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Is Obamacare Working? The Affordable Care Act Five Years Later - YouTube
Channel: vlogbrothers
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Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday- what is this
weird, non-airport background?
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Anyway, yesterday was the five year anniversary
of the signing of the Affordable Care Act,
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widely known as Obamacare, which made me wonder
if it's, ya'know, like, uh... worked.
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So here's the summary of what I found.
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In the United States in 2009 more of my tax
dollars went to healthcare than would if I
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lived in Japan, or the United Kingdom, or
Australia, and in exchange for all of that
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money we did not get the universal health
care that people in all of those countries
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enjoy.
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Five years later, in 2014, we spent about
the same percentage of our GDP on health care,
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and we still don't have universal health care
but we do have less un-universal health care.
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By the way, I'm going to oversimplify here
a lot.
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For better information, you should check out
"Healthcare Triage".
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So here's how it worked in the halcyon, pre-Obamacare
days of 2009: the government provided insurance
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to elderly people, through Medicare, and also
to some poor people, through Medicaid.
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Many other people got insurance through their
jobs or paid for it themselves, but this still
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left a lot of people out: like there were
44 million people without insurance.
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This was obviously a problem for those 44
million people, but it was also a problem
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for the rest of us because we did have a kind
of universal healthcare in the United States:
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like when uninsured people got sick and went
to the hospital, they did receive care and,
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if later, they couldn't pay for that care,
those costs would be absorbed, either by the
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rest of us paying higher prices for healthcare,
or else by taxes, because the government had
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to subsidize public hospitals.
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But it wasn't really Universal Healthcare,
because you can't, like, go into an emergency
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department and get your week's supply of insulin
if you're diabetic.
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So in the US we didn't, and still don't, have
real universal Healthcare, we have, like,
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if-you-get-shot,-we-will-try-to-patch-that-up-for-you
universal Healthcare.
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And this system was astonishingly inefficient.
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Like, we spent more than 17% of our total
Gross Domestic Product on healthcare.
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In countries like Canada and France and Australia
and the Netherlands, they spend less than
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10% of their GDP on healthcare, and they get
similar, or in many cases better, health outcomes.
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Also, back in 2009, insurers could deny you
access to healthcare insurance if you had
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a "pre-existing condition": a phrase intentionally
so broad that it encompassed, like, everything.
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For instance, Henry Reich of "Minute Physics"
was once denied insurance because he had the
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pre-existing condition of tinnitus, or ringing
in his ear.
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The only way to get around the pre-existing
condition clause was if you worked for a big
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company, you could get insurance through them.
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And that, of course, incentivized people to
work for big companies when they might otherwise
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be doing different kinds of work, like...I
don't know, making "Minute Physics" videos.
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So, the Affordable Care Act sought to make
the labor market less bananas; decrease health
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related bankruptcies, the number one cause
of bankruptcy in the United States; and, ultimately,
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to insure those 44 million people without
insurance, while, at the same time, over time
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decreasing the amount of money we spend on
healthcare.
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It was going to solve the access problem by
creating these healthcare exchanges where
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private companies could compete for people's
business, but they couldn't discriminate based
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on gender or pre-existing conditions.
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The law also would expand Medicaid, which
would get insurance to more poor people, and
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it required companies with more than 50 employees
to provide affordable insurance to their employees,
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or else pay a gigantic penalty.
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This would all be paid for, more than paid
for, hopefully, by cost control measures.
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These range from getting tougher on Medicare
fraud, to incentivizing hospitals to keep
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elderly patients healthy so they don't get
readmitted to the hospital.
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There's also a new tax on, like, tanning salons,
and an increase in the Medicare payroll tax
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for income over $250,000 a year.
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But has it worked?
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YES - insofar as things are better than before.
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And also...NO - insofar as we are nowhere
close to a path to sustainable healthcare
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spending.
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So the ACA was phased in slowly, and the real
meat of it didn't get going until 2014.
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You'll recall the roll-out of the healthcare
exchanges in late 2013 was...a complete disaster.
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The website, healthcare.gov, was plagued with
glitches and really just...didn't work.
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Admittedly, buying private insurance in the
US before the Obamacare exchanges was arguably
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even worse than healthcare.gov.
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But it was just terrible.
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I remember trying to sign up in those early
months and it was truly awful.
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What has not been widely reported is that,
now, it's really easy.
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In general, the exchanges now work very well
and more than 12 million Americans, including
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me, have signed up for insurance through them.
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Insurance premiums are going up, on average,
more slowly than they did before the exchanges,
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and more insurers are participating, which
means there will be more competition in the
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market.
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Plus, the law is costing less than expected
because fewer employers than expected have
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dropped fewer people than expected off their
insurance.
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And, it doesn't seem to be negatively affecting
the job market.
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It certainly led to more freedom in the labor
market.
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For instance, Sarah Green could leave her
insurance-providing museum job to start an
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art show with PBS Digital.
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And certainly for people who can get insurance
now who couldn't before, either because of
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pre-existing conditions or because they couldn't
afford without the government subsidies, the
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ACA is a really big deal.
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And none of the collapse of the healthcare
system or "death panel" predictions have come
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to pass.
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Instead, uninsurance rates in the U.S. have
dropped dramatically, and early signs indicate
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that at least in some sectors the law is improving
health.
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By the way, sources for all this stuff in
the doobly-doo.
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On the other hand, many millions of people
still don't have insurance and under-insurance,
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where people technically have insurance but
still end up with medical bills they can't
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afford is a huge problem.
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And while the growth of our healthcare costs
has slowed, we still spend over 17 percent
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of our GDP on healthcare.
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Most other developed countries spend far less
than that and still have citizens who live
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longer and healthier lives than Americans.
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And before you say that's because Americans
eat or drink or smoke or whatever more than
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British people: no, that's simply not true!
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Have you ever met an actual British person?
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I don't mean like Jack or Finn or Charlie,
I mean a real one.
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So yeah, if nothing changes, healthcare costs
are still going to crush us in the long run,
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because the thing about the ACA is that it's
not particularly radical.
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Like, the 12 million people who got insurance
through the exchanges, that's less than 4%
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of Americans.
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For the vast majority of people, very little
has changed, and that means that the underlying
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problems haven't really changed.
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We spend way too much on healthcare, and we
get too little in return.
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To take that seriously would require radical
change: government interventions like price
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controls, for instance.
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Or a single-payer healthcare system, or a
truly free market system where if you show
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up to the hospital with a gunshot wound and
you can't pay for treatment, you don't get
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treatment.
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So Hank, the old system definitely wasn't
working, and the ACA is working, in so far
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as its job is to get health insurance to people
who don't have it without disturbing the health
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insurance ecosystem for most people.
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But the ACA didn't really replace an existing
system so much as it grew on top of it.
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Now the fact that so many insurers are bringing
more plans to the exchanges indicates that
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probably the ACA will continue to work, unless
the Supreme Court eviscerates it in a few
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months.
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But the ACA has not and will not solve the
long-term healthcare spending challenge that
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we face.
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Neither, of course, would repealing the law,
if anything the the healthcare spending problem
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was worse before Obamacare.
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Rather than the endless discussions of repeal
or defend we should be frank about the choices
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before us.
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As healthcare economist and healthcare triage
host Aaron Carroll told me, trade-offs are
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messy.
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You can get reform more easily and more cleanly,
but not necessarily while preserving the private
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market.
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You can make healthcare cheaper, but not without
imposing even more regulation.
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You can insure more people and make it cost
less for everyone, but not without spending
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more tax dollars.
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Hank, healthcare policy experts across the
political spectrum seem to acknowledge this
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complex reality.
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It's our job now to make our politicians acknowledge
it too.
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Again, for more information and lots of other
videos about healthcare, please check out
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Healthcare Triage.
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Hank, thanks for reminding me last week about
the many pleasures of being in a crowd, I
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will see you on Friday.
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