Washington Post President Trump is like a broken record of Pinocchios, incessantly
repeating false and misleading claims that have been debunked. As
Congress debates the Republican replacement bill for the Affordable Care
Act, Trump has been on a greatest-hits tour of his favorite, and
questionable, claims about Obamacare. We compiled a round-up of his most
notable claims from the past week.
“This is the worst year of all … 2017 is going to be the worst because he’s [former president Barack Obama] gone. He knew that was the year. Let him be out before it implodes.”
— March 15
“It’s a catastrophic situation, and there’s nothing to compare anything to because Obamacare won’t be around for a year or two. It’s gone.”
— March 15
“They also want people to know that Obamacare is dead; it’s a dead health-care plan. It’s not even a healthcare plan, frankly.”
— March 17
“I have to tell you that Obamacare is a disaster. It’s failing. … Obamacare will fail. It will fold. It will close up very, very soon if something isn’t done.”
— March 17
Trump’s
claims that Obamacare “is failing,” “is dead,” “will close up very,
very soon” and “is not even a health-care plan [?]” are simply false.
Credible estimates suggest the health-care law boosted the number of people with health insurance by 20 million. The Congressional Budget Office, in its report on the GOP replacement bill, said that the individual market would be stable in most markets at least for the next 10 years under the Affordable Care Act.[...]
Our friends at FactCheck.org looked into this claim
in depth and found “it is possible that some parts of the state will be
without marketplace coverage next year.” But that’s not the same as
Trump claiming half the state has no insurance company.
“I watched Bill Clinton saying, this is the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.”
— March 17
“The Governor of Minnesota said that Affordable Care Act — Obamacare — no longer affordable. That’s what he said.”
— March 17
Trump takes both comments out of context and twists their meaning.
Minnesota
Gov. Mark Dayton (D) on Oct. 12, 2016, faulted Republicans in Congress
for refusing to adjust the law, which he said was the reason individual
health insurance was “no longer affordable to increasing numbers of
people.”
Dayton added that “the Affordable Care Act has many good
features to it, it’s achieved great success in terms of insuring more
people – 20 million people across the country – and providing access for
people who have preexisting conditions and the like. But it’s got some
serious blemishes and serious deficiencies. And we’re going to need both
state and federal governments to step in and do what they need to do to
remedy these problems.”
Bill Clinton’s remark on Oct. 3 about
“the craziest thing I’ve ever seen” did not refer to the Affordable Care
Act. Instead, he was talking about the fact that people who did not
qualify for insurance subsidies did not have a way to buy into Medicare
or Medicaid.
“The people that are getting killed in this deal are
small business people and individuals who make just a little too much
to get any of these subsidies. Why? Because they’re not organized, they
don’t have any bargaining power with insurance companies, and they’re
getting whacked,” Clinton said while campaigning in Flint, Mich. “So
you’ve got this crazy system where all of a sudden, 25 million more
people have health care and then the people that are out there busting
it, sometimes 60 hours a week, wind up with their premiums doubled and
their coverage cut in half. It’s the craziest thing in the world.”
Clinton
noted that his wife, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton,
had a proposal to deal with the problem by allowing affordable access
into Medicare and Medicaid.
“Many of our best and brightest are leaving the medical profession entirely because of Obamacare.”
— March 20
There
are anecdotes of some doctors, especially older ones, who are
frustrated about adopting electronic health records under Obamacare. But
physicians leave the industry for many reasons, mainly aging and
burning out. As the baby boomer patient population gets older and has
more complex conditions, there is greater demand on physicians and their
services.
A 2016 survey
of more than 17,000 physicians by Merritt Hawkins for the Physicians
Foundation, a nonprofit for professional physicians, found low morale
and burnout as key reasons physicians were leaving the industry. Less
than one-quarter of physicians gave the Affordable Care Act a positive
grade of A or B.
Recent data from the Association of American
Medical Colleges shows physicians are actually retiring two years later,
said Atul Grover, the group’s executive vice president. Grover said the
group has not seen a significant number of physicians leaving the
industry because of the law: “There is also no evidence of a declining
interest in medicine since the ACA took effect. Applications to medical
school are at an all-time high. The real challenge the physician
workforce faces is the cap on federal support for graduate medical
education established by Congress 20 years ago. As a result, there are
not enough residency positions to fill demand.”
“People have been kicked off their plans, and their premiums have increased by double and triple digits. Arizona, up 116 percent.”
— March 20
Premiums increased overall in 2017 — but Trump cherry-picks data from Arizona, the state hit hardest by premium increases. The average increase
for the second-lowest-cost silver plan (which is used as the benchmark
to calculate government subsidies) is 25 percent. A few states, such as
Indiana, will actually see a decrease.
But the majority of enrollees in the marketplace receive government premium subsidies
and, in theory, are protected from such premium increases. So who is
affected? The people who do not qualify for the tax subsidy. The GOP
replacement plan would provide tax subsidies to a broader group of
people but often provide less money per person to pay for insurance, so
premiums may rise for many, especially the elderly, compared to current
law, the CBO said.[...]