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comment by OftenBen

The ones who had insurance before, nope. They pay what they always have.

The ones who now have insurance but didn't before? No idea, they didn't have any before.

I have yet to see a 10k deductible. From my side of things, all I know is if a person has coverage or doesn't. And from what I've heard from my veteran coworkers, there has been a significant decrease in the amount of people saying they have no insurance.





snoodog  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

At the moment I can only prove Higher costs, but it was more of a failure to stop a trend than an obvious dislocation caused by the change:

Source: http://files.kff.org/attachment/summary-of-findings-2015-employer-health-benefits-survey

tacocat  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

You literally just tried to support your argument with a paper that says not much has changed and doesn't mention deductibles once. You're so off the rails it's time to just bail.

snoodog  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Like I said the costs are up but there aren't any drastic changes to the existing trend. So obamacare fails to stop the trend of price but there isn't a huge spike either. I was unable to find a clean chart showing deductibles paid per year

OftenBen  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

There's more to it than deductibles.

Prevention is really the part you aren't grasping here. Right now, a huge part of why costs are so high is because of the no-pay rate in Emergency rooms and lots of other outpatient clinics, so the people who do have to pay, pay more. Prevention, annual checkups, nutrition counseling and better access to primary care providers, among other things, lowers the amount of people who use the emergency room as a one stop medical shop, which again, jacks up costs for everybody.

snoodog  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Its interesting that you mention that. The data I linked seemed to show a steady increasing trend in healthcare costs paid but no spike (see exhibit B ) but the increased access is a factor I hadn't considered. Like you said a large part of the cost should be because of the uncompensated care rate best chart I could find (old from 2014). But if uncompensated care has gone down, drastically but patient costs have have continued to climb at previous rates that is the the huge spike. Its just hidden by the medicaid expansion. So i'm not off the rails like tacocat might imply (BTW exhibit G shows % of plans with over 1k deductible).

Effectively middle class Americans are still paying the same huge costs as they were with lots of uncompensated cost but they are also paying for the expansion of medicaid that they weren't paying for before.

As for prevention I agree that more people are using their free annual checkup but I'm not sure how much more likely they are to use primary care considering 40-60 percent of workers have a deductible over 1k [(see graph on exhibit G) ](http://files.kff.org/attachment/summary-of-findings-2015-employer-health-benefits-survey) and less than half of Americans have $1,000 in savings. The current structure still makes many of those services inaccessible to those who would benefit most.

OftenBen  ·  3128 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Like I said, I can only tell you what I see.