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Re: I agree, but for a different reason. 

By: clo in FFFT3 | Recommend this post (1)
Thu, 10 Aug 17 3:14 AM | 45 view(s)
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Msg. 35261 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 35257 by ribit)

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The fate of the GOP’s health reform plan right now hinges on Sen. John McCain’s recovery from a blood clot surgery. The health scare is also the perfect reminder of just how critical insurance can be — and how much protection from medical emergencies Americans stand to lose with the Better Care Reconciliation Act, the Senate Republicans’ plan to dismantle Obamacare.

According to a press release from McCain’s office, the senator had a craniotomy to remove a blood clot from above his left eye on Friday, July 14, at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona. He’s now “recovering comfortably at home.”

This weekend, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced that he’d delay the vote on the contentious Better Care Act until the Arizona Republican had returned to the Hill and could vote to start debate on the bill. (McConnell needs all the supportive votes he can get.)

There are at least four deeply ironic things about McCain’s health situation:

1) As Vox’s Dylan Scott explained, nothing less than a health emergency has thrown the GOP’s health reform plan into disarray.

2) The senator’s office is saying the blood clot was discovered during a routine physical, which is exactly the type of preventive service Obamacare expanded and the Better Care Act could curtail.

3) The craniotomy sounds like an emergency surgery (though McCain’s office would not confirm that).

Obamacare required insurance plans sold in the individual market, the fully insured small-group market, and through Medicaid to cover a list of 10 “essential health benefits”, including emergency healthcare. 
The Better Care Act would allow health insurers to once again sell skimpier insurance plans that might not include such comprehensive benefits.

4) Life-saving surgeries like these would also be out of reach for more people if the GOP plan were to pass, since it’s expected to leave millions more Americans without insurance compared to Obamacare. 

more:
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/7/17/15983944/mccain-uninsured-surgery-cost-76000




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: I agree, but for a different reason.
By: ribit
in FFFT3
Thu, 10 Aug 17 2:57 AM
Msg. 35257 of 65535

clo
With that in mind, how could he take any action that would take health care away from millions...

...McCain doesn't have Obama Care. If he did he would still be sitting in a waiting room somewhere waiting for his number to be called so he could see a doctor who just graduated from Mogadishu Medical College and could not speak English. Providing of course that he had met the deducibles and had the co-pay in his pocket along with the rest of the Obonzocare recipients.


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