It appears that under the "Affordable Care Act", care won't be "affordable", after all, for most serious diseases, unless we are lucky enough to be living in certain states. The law is written so that States can allow insurers to force patients to pay a much higher share for "specialty drugs" used to treat certain diseases, and that list of diseases is apparently mighty long. You can be sure that it will include MC and other IBDs, and virtually every other disease for which expensive drugs are often prescribed for treatment.
California, for example, will sock it to their residents who are unlucky enough to develop a serious disease, by requiring them to pay 30 % of their drug cost. (Of course, California always seems to be socking it to their residents at every opportunity. ) It remains to be seen whether the rest of us will all be in the same leaky boat, or one that's more or less leaky.
Drug costs may vary widely across U.S. after health care overhaulAvalere's research shows that 1 in 4 cancer patients walks away from the pharmacy counter empty-handed when facing a copay of $500 or more for a newly prescribed drug.
"You have to worry about a world where if you happen to contract cancer or multiple sclerosis, you are stuck with a really big bill," Mendelson said.
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