ObamaCare Survival Guide
The Affordable Care Act and What It Means for You and Your Healthcare
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- $19.99
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
We Read the Law So You Don’t Have To
The practical handbook to making good decisions in our changing healthcare marketplace.
At over 2,700 pages - with an additional 20,000 pages of regulations -the ObamaCare law is longer than the Bible, with many more rules. Rules that will, in the words of the president, “fundamentally transform” healthcare in America.
What no one explains is if the transformation will be a good one or a bad one. And that’s why the ObamaCare Survival Guide is so important to you right now.
Because what you don’t know can hurt you. For example, can you answer these vital questions?
• Do you know how the rollout of ObamaCare will affect your relationship with your doctor?
• What is the laws impact on Medicare?
• If your health insurance was cancelled, what options do you have now?
Having trouble with the answers? You aren’t alone. But if you care about your health and your family’s health, you have three choices:
• Read and study all 22,700 pages
• Hire your own personal ObamaCare lobbyist
• Buy a copy of the best-selling ObamaCare Survival Guide: 229 pages of vital information that will govern your healthcare today and tomorrow.
The ObamaCare Survival Guide is a critical resource for every American whether you have health insurance or not.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Boldly one-sided in this presidential election year, this book lobs stink bombs from the start at president Obama and the Democratic Party. Journalist Tate (The Sick Building Syndrome) lays out at the beginning who he thinks will benefit from the Healthcare Reform Act: essentially, no one, except the uninsured. And taxpayers will be harmed. Tate's leaps of logic are frequent; acknowledging, for instance, that life expectancy in the U.S. is lower than that of 36 other advanced nations, he says it is still higher than the world average, implying that it's reasonable to compare American lifespan with that of the world's poorest nations. He states that a focus on prevention, and required preventive screening, will increase costs, though many major insurance companies already pay 100% of the cos of these test in the belief that an ounce of prevention costs less than a pound of cure for, say, breast or cervical cancer. Tate covers many key points that should be clarified in an intelligent discussion about health care in the United States. Unfortunately, in undermining his credibility with his blatant animus, he will feed political arguments rather than intelligent discussions.