http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/six-stories-of-obamacare-already-making-a-difference-20131016<http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/six-stories-of-obamacare-already-making-a-difference-20131016#ixzz2hzrvT8A4>

[image: Rolling Stone] <http://www.rollingstone.com/>
Six Stories of Obamacare Already Making a DifferenceFamilies, small
business owners and more who are finally getting health care thanks to the
Affordable Care Actby ROBIN MARTY
OCTOBER 16, 2013

Obamacare is a disaster! It's the worst thing to happen to the country
since 
slavery<http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/oct/11/ben-carson-obamacare-worst-thing-slavery/>!
It will rape the future of our young
people<http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2013/10/good-news-obamacare-raped-future-26-year-old/70397/>!
It will cause wives to leave
husbands<http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/legally-speaking/2013/oct/7/divorce-side-effect-obamacare-healthcare-reform/>
and
husbands to marry their dogs! OK, I made up the dog part – but all the
others are, sadly, 100 percent real statements made by right-wing
extremists in the last few weeks.

But despite the hand-wringing and rumor-mongering, and despite some gleefully
reported<http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/10/14/obamacares-website-is-crashing-because-it-doesnt-want-you-to-know-health-plans-true-costs/>
website
glitches, around 45,000
people<http://www.advisory.com/Daily-Briefing/Blog/2013/10/How-many-people-have-enrolled-in-Obamacare>
across
the country have already enrolled in the insurance program set up by the
Affordable Care Act, with almost two months left until the December 15th
deadline to be covered starting in January. (Open enrollment for this first
year will be available even later, through March 15th.)

For those who have enrolled, many of whom were previously uninsured or were
hit with massive co-pays, Obamacare is a total success. Here are just a few
of their stories:

Phil Sherburne and Leia Bell
<http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/56973885-78/family-health-exchange-plans.html.csp>This
Utah family will pay just $123 a month to cover their family of five,
despite a shoulder issue that had left Sherburne unable to get insurance
before the Affordable Care Act went into effect. According to Sherburne
(who is also a small business owner), the multiple efforts it took to get
onto the federal exchange website were well worth it. "It's a great deal.
I'm thrilled to have coverage, period," he said to the *Salt Lake
Tribune.<http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/56973885-78/family-health-exchange-plans.html.csp>
*"Once I got onto the site it took about an hour, start to finish."

Kendall Brown
<http://okc.net/2013/09/30/open-letter-lawmakers-human-cost/>This Oklahoma
City resident, who suffers from Crohn's Disease, has already benefited once
from the Affordable Care Act, which allowed her to stay on her parents'
health insurance through age 26. After that, she was unable to find
affordable insurance – forcing her to forgo treatment because she couldn't
afford the out-of-pocket expenses.  She has now been able to enroll in the
exchange, despite the pre-existing condition that previously caused her to
be denied by every insurance company. In an open
letter<http://okc.net/2013/09/30/open-letter-lawmakers-human-cost/> to
Congress, Brown wrote, "[I]f you defund Obamacare, or delay it even for one
year, as you are debating today, then this will be my last letter to you. I
will be dead before my 27th birthday."

Rakesh Rikhi
<http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Obamacare-in-Calif-Saves-One-Family-400-a-Month-227458951.html>For
Rikhi, who owns a Bay Area auto-repair shop, the $500 a month that he is
saving when it comes to covering his family through the state exchange will
mean more money to invest in his small business. Even better, that
investment will likely assist his employees in purchasing their own health
insurance. "Now that he knows his potential saving, Rikhi says he can't
wait to sign up and looks forward to feeling relief from the financial pain
of skyrocketing insurance costs," reports the local NBC
affiliate<http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Obamacare-in-Calif-Saves-One-Family-400-a-Month-227458951.html>
.

Butch Matthews
<http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/10/02/2721501/butch-matthews-obamacare-convert/>If
Rikhi's savings sound good, then Matthews' return must be twice as
impressive. The self-avowed Arkansas Republican and retiree admits he
became an Obamacare convert after learning he will save $13,000 a year
under a new plan that has no monthly premiums. "I would tell [people
badmouthing Obamacare] to learn more about it before they start talking bad
about it," he told
ThinkProgress<http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/10/02/2721501/butch-matthews-obamacare-convert/>.
"Be more informed, get more information, take your time and study and not
just go by just what you hear on one side or the other. Actually check the
facts on it."

Andrew Stryker
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/10/01/signing-up-for-obamacare-it-will-save-me-over-6000-for-that-i-would-have-waited-all-day/>A
Los Angeles freelancer who has been on COBRA health insurance so he won't
have any gap in coverage, Stryker expects his monthly premiums to dip to
$300 a month from the current $600. "Obviously three hours is a long time
to wait, but it will save me over $6,000," he told Sarah Kliff at *The
Washington 
Post*<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/10/01/signing-up-for-obamacare-it-will-save-me-over-6000-for-that-i-would-have-waited-all-day/>.
"For that, I would have waited all day."

Katie Klabusich
<http://katiespeak.com/2013/10/15/in-the-tank-for-obamacare/>Klabusich, a
self-employed writer and activist, says she had been plagued by a chronic
sinus infection that she was unable to treat due to her previous insurance
plan.  "There were periods in my 20's where my health insurance cost more
than my rent," she
wrote<http://katiespeak.com/2013/10/15/in-the-tank-for-obamacare/> in
a blog post, where she went on to praise her new, low monthly premium under
the low-deductible health care plan she purchased on the New York state
exchange, which will allow her to finally treat a myriad of medical issues
she'd mostly tried to ignore. "IN TEN WEEKS . . . I get to see a doctor and
start whatever course of treatment is the best option, not the one I can
attempt to afford. That is my new reality. Thank you, ACA," Klabusich wrote.

These people, some with bigger reasons to be thankful than others, join
many 
others<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/05/i-am-obamacare-_n_4046470.html>
who
are celebrating finally becoming insured after being turned down for having
cancer, arthritis, endometriosis, blindness, amputation or other
devastating illnesses for which having affordable health care isn't just a
convenience, but a matter of survival.

In fact, there are large numbers of people that will benefit from
Obamacare, from those with increased risk of breast and ovarian
cancer<http://chronicle.augusta.com/news/we-think-pink/2013-09-30/genetic-testing-will-be-easier-under-obamacare>
who
will now get plans that make it mandatory to allow preventive genetic
testing, to working-class and middle-class adults and children who will now
be covered under an expansion of
Medicaid<http://www.forbes.com/sites/brucejapsen/2013/07/27/about-half-u-s-states-will-expand-medicaid-under-obamacare/>,
providing even more uninsured with a new chance to finally get coverage. To
the program's defenders, it's clear that these successes should more than
outweigh a few frozen screens during the application process.

-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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