Yea why didnt he just expand it more and not have to come up with obama care?
Expand on that thought. "Obamacare" as a term has become so useless as to convey nothing--if by "Obamacare" you mean the coverage expansions that give tens of millions of people access to health insurance, then the Medicaid expansion
is Obamacare. Or roughly half of it.
So how much more should he have expanded it? To everyone under 150% of the poverty line (as some of the bills at the time did)? Or some higher cutoff? Or to eliminate the entire individual market for folks who don't get health insurance through a job? Or to everyone period?
What is it you're suggesting should have been done? It's hard to debate the question when you haven't clearly articulated what it is.
Sorry, Just a simple guy, but if we had 40 million or so folks with out health care why didnt we just expand them under the medicaid umbralla [spl?] problem solved I would thinik and didnt you post that the penalty dont start to 2015? every thing I keep reading folks with out health care will have to pay in april 2014.. you seem like a smart guy on this. but think you are wrong. sorry for the typos....
I believe that a large constraint is the current health care industry that has fo be considered and built upon. It isn't possible to simply ignore and scrap an existing health care system that is ready in place, down to the computer system that manage insurance payments from thousands of insurance providers to tens of thousands of mlservice providers. Medicare and medicaid programs would have to be massively expanded as a single insurance provider while tens of thousands of employees would lose jobs as the remaining insurance providers shut down. That or they would all be changing employers, from Blue Shield etc to Medicare/caid. Or the existing private providers would suddenly become Medicare/caid providers.
Is that what we are considering?
Oh, sorry, just jack up the current Medicare/caid to pick up the extra 40 million.
Not as intense. Still, do you suppose that is part of it, to get the 40 million into an existing system that is already huge and capable of the increased load rather than have the gov't try and try and expand it's capacity. Don't we generally agree that the private market is a bit better at efficiency then the gov't?
Agreed, Medicare isn't no slouch. They use CMS. And the existing Medicade system functions pretty well in many counties. Still, might it be a matter of a) logistics.
Another thought is that the govt, the US way, is to not be in the business of competing with private industry.
I know some folk have problems with medicaid in their counties but I'd be cautious about generalizing that to Medicaid in general. While it is a block grant supported program, it is state and county run. It may be that itnjust sucks in some places. Down the street from here is a county Medicaid facility and it not to bad.
Also, my wife has been on Medicare for decades and has bad excellent care.