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Lyn Horan's avatar

Thanks again for your insatiable desire to learn and share. On the anniversary of the Affordable Care Act, I'm good-naturedly laughing at the writing of anything that happened so recently with "I'm old enough to remember...", but it's never a waste of time to remind all that the coming Presidential election outcome could threaten that much needed program. That's not politics, that's an ethical issue. For me it's I remember when there was no managed healthcare, doctors could afford private practices, and then HMO's started, and that led to mismanaged healthcare. My Dad was a CEO in the med insurance biz in the late 1970's in Baltimore, and quit his upper level job because he was being asked to do unethical things. In 1985 I was diagnosed with Progressive MS at 27 and then RA a year later. At that age we barely had time to make ends meet with both working, a 3 year-old child who was very asthmatic and got pneumonia every winter, let alone accrue savings. My husband needed to switch jobs to advance and move into a job closer to his true profession. We were scared to death the new job would find out about his very sick wife. Our HMO did not let us go to a good specialist and we had to go to Johns Hopkins out of pocket for my first visit to the neuro that diagnosed the MS. Fortunately, my personnel director was able to switch us to a better plan (for more $$) instead of having to wait for a formal enrollment period. Not likely to happen today. All my life we had to be careful to hide my disability from my husband's co-workers and bosses for fear he would lose his job or be bypassed for promotions. I got sicker and lost my ability to work a full time job income, while getting assaulted by massive healthcare costs even while paying insurance premiums. Thank god for Obamacare addressing pre-existing conditions for women (unlike me) who are sick or have sick children and are abused by their husbands who carry their health insurance so they stay in that abusive relationship. And the ACA made sure more people are insured. For those of us who had older children at the time who were still dependents finishing undergraduate work full time, they could still be covered by their parents' plan till age 25 thanks to ACA. Things have become much worse for medical staff and even worse for their patients as we move to private equity firms and CEO's running our healthcare, but am so grateful for the ACA. (And I'll be lighting a birthday candle for the ACA). But we've still got a long way to go.

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Amy Goldstein's avatar

I very much liked 5 on Fridays!

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