Anxiety over GOP health plan for those with severe illnesses
As
The
The bill sets aside billions of dollars more to help people afford coverage, but experts say that money is unlikely to guarantee an affordable alternative for people now covered under a popular provision of the existing law that prevents insurers from rejecting them or charging higher rates based on their health.
What happens to those with pre-existing conditions under the Republican plan remains unknown.
Several people unsettled by the prospects expressed these concerns.
FORMER
For the last several years, he, his wife and their three children have settled into a comfortable place using health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. But now the
"Today, it really kind of sunk in that not only are we not going to potentially have health care coverage but that it was done as a political win rather than a well-thought-out plan," said Martinez, a 32-year-old former chef who's studying social work. "That's what stings about it."
Shortly after being diagnosed with type I diabetes,
Now she worries that protections under the Affordable Care Act that made sure certain essential health benefits, like insulin prescriptions, could be eliminated.
The new Republican plan would let some states allow insurers to charge higher premiums for people with pre-existing conditions, but only if those people had a lapse in insurance coverage. Supporters say those states would need to have programs in place to help people pay for expensive medical treatments, including high risk pools.
But Perkins said
"I bought a house just a couple of months ago. Will it come down to me paying my mortgage payment or paying my health insurance so I don't have a lapse in coverage?" said Perkins, an attorney for a small firm in
Williams, who owns her own graphic design company in
"I'm terrified of becoming disabled. If I'm being completely honest, I've thought of ending my life if it comes to that," she said.
High risk pools run by the state are not the answer, she says. The Republican plan would also bring back lifetime caps on coverage, which Williams says she would meet after only her first IV treatment. She and her husband both work full time, but wouldn't be able to afford the roughly
"I have really lost my faith in humanity," she said. "It's terrible how little we care for the sick."
Thompson, of
If the House proposal allowing insurers to make coverage for pre-existing conditions unaffordable takes hold, he fears his cancer history will make him uninsurable if he would lose his current job as a retirement financial adviser.
"Like many of us here, whether you have asthma or a heart condition or diabetes or like me, cancer, any type of pre-existing condition, you go back to the way it was before, you give insurance companies carte blanche to do their underwriting and to exclude you," Thompson said.
Jehlen saves about
She was forced to quit work because of all the X-rays and other chemicals she was exposed to daily as a veterinary assistant and now cuts corners, sacrificing phones and school activities for her two teen daughters, to afford the monthly premiums. The stress has caused her to struggle with depression and anxiety.
"Absolutely, I'm scared. I'm worried I'm going to have to figure out what I'm going to do with all my side effects with my leukemia if they take this away from me," she said.
Three days after the inauguration, she set up an appointment for a birth control implant so she would be covered for four years, no matter what happens.
The 29-year-old operations director at a start-up apparel business in
"I'm looking at stockpiling, making sure I have an inhaler," she said. "I'm pretty scared to lose coverage."
The
"We always hear about job growth and business creation — being able to have affordable health care drives that," Williams said. "Because of the ACA I am able to employ people and help the economy grow."



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