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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 06:39 PM Oct 2013

Kentucky's success makes a mockery of GOP Obamacare foes

Kentucky's success makes a mockery of GOP Obamacare foes

by Jon Perr



Wednesday's Wall Street Journal provides the perfect encapsulation of the conservative crusade against the Affordable Care Act. On the opinion pages, columnist James Taranto mocked the story of new Obamacare enrollee Brendan Mahoney. But where news is actually reported, the WSJ's Arian Campo-Flores explained "Why Kentucky's Health Exchange Worked Better Than Many Others." But the Bluegrass State didn't just provide a relatively smooth first-day enrollment experience. As it turns out, one of the only reliably red states to both establish its own health care exchange and accept the expansion of Medicaid to low income residents, Kentucky is already proving Republican critics of Obamacare wrong.

Those critics include Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul, Kentucky's Republican Senators who were caught on a live microphone in Washington admitting their real motives is shutting down the government over the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. But back home, things are going pretty well for Kentucky's uninsured seeking to obtain coverage at Kentucky's Kynect exchange:

While Kentucky's health-insurance exchange experienced some glitches when it launched Tuesday, it seemed to perform better than many of its peers.

State officials and outside experts attribute the smoother rollout to a variety of factors, including intensive testing of the system, a less-flashy but more-efficient website and strong coordination among state agencies involved in the effort.

As a result, Kentucky's exchange, dubbed Kynect, logged solid results in the first day and a half of operation. As of 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, 10,766 applications for health coverage had been initiated, 6,909 had been completed and 2,989 individuals or families had enrolled in new coverage.

As the Journal suggested, Kentucky's success may be in large part to the experience of state agencies working closely together on other health care systems in the recent past, including a prescription-drug monitoring database. But the biggest factor of all is Democratic Governor Steve Beshear, who early on opted to have Kentucky run its own health care marketplace and accept billions of dollars of essentially free money from the federal government in order to expand Medicaid to cover 308,000 lower income working residents. In a recent New York Times op-ed, Governor Beshear explained below why "My State Needs Obamacare. Now":

There's a huge disconnect between the rank partisanship of national politics and the outlook of governors whose job it is to help beleaguered families, strengthen work forces, attract companies and create a balanced budget.

It's no coincidence that numerous governors -- not just Democrats like me but also Republicans like Jan Brewer of Arizona, John Kasich of Ohio and Rick Snyder of Michigan -- see the Affordable Care Act not as a referendum on President Obama but as a tool for historic change.

That is especially true in Kentucky, a state where residents' collective health has long been horrendous. The state ranks among the worst, if not the worst, in almost every major health category, including smoking, cancer deaths, preventable hospitalizations, premature death, heart disease and diabetes.

That "rank partisanship" has left many in Beshear's state misinformed and confused. When 53 year-old Carolyn Richards of Mount Sherman, a woman who has been uninsured for a decade, visited a Kynect information booth at the recent Wild Turkey Sit N' Sip Saloon at the Kentucky Bourbon Festival, she was surprised to learn about her options under the Affordable Care Act:

"I thought this was defunded."

As the Washington Post also reported:

Sharon Omstead, 46, who works at a factory labeling bourbon bottles and who calls Obama "the devil" for his economic policies, was surprised to learn that she'll qualify for Medicaid and have to pay little or nothing for health coverage under the law.

"I'd heard a lot of bad things about the law and how it will make prices for health insurance go up, and how everyone will have to buy insurance even if they can't afford it," she said.

Pam Lux, 59, of Edgewood complained about insurers turning her away because of her diabetes and assumed that that would happen again until a Kynect worker informed her that such exclusions are prohibited under the law starting next year. "I'm glad to hear that," she said.

If that kind of story from the Bluegrass State sounds familiar, it should. In August, Huffington Post documented the same pleasantly surprised reaction from attendees at the Kentucky State Fair:

A middle-aged man in a red golf shirt shuffles up to a small folding table with gold trim, in a booth adorned with a flotilla of helium balloons, where government workers at the Kentucky State Fair are hawking the virtues of Kynect, the state's health benefit exchange established by Obamacare.

The man is impressed. "This beats Obamacare I hope," he mutters to one of the workers.

"Do I burst his bubble?" wonders Reina Diaz-Dempsey, overseeing the operation. She doesn't. If he signs up, it's a win-win, whether he knows he's been ensnared by Obamacare or not.

Ensnared, that is, into finally having access to health care in a state ranked 45th by the Commonwealth Fund.

Meanwhile in Republican-dominated states like Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia and more, the GOP has manufactured a "coverage gap" ensuring that millions of their residents will needlessly be left without health insurance next year. But as Governor Steve Beshear shows, it doesn't need to be this way. As Mark A. Rothstein, a professor of law and medicine at the University of Louisville put it:

"If the law can go in Kentucky, it can go anywhere."

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/10/03/1243855/-Kentucky-s-success-makes-a-mockery-of-GOP-Obamacare-foes


Obamacare Enrollment Is Beating Expectations
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023761610

Under Obamacare, Disney World Will Promote Its Part-Time Workers To Full-Time Status
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023767654





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Kos Media, LLC Site content may be used for any purpose without explicit permission unless otherwise specified

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freshwest

(53,661 posts)
3. Let's see if the citizens of KY vote for McConnell and Paul again, thinking this is their idea...
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 07:32 PM
Oct 2013

Most likely will think it's a gift from their people in D.C and not that evil PBO. Obama will get no credit, and they'll vote for more obstruction. Still, they'll live to possibly learn better on another day.

SoCalDem

(103,856 posts)
5. Sign them up and then send them a follow-up letter informing them that they are
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 08:38 PM
Oct 2013

in fact enrolled in the ACA/Obamacare, and remind them too that their congressional folks did not want them to have it...and if re-elected, WILL do everything to take it away from them.

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
6. That wouldn't be allowed, I bet. From the article, it says they don't think it is. Might be a sea
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 10:19 PM
Oct 2013

change on the way, but this will all be moot if the debt ceiling is not raised this month. And the GOP Koch party and the Preppers are ecstatic over the prospect. I'm sorry if I sound upset. I am very disturbed by the disconnect and the lack of respect for others that I see in DC right now.


ProSense

(116,464 posts)
8. This is going to be a problem for states that didn't fully implement the law.
Fri Oct 4, 2013, 10:53 PM
Oct 2013

People are not going to be happy.

ProSense

(116,464 posts)
9. "Meanwhile in Republican-dominated states...
Sat Oct 5, 2013, 09:41 AM
Oct 2013

From the OP:

Meanwhile in Republican-dominated states like Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia and more, the GOP has manufactured a "coverage gap" ensuring that millions of their residents will needlessly be left without health insurance next year. But as Governor Steve Beshear shows, it doesn't need to be this way. As Mark A. Rothstein, a professor of law and medicine at the University of Louisville put it:

"If the law can go in Kentucky, it can go anywhere."

That's the reality. These states have the ability to change this immediately. Medicaid expansion, fully funded by the federal government, ending the Republican-created crisis for the most vulnerable people in these states.


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