No wonder people are so against the Affordable Care Act—they have no clue what's in it.
The Hill points out that last summer, 72 percent of people polled were aware that the new law will provide financial assistance to people who must buy insurance on their own, rather than getting it from an employer. Now, that number is down to 58 percent. While two-thirds of respondents last year knew the law expands Medicaid, fewer than half know that now. Just 29 percent knew that the law eliminates copays for some preventive services, and half said the law did not provide that benefit—despite the Department of Health's recent announcement that it would require plans to make birth control and other women’s health services copay-free.
This is what happens when sweeping legislation takes years to be enacted; most provisions of the health care bill won't take effect until 2014, though some have already taken effect. But major parts of the bill, like the individual mandate or the elimination of annual limits for insurance coverage, are still years away from being put into practice.
Given this astounding gap, can you blame people for hating "Obamacare" when all they hear about is the president getting sued for the law being unconstitutional, or businesses planning to drop coverage from their plans? Nancy Pelosi may have gotten a lot of heat for saying "we have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it," but it turns out she's right. We won't be able to judge public opinion on the Affordable Care Act until Americans tangibly feel its effect.
Meanwhile, if you need a refresher on what the health care bill does, the government has a useful timeline and the Kaiser Foundation has a pretty thorough explainer (pdf). For an even more abridged summary, check out this very cute video.
photo (cc) by Flickr user FibonacciBlue