “My out of pocket expenses for my family of five went from 1500 a year to 7000 a year.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: “Our President lied to us. Not only are we going to lose our insurance but when go to a different policy-we have to pay more. We will never be able to retire-we are 58 & 56 years old-we will have to work the rest of our [lives] just to pay for our insurance.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

KY Woman: I’ve ‘had really a panicked experience lately trying to figure out how my 10-year-old son can continue with his specialists’ “Rebecca Stewart had a chance to take her concerns about Obamacare directly to the top. … ‘I’m probably not the only one who has had really a panicked experience lately trying to figure out how my 10-year-old son can continue with his specialists,’ Stewart said. ‘I know I can’t keep my plan, which I liked, but as I’m trying to decide what to do going forward, I’ve spent weeks, with days on the phone getting confidently delivered wrong answers, conflicting information, it’s becoming quite obvious to me a lot of agencies, almost everyone I talk to, is having a lot of trouble figuring out the new rules.’” (“Covington Mother Grills Obama On Health Care,” The Cincinnati Enquirer, 2/4/14)

KY Woman: “These plans offered by the ACA … are choking the middle class in this country. If I signed up for one of these plans, I would not be able to use doctors that are right across the Ohio river from me. I live within view of the Ohio River just across from Cincinnati in Campbell County. I have had a relationship with my general practitioner for over 20 years. I have had the same OBGYN for over 10 years. I have had the same pediatrician for 3 years. I don’t think I should have to start over and find other doctors just because all of mine are closer to me in Cincinnati, OH than other doctors would be in Edgewood, KY or Lexington, KY.” (Sen. McConnell, Constituent Mail)

MAINE WOMAN: ‘I Just Feel So Upset And Angry And Agitated’

ME Small Business Owner: Premium will increase by at least $200 a month, ‘I just feel so upset and angry and agitated’ “But for some people, high deductibles work, Pultz said. At age 54, she has enough equity in her house that she could afford to pay $14,000 for her deductible if she wound up in the hospital, she said. It’s much tougher, however, for her to find the cash to pay a higher premium every month, she said. … She would have to pay at least $200 a month more for a plan through the marketplace, which she can’t swing, Pultz said. The deductible would be far lower — the ACA caps deductibles at $6,250 — but that doesn’t matter much to her. ‘I’m pretty laid back — all I think about is my dogs and my business — but I just feel so upset and angry and agitated,’ Pultz said.” (“Maine Health Plans Canceled As Obama Unveils Fix,” Bangor Daily News, 11/15/13)

MASSACHUSETTS WOMAN: ‘It’s Not Right And It’s Not Fair’

MA Woman: ‘I lost coverage with doctors in my area. It’s not right and it’s not fair…The current federal government and their policies are detrimental to the health of my business and my family’ “Introducing Tisei was Erin Calvo Bacci, a Reading chocolatier and small business owner. Originally crippled by the cost of healthcare, Calvo Bacci obtained a plan with $80 monthly premiums for her family of five under the Massachusetts Health Care Reform Law. When the Affordable Care Act went into effect last year, her family was switched to a different plan with the same cost, but different doctors. ‘I lost coverage with doctors in my area. It’s not right and it’s not fair,’ Calvo Bacci said. ‘The current federal government and their policies are detrimental to the health of my business and my family.’” (“Tisei Renews Congressional Battle,” Wicked Local News [MA], 1/23/14)

MARYLAND STUDENTS: ‘We Don’t Have That Money. We Can Barely Afford Books’

MD Student: ‘We don’t have that money. We can barely afford books’ “At Bowie State University in Maryland, the cost of student health insurance policies went from roughly $100 a year to $1,800 a year. … The sticker shock didn’t sit well with some students who spoke out against the price hike. ‘You’ve haven’t done anything Obama and I am disappointed in you,’ one student said. Another told Campus Reform, ‘We don’t have that money. We can barely afford books.’” (“Students Suffer Obamacare Sticker Shock As Premiums Soar, Plans Get Cut,” Fox News, 11/18/13)

MICHIGAN WORKERS: ‘Face Sharply Higher Out-Of-Pocket Costs’

In Michigan, ‘a severe case of sticker shock’ “The 41 employees of Extreme Dodge in Jackson, Mich., are very familiar with trade-ins, but this year they’re learning about trade-offs as they come face to face with the new realities of health care. …most have a severe case of sticker shock. ‘I feel like I’ve been taken to the cleaners,’ said Neal Campbell, a salesman.” (“Workers At Auto Dealership Come Face To Face With Obamacare Trade-Offs,” CNBC, 12/30/13)

· Most employees ‘face sharply higher out-of-pocket costs next year’ “Twenty-one have now decided to go with the new group plan recommended by the company for next year, though they realize that they face sharply higher out-of-pocket costs next year. Their deductibles will go from $1,125 this year to $3,000 next year, and maximum out-of-pocket costs jump from $2,250 to $6,350. And for families, those numbers double: to a $6,000 deductible and $12,700 out-of-pocket maximum.” (“Workers At Auto Dealership Come Face To Face With Obamacare Trade-Offs,” CNBC, 12/30/13)

· MI Man: Monthly premiums up 287%, ‘We feel betrayed, lied to, and we’re pissed off’ “Among the hardest hit is Campbell, a salesman with a wife and three young children, all of whom are active in athletics. The premium payments currently deducted weekly from his paycheck will increase $77, to a total of $221 per week. ‘That’s a huge part of the budget,’ he said. ‘We feel betrayed, lied to, and we’re pissed off.’” (“Workers At Auto Dealership Come Face To Face With Obamacare Trade-Offs,” CNBC, 12/30/13)

· MI Woman: ‘How are we supposed to live?’ “‘How is this helping the average American that’s working 40 to 50 hours per week?’ said Terry Hardcastle, a salesperson. ‘How are we supposed to live?’ Cathy Smith, who’d hoped she’d qualify for a subsidy and made just a little too much money, had tears in her eyes. ‘You don’t make that much money to begin with,’ she said, ‘and the prescriptions are going to kill me.’” (“Workers At Auto Dealership Come Face To Face With Obamacare Trade-Offs,” CNBC, 12/30/13)

MI Retirees: ‘Their premium ticked up from $762 per month to $820’ “Kathleen Forster, 64, a retired interior designer in Grosse Point, Mich., who received a cancellation notice in the mail several weeks ago, said she holds no hope that her provider, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, will rescind the cancellation notice they sent her and her husband several weeks ago. …The Forsters ended up buying a new policy from Blue Cross that meets the ACA requirements. Their premium ticked up from $762 per month to $820; their deductible shot up from $1,000 to $12,000.” (“After Obamacare Fix, Consumers Remain Uncertain,” USA Today, 11/17/13)

MI Woman: ‘Currently pay $925 a month… been quoted between $1,300 and $1,500 a month’ “Kalamazoo residents Mary Swanson and her husband are among the reported 225,000 Michiganders who received cancellation letters from their insurers because their plans did not meet the minimum standards of the Affordable Care Act. The Prudential Preferred Realtor, whose husband owns a construction business, said they currently pay $925 a month… She has been quoted between $1,300 and $1,500 a month for coverage, she said, and the couple’s deductible will jump to $6,000 each instead of $4,000 combined. As a result, in 2014 they would need to budget $26,000 a year for health-care, Swanson said.” (“Obamacare’s Impact On Kalamazoo Residents: ‘We’re In The Worst Spot We Could Be,’” Kalamazoo Gazette, 11/23/13)

· “…for her, the worst part is that ‘we were promised we would keep our doctors and we would keep our plans’ … ‘I would love to have my former plan back.’” (“Obamacare’s Impact On Kalamazoo Residents: ‘We’re In The Worst Spot We Could Be,’” Kalamazoo Gazette, 11/23/13)

MI Insurance Agent: “Gregg Westcott, an agent in Grand Rapids, Mich., said his customers are seeing $300-per-month premiums mushrooming to $900 and $1,400.” (“Survey Finds Doctors Rebelling Against Obamacare, Famous Hospitals Declining To Join,” Washington Examiner, 11/27/13)

MINNESOTA MAN: ‘Premium Will Jump 84 Percent’

MN Resident: ‘Premium will jump 84 percent’ “Like some other consumers, Goedtel is looking at a steep premium increase for coverage that comes with new requirements from the federal Affordable Care Act. Goedtel…said his premium will jump 84 percent, because the new rules say he must have a much lower deductible and purchase richer benefits such as maternity care. It’s no consolation, Goedtel said, that premiums available for 2014 will be cheaper in the Twin Cities than in Rochester, St. Croix County, Wis., and much of the nation. ‘They’re dictating what’s good for me, and telling me I have to buy it whether I think it’s good for me or not,’ said Goedtel, 60, of Hugo.” (“Even With Low MNsure Health Insurance Rates, Some Will Pay More,” St. Paul Pioneer Press, 11/11/13)

MISSISSIPPI MAN: ‘Premiums Will More Than Double’

MS Doctor: New plan ‘will cost 112 percent more a month than their current plan’ “In addition, a disabled, retired doctor from Vicksburg says he was notified that his family’s insurance premiums will skyrocket in January. He says the least expensive health-care option for his wife and two teenage children will cost 112 percent more a month than their current plan, even though it offers less coverage.” (Sen. Wicker, Press Release, 11/25/13)

MS Man: “A graphic designer from Madison says he was recently informed by his insurance provider that his premiums will more than double at the beginning of the year, rising from $355 to $755. The health-care laws requirements for essential benefits such as maternity care and birth control mean that he will pay for services that he will never use as a 58-year-old male.” (Sen. Wicker, Press Release, 11/25/13)

MISSOURI WOMAN: ‘There Is No Way, No Way I Can Afford This’

MO Woman: ‘There is no way, no way I can afford this’ “Lost coverage. Premium will be somewhere around 450 a month with a 6300 deductible up to 500+ a month for the best plan. Struggles to pay $187 a month right now with a 5000 deductible. ‘There is no way, no way I can afford this.’” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

MO Woman: ‘due to the budget constraints placed on the hospital due to the Affordable Care Act they no longer provide [follow-up checkups on pacemaker] services’ … ‘instead of driving 10 miles for these services, they have to drive 60 miles one way’ SEN. ROY BLUNT (R-MO): “William, from Desloge, MO, said that his wife had a pacemaker installed 3 years ago. He goes on to say: Recently, she called to set up a follow-up checkup on the pacemaker with her hospital. She was told that due to the budget constraints placed on the hospital due to the Affordable Care Act they no longer provide those services. According to William, instead of driving 10 miles for these services, they have to drive 60 miles one way. They have to drive 120 to 150 miles to go to one of the places located in St. Louis when they used to drive just 10 miles. The reason the hospital gave is that the Affordable Care Act has created that.” (Sen. Blunt, Congressional Record, S.789, 2/6/14)

NEBRASKA WOMAN: Premiums Will Nearly Double

NE Woman: Premiums increasing from $440 to $726 a month. Reporter: “Kodad showed up these documents. She currently pays about $440 a month, but starting January 1, her rates will increase to $726.” Kodad: “Now we have inpatient substance abuse care.” (KMTV-NE, 11/15/13)

NEW HAMPSHIRE WOMAN: New Premium ‘An Insane Amount Of Money’

NH Woman: New premium ‘an insane amount of money… How are you supposed to pay that?’ “Ginger Chapman and her husband, Doug, are sitting on the health care cliff. The cheapest insurance plan they can find through the new federal marketplace in New Hampshire will cost their family of four about $1,000 a month, 12 percent of their annual income of around $100,000 and more than they have ever paid before. … Because their plan is being canceled, she is looking for new coverage for her family, which includes Mr. Chapman, 55, a retired fireman who works on a friend’s farm, and her two sons. ‘That’s an insane amount of money,’ she said of their new premium. ‘How are you supposed to pay that?’” (“New Health Law Frustrates Many In Middle Class,” The New York Times, 12/20/13)

NH Doctor: ‘Pretty shocking not be able to come to your own hospital’ “…in New Hampshire… a rude awakening for Dr. Jocelyn Caple, who works at one of the excluded hospitals, Frisbie Memorial in Rochester, N.H., where she’s president of the medical staff. … ‘We all use Frisbie physicians,’ she said. Although there’s another facility she could go to next year, ‘it’s pretty shocking not be able to come to your own hospital.’ As an Obama supporter, Caple is troubled.” (“Limited Patient Choice Next Health Overhaul Issue,” AP, 11/20/13)

NEW JERSEY MAN: ‘Monthly Premium Triples’

NJ Man: Premium increased 10-fold, ‘That’s more money than I can afford’ “Vincent Grosso, an 88-year-old Washington Township resident, received a cancellation notice this fall from the HMO administering his Medicare. When he asked why, he was told the new health law imposed additional mandates on insurance companies that would increase costs. The insurance company suggested he enroll in a new plan it offered that would increase his monthly premium from $15 to $150 each for him and his wife. ‘That’s $300 a month,’ said Grosso, who opted for a less costly plan. ‘That’s more money than I can afford.’” (“Health Plan Creates Both ‘Winners And Losers’ In South Jersey,” Courier-Post [NJ], 1/12/14)

NJ Retiree: ‘Retirement medical premium will go up $103 a month’ and ‘maximum out-of-pocket has risen from $6,000 to $9,200’ “After 36 years on the job as an IT specialist, Saglibene retired last year. He said under the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act, his ‘retirement medical premium will go up $103 a month beginning in 2014.’ Also, said Saglibene, his ‘maximum out-of-pocket has risen from $6,000 to $9,200 for my family in network, and the Health Reimbursement Account from my company will decrease from $2,000 to only $800.’” (“Added Costs For Obamacare Put Squeeze On Staten Islanders; Grimm Seeks Input,” Staten Island Advance, 11/25/13)

NJ Woman: Premium will increase by $8,000 per year “Ms. Tuit said that she and her husband had private health insurance, spending up to $10,000 a year, because he has long been self-employed. But she said their existing plan was no longer available, effective Dec. 31. Even though the Obama administration said that people would be able to keep their existing insurance for a year, she said she was told by her insurer that her plan no longer exists so she is anxious to learn about new options and the cost. She said she needed the tax credit information because the quote she was getting without it was $18,000 a year, starting Jan. 1. ‘I was looking forward to Obamacare,’ she said. ‘I thought that it had to be better because with more people in it, the price had be better. It can’t be $18,000 a year.’” (“Even With Website Fixes, Troubles Persist In Applying For Insurance,” The New York Times, 12/3/13)

NJ Man: ‘Monthly premium triples from the current contract’ “I recently received a notice from my medical insurance carrier that my current policy will be terminated on Dec. 31. They offered me a new contract starting Jan. 1, 2014. The monthly premium triples from the current contract and the co-pay increases. When I questioned the carrier about the increase I was told that the Affordable Health Care Act imposes additional mandates that resulted in increased cost. I cannot afford such a large increase.” (“Send Obamacare Bills To Congress,” South Jersey Times, 11/28/13)

NJ Small Business Owner: ‘Has found himself in the segment of consumers who likely will pay more both for insurance and for health care’ “…Brock last year found a plan from Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey that covered himself and his three college-age children for $755 a month. In October, Horizon sent Brock a letter saying the plan, called Horizon EPO Plus, wouldn’t be renewed when it expires June 1, because it didn’t meet the law’s requirements. … He then went to the Horizon site, which asked for more details, including the ages of his three children. The premium for Horizon Advance EPO Silver was $1,303 a month. … one truth was beginning to emerge: He has found himself in the segment of consumers who likely will pay more both for insurance and for health care. ‘Even if you’re healthy, I’ve got to believe you’re going to spend $2,000 to $4,000 a year, besides what you pay for (premiums),’ he said. ‘With three kids, somebody is going to get sick or hurt.’” (“Obamacare Leaves NJ Consumers Struggling To Buy Insurance As Deadlines Near,” Ashbury Park Press, 11/29/13)

NJ Man: “Joe Porzio, a 57-year-old construction worker in Wayne … received a letter saying his plan was being canceled by Dec. 31… He was eventually able to fill out an application, but the website locked him out and he has not been able to access it. ‘The deadline is approaching, and I’m still in limbo,’ Porzio said.” (“Many New Jerseyans Stuck In Health Care Limbo As Dec. 23 Deadline Nears,” Bergen County Record, 12/12/13)

· “I also found out that my doctors, who I have been seeing for years, will now only accept the highest offered plans. So, it’s true, you have to pay to keep your doctors.” (“Many New Jerseyans Stuck In Health Care Limbo As Dec. 23 Deadline Nears,” Bergen County Record, 12/12/13)

NJ Woman: “Kim Greene warned her small-business clients that 2014 would be ugly. But not like this. … ‘Sixty-eight percent, 43 percent, 40 percent,’ Greene said as she read off the rate hikes that her small-employer clients are facing in 2014. ‘Wow, 70.33 percent.’ ‘I’ve never seen anything like this,’ she said.” (“Obamacare Leaves N.J. Small Employers Scrambling Around High Premiums, Hard Choices,” The Star-Ledger, 12/8/13)

NJ Man: ‘I am totally upset’ about 43 percent premium increase Dr. Papasikos: “I am totally upset.” Reporter: “Dentist Dr. George Papasikos is upset because of a notice he got from his health insurance company.” Dr. Papasikos: “In the end of September I received a notice from my small business health care plan, that it was going to be terminated as of February 1. And that I would probably be offered a substitute plan at a much higher premium.” Reporter: “How much higher? 43 percent.” (NJTV, 12/11/13)

NEW MEXICO WOMAN: ‘Going To Lose My Existing Policy’

NM Resident: “I am one of the previously happy insured who is going to lose my existing policy at the end of the year, lose my primary care physician and pay substantially more for comparable coverage.” (“Losing Policy, Longtime Doctor, Cancer Specialists,” Albuquerque Journal, 11/22/13)

NEW YORK WOMAN: ‘Life-Saving Surgery Has Been Postponed’

NY Woman: “A woman diagnosed with breast cancer, whose life-saving surgery has been postponed after she lost her doctors under ObamaCare, made a heartfelt plea Sunday to President Obama to amend the Affordable Care Act. In an exclusive appearance on ‘Fox & Friends,’ Josie Gracchi, who has been diagnosed with ductal-invasive carcinoma, looked into the camera and addressed Obama: ‘I would like my health care taken care of. I was insured. I think anyone who is going through a serious illness should have immediate responses. I shouldn’t have to wait months, weeks, to even be considered for surgery that I should have had weeks ago.’ Gracchi was forced to postpone her Jan. 3 biopsy and follow-up treatment at New York’s Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, the largest private cancer center in the world, when her insurance rolled over into a new plan that was part of an exchange under the Affordable Care Act. ‘As of January 1, my insurance plan rolled over into a new ObamaCare plan that is part of the exchange and my doctors are no longer available in my network, so the surgeons that I was dealing with … I no longer have access to,’ Gracchi told Fox News. … ‘This is delaying all my treatment and surgery. Most people that get breast cancer don’t wait this long to have a surgery, but it’s as if I’ve never had insurance at all,’ Gracchi added.” (“Cancer Patient’s Treatment Put On Hold Over Obamacare,” Fox News, 1/19/14)

NY Woman: Insurance plan canceled under Obamacare, ‘I’m dead in the dirt, I can’t do anything. I can’t go to the doctor.’ REPORTER: “Many people in the Rochester area lost their healthcare insurance January 1. They’re among the millions across the country who saw their plans canceled under the Affordable Care Act. Nancy Miller is one of them. The self-employed hairdresser says she began doing research in September to make sure she’d be covered this year, but she then learned the health plan that she’d had for years was no longer available. She says other options were too expensive. Miller has some health issues that require medication, treatments and tests – treatments she’s delayed because of the lack of insurance.” MILLER: “I’m not going to lose my house because I don’t have health insurance and I need medical assistance, so I’m dead in the dirt, I can’t do anything. I can’t go to the doctor, I can’t have my tests run, I can’t go for an MRI.” (YNN-NY, 1/7/14)

NY Man: Obamacare ‘more than doubled the cost, from $132.99 to $325.92 a month’ “Michael Kennedy, who runs two family-owned dog-grooming salons near Albany, said changes to his cut-rate insurance coverage mandated by ObamaCare had more than doubled the cost, from $132.99 to $325.92 a month per person. And when he checked the cost of buying an ObamaCare policy instead, it was ‘basically the same price, or even more,’ he said. Kennedy, 46, said that he and his wife clear only about $60,000 a year from their Pink Dog Parlor and Resort business, and that paying the new, higher premiums will be ‘a huge challenge.’ ‘It’s like another 100 dogs we need to groom,’ he said.” (“Here Are The Big Losers In Obamacare,” The New York Post, 1/2/14)

NY Man: “Betrayed by Obama’s now infamous promise that ‘if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor.’ … family physician was ‘randomly removed’ from the network” “Capt. Fred Ardolino, who is the owner of the Atlantis charter yacht that cruises New York City’s waterways, said he was betrayed by Obama’s now infamous promise that ‘if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor.’ Ardolino, 69, of Gerritsen Beach, Brooklyn, said his family physician was ‘randomly removed’ from the network of managed-Medicare doctors approved by his insurance company, Oxford Health Plans.” (“Here Are The Big Losers In Obamacare,” The New York Post, 1/2/14)

NY Senior: ‘Obama had said I could keep my doctor. Now they’re doing away with my doctor. They kicked him out! After 20 years, that’s not right.’ “ObamaCare is making seniors sick. Elderly New Yorkers are in a panic after getting notices that insurance companies are booting their doctors from the Medicare Advantage program as a result of the shifting medical landscape under ObamaCare… [Dr. Jonathan] Leibowitz’s patients are furious. Alfred Gargiulio, who has cerebral palsy with a seizure disorder, has been seeing Leibowitz since 1993. ‘Obama had said I could keep my doctor. Now they’re doing away with my doctor. They kicked him out! After 20 years, that’s not right. We love Dr. Leibowitz,’ said Gargiulio.” (“Elderly Patients Sick Over Losing Doctors Under Obamacare,” New York Post, 10/25/13)

NY Senior: “It hurts, it hurts inside and it’s a terrible feeling to think that you can’t get what you want” “Doctors are getting bumped off plans and their patients are getting worried, Brennan reported. ‘I just can’t believe it because this is the man you rely on,’ heart patient Leonard Goldberg, 82, said. ‘It hurts, it hurts inside and it’s a terrible feeling to think that you can’t get what you want,’ Tony Molesphini, 83, said. ‘Nobody wants to die, me above all people,’ 79-year-old Jim Heffernan said. The three men with heart trouble say their biggest problem is losing the doctor they’ve had for decades, and they fear for their future. … They claim that they that this is a way of cutting costs which they have to do because they are getting a reduction in their reimbursement for the Medicare Advantage plans due to the Affordable Care Act,” [Dr. David Hess] told Brennan.” (“Doctors Dropped By Insurers As Affordable Care Act Rollout Continues,” CBS New York, 11/1/13)

NY Businesswoman: “A minimum 119 percent increase in insurance premiums … ‘We’re taking a hit for the cost in a lot of ways’” “The change will cause a minimum 119 percent increase in insurance premiums for J&H Troy Ltd., a consulting business run by Jim Martin and Heather Hamlin, who are married. The coverage they’ll get for that money will be worse than what they have now, Hamlin said. She feels businesses like J&H are paying unduly for expenses associated with the new law. ‘We’re taking a hit for the cost in a lot of ways,’ Hamlin said.” (“When Care Act Isn’t Affordable,” The Times-Union, 11/17/13)

NY Man: “Can’t afford price increase; $261.00 per month; website troubles too.” (“Obamacare’s Harmful Impact,” GOP.gov, 12/11/13)

NY Woman: “‘We are the Obama people,’ said Camille Sweeney, a New York writer and member of the Authors Guild. Her insurance is being canceled, and she is dismayed that neither her pediatrician nor her general practitioner appears to be on the exchange plans.” (“With Affordable Care Act, Canceled Policies For New York Professionals,” The New York Times, 12/13/13)

NY Woman: “Ms. Meinwald, 61, has been paying $10,000 a year for her insurance through the New York City Bar. A broker told her that a new temporary plan with fewer doctors would cost $5,000 more, after factoring in the cost of her medications. Ms. Meinwald also looked on the state’s health insurance exchange. But she said she found that those plans did not have a good choice of doctors, and that it was hard to even find out who the doctors were, and which hospitals were covered… said she was a lifelong Democrat who still supported better health care for all, but had she known what was in store for her, she would have voted for Mitt Romney.” (“With Affordable Care Act, Canceled Policies For New York Professionals,” The New York Times, 12/13/13)

NORTH CAROLINA MAN: ‘Health Care Premium Is Tripling’

NC Small Business: Healthcare costs increasing by up to $275,000, ‘it’s going to limit our ability to expand the business’ Brooke Wilson: “We anticipate our costs to be increased about $250,000-$275,000 a year with the Affordable Health Care.” … Reporter: “So how are you going to make up this cost, this $250,000 additional burden?” Wilson: “Unfortunately, I think it’s going to limit our ability to expand the business, we may not be able to add as many trucks to our fleet, we may not be able to open another location.” (WRAL-NC, 1/14/14)

NC Woman: “It’s been aggravating to have to see the policy that you were perfectly happy with doesn’t exist anymore and you can’t keep it.” Reporter: “For the past three years, Ruth-Anne Grimes says the health insurance plan that cost her $381 a month served her well. Then this letter…” Grimes: “It says you’ll no longer – the plan will no longer be offered in 2014.” Reporter: “Because it does not meet the qualifications of the Affordable Care Act. But there’s another plan available: for $562 a month.” … Grimes: “It’s been aggravating to have to see the policy that you were perfectly happy with doesn’t exist anymore and you can’t keep it, you have to go on another plan. … the Affordable Care Act did not make it very affordable for me.” (WRAL-NC, 11/7/13)

NC Businessman: ‘Health care premium is tripling from $311 a month to $963.’ Anchor: “One local business owner told us he is suffering from sticker shock after watching his premiums skyrocket.” … Reporter: “…their health care premium is tripling from $311 a month to $963. He says the letter from his provider also said his deductible is increasing by $1,000.” … Tony Hyatt: “I really am concerned that the way things are going that the quality of healthcare will go down.” (WSOC-NC, 11/18/13)

NC Woman: Family’s premium ‘will increase from $395.60 to $713.11’ “‘We know now that the opposite was true,’ said Sherry Overbey, 58, director of the Belmont Crisis Pregnancy Center. ‘Now you can call this deception, deceit, falsifying information, fabrication, whatever. But the bottom line is no matter what nicety you give it, a lie is a lie is a lie.’ She said the monthly premium for her family health insurance will increase from $395.60 to $713.11, more than ‘my mortgage and my second mortgage combined.’ Overbey drew laughter when she added: ‘Of course, I now have maternity coverage and I can get free birth control pills.’” (“Supporters, Protesters Show Up For Testimony On Health Law In Gastonia,” Charlotte Observer, 11/22/13)

NC Man: ‘Health insurance premium … going from $401 a month to $747’ “Ralph Webster, 62, of Kitty Hawk, N.C., says his health insurance premium for a Blue Cross/Blue Shield plan is going from $401 a month to $747. His old plan was canceled, and the best plans the insurer could offer both on and off the exchange cost the same. Dare County is one of the 18% of counties with just one insurer on the federal exchange, USA TODAY’s analysis shows.” (“Sticker Shock Hits Health Exchange Shoppers,” USA Today, 11/22/13)

NC Businessman: ‘Deductible is increasing by $1,000’ Anchor: ‘One local business owner told us he is suffering from sticker shock after watching his premiums skyrocket.’ … Reporter: ‘…their health care premium is tripling from $311 a month to $963. He says the letter from his provider also said his deductible is increasing by $1,000.’ … Tony Hyatt: ‘I really am concerned that the way things are going that the quality of healthcare will go down.’ (WSOC-NC, 11/18/13)

NC Businessman: ‘Deductible is increasing by $1,000’ Anchor: ‘One local business owner told us he is suffering from sticker shock after watching his premiums skyrocket.’ … Reporter: ‘…their health care premium is tripling from $311 a month to $963. He says the letter from his provider also said his deductible is increasing by $1,000.’ … Tony Hyatt: ‘I really am concerned that the way things are going that the quality of healthcare will go down.’ (WSOC-NC, 11/18/13)

HUNDREDS IN OHIO: ‘Can No Longer Go To Their Trusted Doctors’

Hundreds In OH: ‘Hundreds of people in the Mahoning Valley can no longer go to their trusted doctors… the Affordable Care Act is to blame’ ANCHOR: “With the passage of the Affordable Care Act, some area medical facilities saying, they’re no longer able to use some insurance companies.” … REPORTER: “Hundreds of people in the Mahoning Valley can no longer go to their trusted doctors, and local officials say the Affordable Care Act is to blame.” … DOCTOR: “Now they’re facing the choice of switching to another doctor. They’re really scared. Really scared.” (WKBN-OH, 1/21/14)

At Denison University in Granville, OH ‘annual premium increased from $520 to $970’ “As a result of the Affordable Care Act… Denison University in Granville is phasing out annual caps on the coverage provided through its student health plan. … Denison’s annual premium increased from $520 to $970. … About 25 percent of Denison students are enrolled in the plan, down from about 50 percent in the past, Patton said.” (“Colleges Revise Student Health Plans Under Obamacare,” The Columbus Dispatch, 1/6/14)

OH Family: Premiums alone will increase by $5,000 per year, ‘When you’re trying to keep your house, pay car insurance and put your kid through college, it’s tough’ “Ed Anderson, a graphic designer from Columbus, Ohio, who was recently bumped from his wife’s insurance policy for reasons relating to the new law, discovered that his family’s monthly premiums will double even if he chooses the most inexpensive plan available to him through the new federal insurance exchange in his state. Anderson said he and his wife currently pay a monthly premium of $460 through Blue Cross Blue Shield. … The new insurance policy will cost the Andersons an extra $5,000 a year in premiums alone. ‘When you’re trying to keep your house, pay car insurance and put your kid through college, it’s tough,’ Anderson said. ‘Everything we do is going to be affected by this. Getting groceries, eating out. Going anywhere. It’s just crazy.’” (“The Many Disrupted Lives Under Obamacare,” The Fiscal Times, 12/12/13)

OH Woman: ‘I can’t afford it. I cannot afford it … It’s going to take at least a second job, praying that I would make enough’ Reporter: ‘She went shopping today for an insurance plan, and what she found has her devastated.’ Liz Binns: ‘Ahhh’ Reporter: ‘You can see it in her face and hear it in her voice. The disappointment Liz Binns felt when after two months of trying she was finally able to compare health insurance plans on the government website healthcare.gov’ Binns: ‘I can’t afford it. I cannot afford it.’ Reporter: ‘Liz needs insurance for her husband who has a pre-existing condition and who’s job doesn’t offer coverage, but the cheapest match for him that she found on the health insurance marketplace is well over $400 a month with a $5,000 deductible.’ Binns: ‘How can I pay this kind of money out? It’s going to take at least a second job, praying that I would make enough on a second job just to pay for this health insurance.’ (WEWS-OH, 12/3/13)

PENNSYLVANIA WOMAN: ‘Obamacare Benefits Were Not In Order, Forcing Her To Spend Hours And Hours On Hold’

PA Small Business: Plan cancelled, premiums now ‘40 percent higher’ “Stephen Lohman, owner of Allegheny Plant Services, a trucking company in Pittsburgh, said the Aetna PPO plan he offers his 38 employees will be discontinued at the end of this year. He said he has been offered a new Aetna policy with premiums that are 40 percent higher, and that other insurers’ rates are similar. ‘We were very surprised,’ he said, adding that it is ‘important to me personally’ to offer insurance to his employees, but he is not sure he can afford the premium increase.” (“Second Wave Of Health-Insurance Disruption Affects Small Businesses,” Washington Post, 1/11/14)

PA Woman ‘left the [doctor’s] office without care’: “Jeanne Patterson really needs to see a doctor but had to cancel her appointment last week. Why? Because her new Obamacare benefits were not in order, forcing her to spend hours and hours on hold…” (“Help! I Can’t Use My Obamacare Benefits,” CNN Money, 1/12/14)

· “Patterson’s journey started New Year’s Day, when she landed in the emergency room for a stomach ailment. The Independence policy number she received didn’t work and the hospital required her to sign a form saying she would pay for care herself, though it agreed to bill her later. She then received an ID card for her HMO plan in the mail a few days later, so she made an appointment with her primary care doctor and a gastric specialist for follow up. But when the 59-year-old went to her doctor last week, she was told he couldn’t see her because she hadn’t designated him as her primary care provider. If she wanted to be treated, she’d have to pay for the visit and lab work and request reimbursement. She spent an hour on hold with Independence trying to fix the problem and left the office without care.” (“Help! I Can’t Use My Obamacare Benefits,” CNN Money, 1/12/14)

· “Patterson, who has previously always had insurance… learned she’d have to wait until February to make an appointment.” (“Help! I Can’t Use My Obamacare Benefits,” CNN Money, 1/12/14)

SOUTH CAROLINA WOMAN: Doctor ‘Absolutely Would Not Take’ Obamacare Plan

SC Woman: Doctor ‘absolutely would not take’ Obamacare insurance Host: “Have you applied for insurance under the [Patient Protection and] Affordable Care Act? Your local provider may not accept your coverage.” … Lisa Bentley-Long: “I do not know what I’m going to do. I really don’t.” … Reporter: “Being self-employed she jumped at the change to sign up for an insurance plan on the healthcare.gov marketplace, a website created under the recent Affordable Care Act. She said she enrolled in the consumer’s choice plan. According to the website she qualified for it and it was available in the Spartanburg County area. But she says that her doctor and a local county hospital wouldn’t accept the plan.” Long: “They absolutely would not take it, and there are several other doctors in Spartanburg that are the same way.” (WSPA-SC, 2/5/14)

TENNESSEE BUSINESS: Insurance ‘Basically Tripling In Price’

TN Small Business Owner: Insurance ‘basically tripling in price’ “A lot of small businesses like myself do not even – they’re not required to have health insurance, [and] I’m not either but I try to do that in order to keep high quality [workers] and take care of my people that work for me. Right now, the average is around $100 a month. When the insurance goes up the least expensive policy we can get is $296 a month, so it’s basically tripling in price.” (WJHL-TN, 11/13/13)

TN Woman: “‘We have health insurance that is worthless,’ said customer Shawnna Simpson. Simpson found out last week the new insurance for which she is paying $600 a month was a bad choice for her family.” (“Some Finding Coverage Problems Under New Health Exchange, WSMV-TN, 1/27/14)

· “Her 15-year-old daughter was hurt in a cheerleading accident, so Simpson called her family doctor only to learn they don’t take her new health plan… Ever since, she’s been on the phone with the healthcare exchange, looking for a family doctor in Williamson County that accepts her plan, but finding none. ‘We can’t use it in the county where we live… Obamacare is not working. A lot of people that have the same issues we have and don’t know it yet, until they try to use it,’ she said.” (“Some Finding Coverage Problems Under New Health Exchange, WSMV-TN, 1/27/14)

TN Man: ‘Handed them my [Obamacare insurance] card, and the girl had this deer in the headlights look and said, “I’ll be right back.”’ “Last year, Channel 4 News interviewed David Pearce, who was excited about enrolling in the healthcare exchange. Then, he showed up for his doctor’s appointment last week. ‘Handed them my card, and the girl had this deer in the headlights look and said, “I’ll be right back,” ’ Pierce said. It turns out his doctor in Murfreesboro doesn’t accept [his plan]…” (“Some Finding Coverage Problems Under New Health Exchange, WSMV-TN, 1/27/14)

TEXAS MAN: Deductibles Now ‘Double’

TX Man: ‘Local pharmacies could not confirm his coverage, so he left without his medications’ “Paul D. Donahue and his wife, Angela, are among more than a million Americans who have signed up for health coverage through the federal insurance exchange. Mr. Donahue has a card in his wallet from his insurer to prove it. But when he tried to use it to get a flu shot and fill prescriptions this week, local pharmacies could not confirm his coverage, so he left without his medications.” (“Enrollees At Health Exchanges Face Struggle To Prove Coverage,” The New York Times, 1/10/14)

TX Artist: ‘I am one of those Democrats who wanted it to be better… I wouldn’t be able to go to the doctor I’ve been going to for years’ “Marlys Dietrick, a 60-year-old artist from San Antonio, said she had high hopes… But she said they have been turned off by high premiums and deductibles and would rather pay the fine. ‘I am one of those Democrats who wanted it to be better than this,’ she said. … ‘I wouldn’t be able to go to the doctor I’ve been going to for years,’ she said. ‘That is not a deal.’” (“For Consumers Whose Health Premiums Will Go Up Under New Law, Sticker Shock Leads To Anger,” Washington Post, 11/3/13)

TX Man: ‘Had paid an annual $10,000 deductible before 2012. Now he pays double’ “Policies bought before the law was passed were ‘grandfathered in’ and can remain in place, she said. But that apparently doesn’t lock in the cost of premiums or deductibles, said Robert Kecseg, an investment adviser in Lewisville. Kecseg, 61, said he bought a plan before Obamacare took effect. But the insurer that provided the coverage went out of business. When he went to buy new insurance, he found that the cost was much higher. He had paid an annual $10,000 deductible before 2012. Now he pays double. ‘It’s pretty spectacular,’ he said.” (“Obamacare Stirs Anxiety For Thousands With Canceled Policies,” Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 11/23/13)

UTAH PARENTS: Premiums Will ‘More Than Double’

UT Parents: Premiums will ‘more than double’ after their plan was cancelled ‘more than 3 1/2 months into their daughter’s fight with undifferentiated sarcoma’ “Paul and Jami Porter of Kaysville learned last week their insurance plan was terminated under the Affordable Care Act, more than 3 1/2 months into their daughter’s fight with undifferentiated sarcoma began. Six-year-old Ellie Porter, who has had one kidney removed, just wrapped up her radiation treatments and is expected to be done with chemotherapy around the first of the year. … He and his wife are now in the middle of shopping for a new plan that complies with the Affordable Care Act. … The options the family is weighing have premiums that are more than double the premiums under their previous plan, Paul Porter said.” (“New Health Care Law Makes Finding Cancer Coverage Difficult, Family Says,” KSL, 11/29/13)

UT Man: “After three months and more than 50 phone calls, John Gisler gave up on buying coverage through HealthCare.gov. Gisler wanted to purchase a plan for his 45-year-old son, who has a rare degenerative condition affecting his coordination and speech. His current coverage through Utah’s high-risk insurance pool plan ends Dec. 31. …so far, Gisler hasn’t succeeded in purchasing coverage — but not for a lack of effort. ‘We’ve had three separate applications that failed to make it through,’ Gisler says. ‘I have a notebook with all the calls I’ve made, maybe 50 or 100. It just goes on and on.’ Earlier this week, Gisler quit trying.” (“Obamacare’s Biggest Losers,” Washington Post, 12/11/13)

VIRGINIA MAN: ‘Deductibles Are Way Higher’

VA Lawyer: ‘It’s not as good and way more expensive’ “Cynthia Rutzick, 49, who has her own law practice in Oak Hill, Va., said that the policy she had been buying for years through the state bar association was already offering the benefits mandated by the health law. But the policy, which cost $1,500 a month for herself, her husband and their two children and included 94 percent of the physicians in her area, was canceled. The new one, which costs $1,600 a month for her and her two children (her husband is going on Medicare next year) includes 82 percent of area physicians. Her broker said plans like her old one don’t exist anymore. ‘So I had a blue car, but could not go out and buy another blue car,’ she said. ‘I have to buy a red car, and it’s not as good and way more expensive.’” (“Second Wave Of Health-Insurance Disruption Affects Small Businesses,” Washington Post, 1/11/14)

VA Woman: Premium of $600 and deductible of $6,000 so high ‘Donald Trump couldn’t do that’ “Vickie Lynn Kershaw, 60, of Virginia Beach … has gone without insurance since poor health forced her to leave a motel housekeeping job in 2003. She showed up at the O.V. Medical and Dental Center in Norfolk the second week of October to get help signing up for a health plan. …An insurance agent working with the health center gave her a quote for a couple of plans. One cost more than $1,400 a month with a $4,000 deductible, the other more than $600 a month with a $6,000 deductible. ‘I said, “Well, Donald Trump couldn’t do that,”’ Kershaw said. ‘That’s as far as I got with them.’” (“At Midpoint, Health Care Market Gets Mixed Reviews,” The Virginian-Pilot, 1/4/14)

VA Man: ‘The deductibles are way higher, $5,000 or $6,000’ “Brian H. Snoddy, 35, of Palmyra, Va., said his wife and two children had a policy with a $330 premium and a $2,500 deductible, but it is being canceled. For new plans with comparable coverage on the federal exchange, he said, ‘the deductibles are way higher, $5,000 or $6,000.’” (“On Health Exchanges, Premiums May Be Low, But Other Costs Can Be High,” The New York Times, 12/9/13)

WASHINGTON WOMAN: ‘Tried To Fill A Prescription … Pharmacy Could Not Verify Her Coverage’

WA Woman: ‘Tried to fill a prescription for a new asthma inhaler, [but] the pharmacy could not verify her coverage’ “Ms. [Erin] Waterman, 47, tried to fill a prescription for a new asthma inhaler, the pharmacy could not verify her coverage even though she had paid her first month’s premium on Dec. 23.Ms. Waterman was given the option of paying full price — $187, instead of the $50 co-payment required under her new plan — and eventually being reimbursed. But she decided to wait, and hope that she does not have an asthma attack in the meantime. ‘I didn’t want to give them more money than I have to,’ she said.” (“Enrollees At Health Exchanges Face Struggle To Prove Coverage,” The New York Times, 1/10/14)

WA Small Business: ‘There was one point when we had a $100 deductible. Now, it’s $3,000’ “She and her husband own A&C Mechanical in Wenatchee, a small business that has struggles every year with the rising cost of health insurance. ‘It’s literally getting to the point where it’s unaffordable, and Obamacare does nothing to help that,’ she said. ‘There was one point when we had a $100 deductible. Now, it’s $3,000.’” (“Experiences Finding Health Plans Range From Frustration To Elation,” The Wenatchee World [WA], 11/23/13)

WA: “Administrator’s at Seattle Children’s today said they predicted this would happen and it’s even worse than they expected. Kids being denied specialty treatment at the hospital by insurance providers on the Washington Health Benefits exchange. Children’s filed requests on behalf of 125 of their patients. Of those they said they got only 20 responses, eight of which were denials.” (KING-WA, 1/31/14)

· Dr. Melzer: “Well some of the patients who were denied… a two year old with a new significant neck mass that was being evaluated for infection or malignancy, an older child with a chronic severe medical condition requiring multi-disciplinary care here, a baby that had a skull abnormality.” (KING-WA, 1/31/14)

WA Doctor: ‘families who bought insurance thinking that their children were going to be covered…in fact found that it’s a false promise’ Doctor: “This is not an isolated incident… The exclusion of a major provider like Seattle Children’s from a major insurance network in this market is unprecedented… we’re seeing denials of care, disruptions in care; we’re seeing a great deal of confusion and, at times, anger and frustration on the part of these families who bought insurance thinking that their children were going to be covered. And they’ve in fact found that it’s a false promise.” (CBS News, 2/8/14)

· WA Mother: Health care exchange ‘kinda backfired’ Reporter: “Kate’s ear drum had ruptured. Her doctor recommended a specialist at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital. … The care was authorized by Sarah’s insurer, through Washington state’s health care exchange. … This is an approval letter for the coverage, four days later this is a denial.” Sarah: “Exactly.” Reporter: “That letter says the hospital is out of network.” … Sarah: “That’s why we all pay into the system. Is because in that moment, when you’re in a dire situation then you hope that insurance company is gonna take care of you.” Reporter: “And what did you find out?” Sarah: “That it kinda backfired.” (CBS News, 2/8/14)

WEST VIRGINIA WOMAN: ‘Stuck’

WV Woman: “‘It is definitely frustrating and not fair,’ said Addie Wilson, 27, who lives in Fairmont, W.Va., and earns $22,000 a year working with at-risk families. She said that she is paying $100 a month more than she should for her insurance and that her deductible is $4,000 too high. When Wilson logged on to HealthCare.gov in late December, she needed coverage right away. … Terrified to go without coverage, Wilson phoned a federal call center and took the advice she was given: Pay the full price now and appeal later. Now she is stuck. ‘I hope,’ she said, ‘they really work on getting this fixed.’” (“Healthcare.Gov Can’t Handle Appeals Of Enrollment Errors,” Washington Post, 2/2/14)

· “She was told to pay the full insurance premium — $215 a month. She did. The next day, Brandon Williams, an enrollment counselor at a local health clinic, helped her check HealthCare.gov again. This time, the computer worked properly and showed that, with the subsidy, her monthly premium should be just $106 and her yearly deductible $617, not $4,750. Wilson and Williams called the online marketplace and, after three hours on the phone, got only a promise from a supervisor that Wilson would hear from CMS’s ‘advance resolution team’ within five days. The call didn’t come.” (“Healthcare.Gov Can’t Handle Appeals Of Enrollment Errors,” Washington Post, 2/2/14)

WISCONSIN DEMOCRAT: ‘Personal Health Insurance Costs … Have Gone Up 3-4 Times’

WI Dem Chief Of Staff: “‘In a shock to the system, the older staff in my office (folks over 59) have now found out their personal health insurance costs (even with the government contribution) have gone up 3-4 times what they were paying before,’ Minh Ta, chief of staff to Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), wrote to fellow Democratic chiefs of staff in an email message obtained by POLITICO. ‘Simply unacceptable.’” (“Older Hill Aides Shocked By Obamacare Prices,” Politico, 11/21/13)

But, hey, pay no attention to the bitter experience of millions of Americans! They’re liars, every one of them! Who you gonna believe, Harry Reid says, me or your lying eyes?

Reid took to the Senate floor this afternoon to revise his prior comments:

I can’t say that every one of the Koch brothers ads are [sic] a lie but the vast, vast majority of them are.

Right. So the experience of many millions of Americans with the Affordable Care Act should simply be disregarded. Why? Because Harry Reid hates the Koch brothers. That’s liberal logic.

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