Posted 2013-November-12, 07:27
Aboput the idea of actually reading the bill. In addition to the work that is involved, my experience is that such an approach sounds more effective than it is. I bill becomes law. Then there are interpretations. These interpretations are passed on to others, who interpret the interpretations.
My approach is more like this: Apparently a lot of cancellations are being sent out. These cancellations are for the specific policy, not for the specific policy holder. That is, if Tom Jones holds policy X, the insurance company is cancelling because it is plam X, not because the holder is Tom Jones. Is it true that "This is 100% about the insurance company screwing you under the pretext of regulation.".? It's hard to see why.. Generally insurance companies are hoping that I will take out a policy with them. I am thinking that their lawyers, who perhaps have read and at least tried to understand the law and its ramifications, have told them that they can no longer provide plan X in its current form. Perhaps their lawyers have mis-interpreted, this can happen, but it just seems unlikely to me that the CEO on his own said "Hey, great, let's cancel all of our plan X holders and blame in on the government".
Determining exactly what the rules mean is not always easy. I told a while back of an experience involving medicare. The doc wanted me to follow plan A for a problem I had and sent me to a lab. The lab said I had to try plan B first because medicare would not pay for A unless we first tried plan B. I said I wanted what the doc said I needed, and if medicare would not pay for A then I would pay for A. I got A, and medicare paid for it. I have shortened the story, this did not happen all in one day. During the struggle I got through to someone at medicare. She was very nice, she knew what she knew, she did not know about A and B. There were, perhaps, people who did know but I couldn't talk to them. The lab could talk to them. But since the lab already "knew" the answer, they wouldn't. The lab knew wrong.
A shorter version of the same point, although only medical on the periphery, occurred just yesterday. My wife had a double knee replacement yesterday and while at the hospital I had lunch at the cafeteria. They have a special: Fish, two sides, a 20 oz soft drink. Can I get coffee instead of a soft drink? No, she said. Give me coffee anyway, I said, I'll pay for it. When I got to the cashier, she said that the coffee came with the special. I suppose the rules are written somewhere, but they get interpreted. Maybe she liked me.
More medically relevant: Within a day or two there will be physical therapy plans for the knees (It's all going fine, by the way). What will insurance pay for? Well, again, I want what the doc says we should have, how to pay for it is secondary. Secondary, but hardly irrelevant. Some people actually seem to understand how these policies work (I'm genetically incapable of this), what will be paid for, and, quite often, which magic words have to be said to get the policies to pay for it. These people are worth their weight in gold, even at gold's inflated price.
The above, of course, has to do with the complexity of medical coverage as it now exists. The ACA will make it all simpler. Uh huh.
Anyway, reading the bill might be an idea, but experience makes me skeptical. A place to start though, I suppose. But if I had to read every bill that is passed before I could have an opinion I would have damn few opinions. Paul McCartney echoes in my mind "What's wrong with that, I'd like to know".
Ken