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ACA dependent insurance quesiton
This has to do with money, so perhaps someone on this forum would know the answer to this question:
Under the affordable care act, can a dependent child remain on their parents insurance until age 26, if they are married and have coverage through their spouses employer but they are not eligible for coverage under their own employer?
I know that insurance companies must cover dependent children under 26 even if they are married and have an offer of insurance through their own employer. But, I'm still not sure if they can have dual coverage or if it matters if their offer of alternate coverage is through a spouse or their own employer.
Thank you to anyone who knows. I'm going to read the actual ACA to try and figure this out. When I call my insurance company they are clueless and give me a different answer every time.
Re: ACA dependent insurance quesiton
For the ACA, "dependent" is defined differently. It just means that you're a child of the parent. Financial or marital status isn't considered, and your parent does not have to claim you as a dependent for it to apply. So, the use of the word "dependent" is misleading because it makes one think of the way the term is used under the tax code.
I'm not a lawyer by choice, but I do have a JD (maybe you could tell from my "issue" statement HA), and I LOVE the ACA. haha I have a serious chronic illness and thank goodness for the ACA because now I cannot be denied coverage due to my preexisting condition or reach a lifetime limit on my care, which includes drugs that can cost over $25,000 per year. For the record, I also supported it before I was diagnosed.
And, I totally respect people with different views, and I love hearing different views on it or any other subject.
So, for anyone who cares to know this information, I think this is the correct answer. I gave up reading the ACA. hahaha. Too convoluted, and I was probably missing some pertinent amendment that got passed, making most of my reading futile anyway.
So, it's not perfect, but it's an amazing start. And I'm glad it passed rather than having people suffer longer while we tried to come up with some nearly perfect solution. It will be refined more and more as we continue to debate it as a nation, but many ill people now have a hope of gaining a better quality of life and if that means that we all pay more, so be it. It's not like people who have to opt-in get nothing. They get more comprehensive health coverage. Anyone could wake up tomorrow with a serious chronic illness, and then they will be thankful for being forced to get coverage. I'm not usually a fan of the government making people do things, but I feel differently when it comes to health care.
And, it's just not realistic to prevent pregnancy with abstinence. I'd rather a girl be given free birth control than support her and her baby on welfare.
Definitely, health care is way too expensive and costs need to be controlled. But while we work on that, people should have access to care, like they do now, and no one should go bankrupt because they were diagnosed with cancer or some other terrible illness. Costs are high in part because the drugs a lot of people need are super expensive, and the drug companies have lobbyists fighting for them. Who do the sick people have? They needed a law like this to give them a chance at a normal life. Getting the drug companies to profit significantly less or restructuring our entire healthcare system to cut out all the red tape that creates extra costs is a crazy huge task. The ACA was the more realistic way of starting the change that needed to happen.
And, the middle class will feel the pinch when they pay more for healthcare. But, the middle class is suffering due to many serious problems with our overall economy. Let's fix all that stuff and then paying this extra amount for health care won't be a problem. Of course, none of our problems are easy to fix, but people need healthcare and they shouldn't have to wait until our country's economy is stronger to get it. We already have people profiting off lots of government programs/interventions, and the people who are left out should not be the sick, they need the help more than anyone.
But, no one asked me either. Hahaha. I love debating stuff like this.
It has a huge number of carve outs and exemptions to special groups who do not have to abide by the same rules and guidelines of the law.
There are now more people without insurance than before the ACA became law --- and this was supposed to get the uninusred insured?
This was a badly written bill
And yes, the Republicans do have a heath care plan, but you don't hear much about it. It includes some aspects of the ACA - pre existing conditions one of them. They have passed numerous bills in the house, but Harry Reid will not let them come to the floor for discussion much less a vote.