When you use a tanning salon, you are paying for ObamaCare. New a pacemaker for your heart, you are paying for ObamaCare—in fact there are dozens of taxes involved in ObamaCare. Starting in 2017 if you are a union member, with a negotiated health care program, you will start paying a tax on your health care. These are the financial taxes.
Then you have the health taxes. In San Diego people with certain cancers are now forced to go to Los Angeles for treatment because NO doctor in the County with that specialty wants to be involved in ObamaCare—though the insurance companies and the State of California lied and added those physicians’ names to the list of doctors in the network. If a private firm did this they would be closed down and the principals jailed for bait and switch.
Then you have the financially killer deductibles and co-pays—can you afford this, PLUS the konthly premium?
“An out-of-pocket maximum is the most you would pay during the term of your health policy (usually one year) before your insurance begins paying 100 percent of covered medical services. Deductibles, co-pays and other costs generally count toward your out-of-pocket maximum. Your monthly premiums don’t.
This year, Obamacare capped out-of-pocket maximums at $6,350 for an individual policy and $12,700 for a family.”

Obamacare costs not always clear-cut
By Emily Bazar, CHCF Center for Health Reporting, 5/10/14
Obamacare’s inaugural open-enrollment period is over, and all you enrollees can breathe easy now. Someday I’d like to write that sentence and mean it — but not today.
Instead, it’s time to take a look at an unwelcome surprise that is turning up in some of your new policies, whether you bought them through Covered California, the state’s health insurance exchange, or on the private market.
I learned today that the health “insurance” I purchased for my family through Covered California does not have ANY maximum out-of-pocket cost on out-of-network providers. How is that even possible? Our family is now faced with potentially infinite costs that could wipe us out.
Let’s start with a quick refresher.
An out-of-pocket maximum is the most you would pay during the term of your health policy (usually one year) before your insurance begins paying 100 percent of covered medical services. Deductibles, co-pays and other costs generally count toward your out-of-pocket maximum. Your monthly premiums don’t.
This year, Obamacare capped out-of-pocket maximums at $6,350 for an individual policy and $12,700 for a family.
Maureen Burke of Berkeley, who submitted this question above, settled on a Blue Shield EPO (Exclusive Provider Organization) family plan from Covered California with a $12,700 out-of-pocket maximum.
It wasn’t until recently that she realized those much-publicized out-of-pocket maximums — including hers — only apply to services obtained from medical providers IN the plan’s network.
So what about providers who are not in network — were limits set on those costs? In her case, and to her shock, no.
As it turns out, insurers get to decide the dollar limits — if any. “The out-of-network, out-of-pocket costs for each plan would be at the plans’ discretion,” said Covered California spokesman Roy Kennedy. “You would need to inquire with the individual plans on what their policy is for out-of-network costs.”
What’s the big deal, you may be wondering. People should just stay in their networks, right?
In this new health insurance environment, that’s easier said than done. As many of you know, insurers have created “narrow networks” for many of their new plans. In plain terms, that means they have whittled down the number of participating doctors and hospitals. The providers agree to charge insurers lower fees in return for higher volumes of patients.
But for consumers, staying in network has become more difficult because there are fewer providers serving more patients. And good luck confirming whether your doctor and hospital are in network. Misinformation and inaccuracies have plagued the network lists since the beginning.
But Burke’s question leads me to a hypothetical: What if she needs surgery? She can make sure her doctor and hospital are in network, but they won’t be the only ones providing services. “One can’t know during surgery whether the assistant surgeon, the radiologist, the anesthesiologist, etc. are in network or not,” she said.
And this problem is not unique to Covered California. Priscilla Myrick, also of Berkeley, bought an Anthem Blue Cross PPO (Preferred Provider Organization) family plan on the private market. Earlier this year, she visited a cardiologist she had previously seen through her previous Anthem plan and had a mammogram and bone density test at an imaging center that used to be in network.
Then she opened her mailbox and found bills totaling more than $1,500.
Myrick started digging. She learned that the cardiologist and imaging center are no longer in network, which sent her bills skyrocketing. Then she discovered Anthem would assume all costs for covered services outside its network only after she had paid $30,000 out of her own pocket.
“I know how to look at numbers,” said the retired certified public accountant, noting that one had not been apparent when she shopped around for plans. “How was anyone supposed to know this?”
Myrick wrote a letter of complaint to the Covered California board and has since canceled a follow-up procedure ordered by the cardiologist, because “I couldn’t find out how much it was going to cost,” she said.
Darrel Ng, an Anthem spokesman, said out-of-pocket maximums for out-of-network providers range from $10,000 to $18,000 for the company’s individual plans and $20,000 to $36,000 for family plans on the private market. On Covered California, they range from $10,000 to $15,000 for individuals and from $20,000 to $30,000 for families.
He urged consumers to do their homework before getting care to ensure their providers are in network.
“We would encourage them to contact the hospital and find out whether all the different parts of the medical system they’ll be touching are in their network and ask, if possible, that in-network providers be used,” Ng says.
Once again, easier said than done. How will the hospital know which radiologist or pathologist or fill-in-the-blank-ologist will be working at the time of your surgery one month from now?
“Who would answer those questions — the receptionist at the hospital?” Burke asks. “It’s impossible.”
So, here’s my advice: Find out what your limit is for out-of-network providers … and hope like heck that you don’t need them.
This Unaffordable HCA is nothing more than a extension of the huge IRS mannual of some 75K pages and just as contradictory with all the strong arm policing one could ask for. You also get the non benefit of paying more for a lot less and being intimidated by more than on government agency should you respond to the questions your Dr. has been told to ask you in some berserk quest for intimate details of your daily life….. This growing 2800 page monster is growing in leaps and bounds and needs to be completely repealed, it is a unconstitutional right suppressing tragedy….
May 12, 2014 at 11:16 am
We American (citizens) need to document (on a spreadsheet) all ObamaCare exceptions to to what was public ally advertised (and accepted ) as contract.
ObamaCare as it is now is deliberately void by omission of business participation that was never offered as optional as to inclusion or not or when it might ever be done. Dan at http://danfromsquirrelhill.wordpress.com/2013/08/15/obama-252/#comment-20142 does a great overall blog on the subject (I don’t have the record keeping resources to attempt to track down the ObamaCare blog on my Mickey IPhone) and D an does have a separate blog for ObamaCare. Who can do this, if you know? Thanks, Eric
May 12, 2014 at 8:31 am