Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

NYC_SKP

(68,644 posts)
3. People who now pay their own costs will be thrilled! My COBRA is $1,432.49/month.
Thu Sep 26, 2013, 12:49 PM
Sep 2013

It will go down to around $700, so I'm delighted.

Others who don't pay their own way or who have never had the displeasure of finding and paying for their own private plan might not be so happy.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

A lot of people have been asking for that enlightenment Sep 2013 #1
"turned away"? How about arrested and marched out solarhydrocan Sep 2013 #4
I have not forgotten. RC Sep 2013 #5
outside, on the steps at best (if we're lucky) yurbud Sep 2013 #34
At the 'You're allowed to voice your protest here' zone. icymist Sep 2013 #44
Would you qualify for a subsidy to help with that amount? NightWatcher Sep 2013 #2
I think my wife and I together make too much--though student loan payments take a bite yurbud Sep 2013 #8
Discounted premium. Ms. Toad Sep 2013 #18
People who now pay their own costs will be thrilled! My COBRA is $1,432.49/month. NYC_SKP Sep 2013 #3
There were times when I could have gotten individual insurance for that but couldn't afford it yurbud Sep 2013 #9
And, COBRA is for a limited time, right? MH1 Sep 2013 #15
18 months and then 18 months again = 3 years. NYC_SKP Sep 2013 #17
Should be far less than COBRA. n/t Ms. Toad Sep 2013 #20
I pay for my own, but am lucky enough to live in the only state that has implemented bluestate10 Sep 2013 #25
It's not the "real" cost of health CARE, it's the real cost of health INSURANCE COMPANY PROFITS yurbud Sep 2013 #35
That profit is definitely waste, but at best eliminating "profit" from premiums will save only 10% Hoyt Sep 2013 #53
and for those who dont live in "blue states"? bunnies Sep 2013 #54
The average Walmart worker earns about 17K a year... Demo_Chris Sep 2013 #6
Those will have subsidies MH1 Sep 2013 #16
That average Walmart employer would get insurance that are virtually free to them under the bluestate10 Sep 2013 #26
Not to worry Demo_Chris the poor people will be dumped into the so-called bronze plans Egalitarian Thug Sep 2013 #37
Sadly, the mandated premiums demanded of the poor... Demo_Chris Sep 2013 #39
I don't think there's any question of for whom it works, at all. Egalitarian Thug Sep 2013 #41
This is my read on it as well.. Demo_Chris Sep 2013 #42
Not entirely. Some wellness/preventative measures will be free Orangepeel Sep 2013 #47
That would be a very good side effect. Laelth Sep 2013 #7
I don't think it's the intent, but I hope it's an effect nonetheless yurbud Sep 2013 #10
As a side point, that's cheaper than Medicare Recursion Sep 2013 #11
You can't be serious. RebelOne Sep 2013 #12
You presumably have paid in to the system, yes? Recursion Sep 2013 #14
I am over 65 and I think I just have Part A, RebelOne Sep 2013 #52
Almost nobody has to pay the Part A premium (except for the Medicare trust fund) Recursion Sep 2013 #57
Most people that have jobs that provide health care coverage never see the real cost of their bluestate10 Sep 2013 #28
That goes on this year's W-2's, right? Recursion Sep 2013 #29
You must be kidding. RebelOne Sep 2013 #51
But Part A - hospital - is "free," and you only pay about 1/3 average of Part B. Hoyt Sep 2013 #56
That's the subsidized Part B premium Recursion Sep 2013 #58
I understand that if you get a silver plan, many people can get subsidies for out-of-pocket costs, pnwmom Sep 2013 #13
A person or family must earn below a specific amount for subsidies. In my state, a bluestate10 Sep 2013 #22
BINGO. We have a WINNAH!!! bluestate10 Sep 2013 #19
I once got a quote out of curiosity from Blue Cross over the phone, the guy actually said JaneyVee Sep 2013 #21
The quote was likely for a top of the line Gold plan. Search on your ACA Exchange. bluestate10 Sep 2013 #23
This was 4 years ago. I was agreeing that most people don't know how much JaneyVee Sep 2013 #24
I was actually looking at Kaiser. I like the way they deliver services. yurbud Sep 2013 #33
My prediction: The ACA's greatest contribution will be to show the wisdom of single-payer n/t arcane1 Sep 2013 #27
"they probably have no idea what the total cost of their coverage is." PoliticAverse Sep 2013 #30
Probably a good thing but I'm not really personally pleased as that piece will make my TheKentuckian Sep 2013 #36
I'm glad that's in there. I hope people actually look at it. yurbud Sep 2013 #45
And the more who sign up, the less HC is linked to a specific job. DevonRex Sep 2013 #31
We effectively cannot, not most of us. Our employer contribution is not portable and we can't get TheKentuckian Sep 2013 #38
I'm looking at it this way. DevonRex Sep 2013 #40
They better pay a hell of a lot more and magically spring up within walking distance. TheKentuckian Sep 2013 #46
I would like to see a single payer system and though I was covered over the years by insurance I Thinkingabout Sep 2013 #32
good god his insurance is 1200/mth. who okieinpain Sep 2013 #43
I've been saying this LWolf Sep 2013 #48
I agree with you. DevonRex Sep 2013 #49
I guess I'll find out SOMETHING for sure on October 1st. LWolf Sep 2013 #50
Before I got coverage through a job, I used to do the math on premiums vs my out of pocket costs... yurbud Sep 2013 #59
Yes. LWolf Sep 2013 #60
Many people see the ACA as a large step toward the real goal pnwmom Sep 2013 #55
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»A possible unintended sid...»Reply #3