Tale of Two Brothers
To illustrate the difference of being with and without affordable coverage that covers all our healthcare needs, I would like share my sons' story.
To illustrate the difference of being with and without affordable coverage that covers all our healthcare needs, I would like share my sons' story.
I have two boys that are severely Autistic. Quinn was born in 2006, 4 years before the ACA was passed. Milo was born in 2009, 1 year before the ACA was passed. ABA has been the prescribed treatment for the entire period from Quinn's initial diagnosis in 2008. The problem then was that ABA was not covered by any insurance companies and it cost more than 30,000 dollars per year. On salary of a Bachelor degreed accountant, that sum would take nearly 75% of my annual salary. In the meantime, I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that required a financially painful medication regimen and my second son was also diagnosed with Autism a few years later.
My wife and I decided to change our situation the best we could. Since my long-term health had come into question, we determined that we should invest in my wife's education with the intent that she can be the breadwinner. This took 6 years, but we sacrificed and got my wife through her masters degree. She is now the breadwinner with a good health insurance plan.
Luckily, a few things happened toward the tail end of her education. State law required insurance companies and court rulings related to the ACA required Medicaid to cover ABA. My boys finally started getting therapy in 2016. This is almost 8 years after Quinn was diagnosed, and 5 years after Milo was diagnosed.
Sadly, time is your enemy with Autism. The older a child gets, the more difficult it becomes to treat them with ABA. By the time my wife finished her education, Quinn was almost 10 years old and Milo was 7 years old. The ages 2 to 5 are the most impactful years for Autism treatment.
The differences in the boys' progress is striking.
Milo has improved immensely. He is able to participate in mainstream classes at school, makes some eye contact, speaks clearly, is a great problem solver, and can take care of almost all of his functional needs.
Quinn has also improved as well, but his improvement has not been nearly as drastic. While he is now partially potty trained (a feat that I greatly appreciate) he is still very much trapped in his own world. He still doesn't speak clearly, he requires assistance with most of his functional needs, he makes no eye contact, and spends almost zero time in mainstream classes.
Autism treatment is most valuable at younger ages. From Autism Speaks:
Autism treatment is most valuable at younger ages. From Autism Speaks:
In the study, researchers at The New England Center for Children enrolled 83 toddlers diagnosed with autism in the school’s Early Intensive Behavioral Intervention program. The program, based on the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA), provided 20 to 30 hours of one-on-one therapy each week. The children were between 1 and 3 years old at the time they began therapy....
While all age groups showed improvements, a much larger percentage of the youngest participants made significant gains in skills during the year of therapy.
* Among the toddlers who entered the therapy program before their second birthday, 90 percent (11 out of 12 children) made significant gains.
* This was true of 70 percent (26 of 36) of those who began therapy between 24 and 29 months of age.
* By contrast, only 30 percent of the children who entered therapy after 30 months of age (11 out of 35) made significant gains across the year.
Prior to ACA, poorer Autistic kids were generally out of luck because of a lack of services and affordability. In Utah, there was both a lack of services in our home town and the available services were unaffordable until the past few years. Since the ACA and the court ruling that required state Medicaid cover ABA, more children are receiving therapy than ever.
I have concerns that the GOP ACA will make treatment unaffordable and unattainable for many other families of autistic children during the formative developmental years when treatment has the best chance of providing the Autistic child with a normal life.
Big Brother
Socialized healthcare has been a bogeyman in the US since the Cold War. In the fight against the ACA, the right used the popular image of Orwellian death panels that would be tasked with coldly allocating healthcare to only the most important members of society. Other images that socialized healthcare conjures are DMV styled hospitals, where patients are dying in inefficient and poorly managed lines by uncaring bureaucrats.
The ACA definitely has some majorly intrusive requirements for individuals. For a family of six to buy minimum coverage under the ACA, you may be forced to spend between 1,000 and 2,000 dollars per month or face a penalty of 2,128 dollars for 2016 (for income of 100,000 dollars). High earners were required to pay an additional medicare tax on their wages and investment income to help subsidize health care costs.
Worse still, is the fact that health premiums rose drastically each year for almost all Americans and insurance companies are starting to drop out of the ACA Marketplace because it has not been profitable insuring people with pre-existing conditions.
Unilateral Healthcare Reform
The ACA and now the AHCA were both crafted unilaterally. The GOP complained for nearly eight years that they were not given a voice in regards to Obamacare, and in a "tit for tat" move they are doing the exact same thing.
It is this "tit-for-tat" politics regarding health care that is most disturbing. One doesn't need a crystal ball to see that the Democrat's will reinstate Obamacare (possibly a far more left leaning version) as soon as they regain power (which is almost assured to happen with Trump's popularity). This leaves the American people in limbo in regards to healthcare every 4-8 years wondering how will something as important as healthcare change.
Healthcare should not be used as a political pawn.
Making Healthcare Affordable
Principle not politics needs to guide the discussion of healthcare, and until that happens the American people are getting the raw deal.
Personally, I think there must be a better way to help people get healthcare than handing the reins to the Federal government.
As tax professional, government can subsidize healthcare in a less intrusive and more cost efficient manner. If I had the power to enact regulation, I would move to use charitable giving and medical expense deductions to make health care more affordable to more people.
Special status could be given to certain 501(c)(3) organizations that provide financial assistance for the healthcare expenses of the poor. For contributions to these organizations, a taxpayer could be given a generous credit (without income limits) instead of a deduction. Making the credit available for contributions up until the filing deadline (like with the IRA) would allow tax payers to make contributions based on their tax situation (the time when people are most interested in saving tax dollars). This way more healthcare would be subsidized outside of entitlement programs.
Necessary medical expenses should be fully deductible, and health insurance should be an adjustment from income for all taxpayers (not just the self-employed). This would alleviate the burden that people face when they have high medical bills and a tax bill in the same year.
I have concerns that the GOP ACA will make treatment unaffordable and unattainable for many other families of autistic children during the formative developmental years when treatment has the best chance of providing the Autistic child with a normal life.
Big Brother
Socialized healthcare has been a bogeyman in the US since the Cold War. In the fight against the ACA, the right used the popular image of Orwellian death panels that would be tasked with coldly allocating healthcare to only the most important members of society. Other images that socialized healthcare conjures are DMV styled hospitals, where patients are dying in inefficient and poorly managed lines by uncaring bureaucrats.
The ACA definitely has some majorly intrusive requirements for individuals. For a family of six to buy minimum coverage under the ACA, you may be forced to spend between 1,000 and 2,000 dollars per month or face a penalty of 2,128 dollars for 2016 (for income of 100,000 dollars). High earners were required to pay an additional medicare tax on their wages and investment income to help subsidize health care costs.
Worse still, is the fact that health premiums rose drastically each year for almost all Americans and insurance companies are starting to drop out of the ACA Marketplace because it has not been profitable insuring people with pre-existing conditions.
Unilateral Healthcare Reform
The ACA and now the AHCA were both crafted unilaterally. The GOP complained for nearly eight years that they were not given a voice in regards to Obamacare, and in a "tit for tat" move they are doing the exact same thing.
It is this "tit-for-tat" politics regarding health care that is most disturbing. One doesn't need a crystal ball to see that the Democrat's will reinstate Obamacare (possibly a far more left leaning version) as soon as they regain power (which is almost assured to happen with Trump's popularity). This leaves the American people in limbo in regards to healthcare every 4-8 years wondering how will something as important as healthcare change.
Healthcare should not be used as a political pawn.
Making Healthcare Affordable
Principle not politics needs to guide the discussion of healthcare, and until that happens the American people are getting the raw deal.
Personally, I think there must be a better way to help people get healthcare than handing the reins to the Federal government.
As tax professional, government can subsidize healthcare in a less intrusive and more cost efficient manner. If I had the power to enact regulation, I would move to use charitable giving and medical expense deductions to make health care more affordable to more people.
Special status could be given to certain 501(c)(3) organizations that provide financial assistance for the healthcare expenses of the poor. For contributions to these organizations, a taxpayer could be given a generous credit (without income limits) instead of a deduction. Making the credit available for contributions up until the filing deadline (like with the IRA) would allow tax payers to make contributions based on their tax situation (the time when people are most interested in saving tax dollars). This way more healthcare would be subsidized outside of entitlement programs.
Necessary medical expenses should be fully deductible, and health insurance should be an adjustment from income for all taxpayers (not just the self-employed). This would alleviate the burden that people face when they have high medical bills and a tax bill in the same year.