After a year of AmeriCorps, living in poverty while dealing with Hopkins staff and students and Baltimore city youth (all intimidating in their own way), I do feel quite powerful and invincible. I’m moving to Africa and the world is mine for the taking! According to Joel Stein’s The Me Generation such narcissism and self-confidence is beneficial since it causes myself and others born between 1980 and 2000 to think that we can change the world for the better. At the same time, such traits are becoming a barrier to the success of the Affordable Care Act.
The Department of Health and Human Service recently announced a video contest, pioneered by the non-profit The Young Invincibles, that will give up to $30,000 in prizes to winners who convince the millennials to sign up for health insurance. A little bit of peer education – smart idea. Getting people ages 18-30 is an integral part of making Obamacare work and keeping critics at bay. Having healthy people to pay for insurance (or medical care of the poor) is a sacrifice that all other countries with national health care consider a no-brainer. And it should be. Getting young healthy people to pay for insurance means keeping insurance costs lower for everyone else (ideally).
Most critics have already been complaining about higher premiums costs under the ACA. But all premium increases (whether it’s an increase to an already existing plan or a comparison of the new plans in the exchanges) will have to be approved and out-of-pocket costs will be capped, eventually (unfortunately this requirement will also be delayed another year). Another consideration is that all health insurance plans will have to have minimum benefits so even if you’re paying more, you may be receiving more too. Slowly but surely states are releasing estimates of health insurance rates from the exchanges, and depending where you live it could be more or less. Plus people up to 400% of Federal Poverty Level will be receiving subsidies for health insurance.
So if you’re young and invincible and will very soon need to start thinking about purchasing health insurance, the government has given over $67 million to organizations that will help people navigate the exchanges. United Way and Planned Parenthood are two of the most popular organization to receive grants while University of South Florida Association of Community Health Centers and United Way of Metropolitan Tarrant County (Texas) were among those to receive the highest amounts. Or if you want to start taking things into your own hands (feeding into those self-reliant stereotypes) these pointers from Kaiser Health News will serve you well. And if you’re still hesitant about even considering health insurance, this article from New York Magazine describing how vulnerable we truly are might change your mind.