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Thursday, July 13, 2017
Friday, July 7, 2017
Arizonans’ stories and the Affordable Care Act
Posted by Ken Farbstein 0 comments
Labels: Affordable Care Act, Arizona, chronic Lyme Disease, Dirk Almstedt, El Rio Community Health Center, Jeff Jeans, Masche sextuplets, Obamacare, Phoenix, Wickenburg
Saturday, February 4, 2017
The Affordable Care Act: I clinically died twice
Guadalupe Mota told his story at a meeting of nearly 900 members of 32 of the churches, mosques, and synagogues in the Greater Boston Interfaith Organization on Feb. 2.
I am here because the Affordable Care Act (ACA) saved my life. I was born and raised in Zacatecas, Mexico. When I was learning to walk as a child, like many kids, I would fall and bump my head. But in my case, when that happened, I’d start to bleed uncontrollably. My parents took me to the doctor, and I was diagnosed hemophilia. Hemophilia is a hereditary disorder that prevents a person’s blood from clotting. That means both internal and external bleeding can easily become life threatening.
At age 13, I had a severe internal bleeding that put me in the hospital. The doctors could not control the bleeding because the medicines they needed had run out. Mexico’s healthcare system was, and still is, too poor and broken to afford the medicines patients like me needed. During that stay in the hospital, I bled so severely that I clinically died twice. Miraculously, I was brought back to life. It is a miracle I am alive today. In many countries like Mexico, hemophiliacs die in their childhood or teenage years because there is no medicine available.
My parents decided they couldn’t allow this to happen again. Holding dual citizenship in the United States, they decided to move our family to California. They left behind their jobs, our home, and many of our family so I could have access to the medicines I needed. Once in the United States, I received insurance through the state, then through MIT, when I came here for college. After that, I was covered by my employers. As a working adult, my pre-existing condition prevented me from getting coverage for myself.
Fast forward to January of 2016. I graduated from business school without a job--and without insurance. I once again felt the desperation I had in Mexico. If this had been 2008, my pre-existing condition would have made it impossible to buy insurance. By this time, though, the ACA was in place. It allowed me to purchase insurance through the Connector at a reasonable price. For the months it took me to find a job, it was my safety net.
That safety net saved my life. Two months after graduating, I again ended up in a Boston hospital with internal bleeding. The medicine provided by the hospital stopped my bleeding. But without my insurance, there’s no way I could have afforded those medicines. My condition could have killed me, just as it almost did in Mexico. But it didn’t, because of the Affordable Care Act. I am here because the Affordable Care Act saved my life.
Share this, and your own story, with your U.S. Senators in Alaska, Arizona, Iowa, Maine, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia and elsewhere. Get their name and phone number here. Read another ACA story.
Posted by Ken Farbstein 0 comments
Labels: Affordable Care Act, dual citizenship, GBIO, Greater Boston Interfaith Organization, Guadalupe Mota, Health Connector, health insurance coverage, hemophilia, Obamacare, pre-existing condition
Monday, January 16, 2017
Martin Luther King on health care injustice: Jeff Jeans, just like you
Posted by Ken Farbstein 0 comments
Labels: Affordable Care Act, Amy Goldstein, I Have a Dream, Jeff Jeans, Martin Luther King, ObamaCareSavedMyLife, Paul Ryan, pre-existing conditions, promissory note, throat cancer
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Happy Anniversary!: Affordable Care Act at the five-year mark
March 23 marked five years since Pres. Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law. Ten million more people now have insurance coverage. As the ACA has only been in effect for a little more than a year, though, to ascertain its other likely effects, it is more useful to consider the first five years of the universal health coverage law in Massachusetts, the model for the ACA.
In Massachusetts, universal coverage became law in April 2006 as Chapter 58. The most widely cited study of its effects over the first five years describes an improvement in the self-assessed health status of non-elderly Massachusetts adults. That's the gold standard for whether the whole law was worth it: do people feel healthier? Before the law, 60% rated their health as very good or excellent; afterward, 65% rated it that way. Far more people were insured, and got medical care, according to the article by Sharon K. Long, Karen Stockley and Heather Dahlen in Health Affairs in January 2012, "Massachusetts Health Reforms: Uninsurance Remains Low, Self-Reported Health Status Improves As State Prepares To Tackle Costs."
Read a story about the likely effects of universal health insurance on women's health.
Posted by Ken Farbstein 0 comments
Labels: Affordable Care Act, Chapter 58, Health Affairs, health status, Heather Dahlen, Karen Stockley, Massachusetts health reform, Sharon K. Long, universal coverage, universal health insurance