by Paul Bedard
via Washington Examiner 
Many Americans shopping for better health insurance deals promised by
 the two-week-old Obamacare system are instead being slapped with rate 
shock, including savings-sapping deductibles and co-pays, according to 
multiple reports from around the country.
For some able to get the problem-plagued Obamacare website to work, 
the so-called “deals” the system is coughing up around the country 
include $12,600 deductibles, co-pays of up to 40 percent, zero 
competition, and rate hikes of 260 percent.
The huge cost increases that some Obamacare applicants are seeing are
 feeding the effort in Congress to change the system and delay 
implementation.
"This is why we've been working so hard to dismantle and repeal this 
bill, so that we can begin to pass step-by-step reforms that transform 
the health care delivery system by putting patients in charge, giving 
them more choices, and reducing the cost of health care so that more 
people can afford it,” said Tennessee Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander.
The top Republican on the Senate health committee has collected 
several official and media reports of the Obamacare horror stories 
Americans have encountered so far. They include:
-- A $12,600 deductible. CNNMoney
 reported that one family “found a bronze-level plan for roughly $357 a 
month, after their subsidy, which they could swing. But it comes with a 
$12,600 family deductible.”
-- Enormous rate increases. A research group found that a 30-year-old male nonsmoker “will see his lowest cost insurance option increase 260 percent.”
-- Some who already buy their own insurance are receiving cancellation notices -- and offers for expensive new policies. The Christian Science Monitor
 reported on a North Carolina family who had been buying Blue Cross and 
Blue Shield insurance for $380-a-month. “BCBS is offering them a new 
plan for three times the cost, $1,124.50 a month, still with an $11,000 
deductible,” reports the paper.
-- A California couple said that the Obamacare policy suggested to 
them included a 40 percent increase in their doctor's office co-pay. 
“Our co-pay skyrocketed from 0 percent to 40 percent and the maximum 
out-of-pocket increased an additional $2,300,” according to a letter in 
the Fresno Bee.
-- Kaiser Health News
 found a lack of competition in some pockets of the country. “Eighteen 
percent of counties have only one insurer offering plans and 33 percent 
of counties have only two insurers competing.”
— There is little uniformity to premiums charged around the nation. 
“For instance,” Kaiser also reported, “Cigna is offering 50-year-olds 
one of its midlevel plans for $614 if they live in Flagstaff, Ariz. That
 same plan, contracting with different hospitals and doctors, will cost 
$428 in Phoenix and just $395 in Nashville.”

 
The variation in premiums with location of the recipient is one of the biggest clues: INSURANCE IS A SCAM! It always has been. Pay cash. Have a savings account(a safe or your mattress) and actually contribute to it regularly, no matter what the situation.
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