Young Adult Cancer Survivors Worry What the AHCA Would Mean for Them
By Shelley Fuld Nasso
NCCS Chief Executive Officer
Along with Kelsey Nepote, NCCS Advocacy Manager, and Kate Houghton, CEO of Critical Mass, we presented “From Patient to Advocate – Using Your Voice to Make Change.” We talked about the journey from self-advocate to public policy advocate, and discussed the importance of survivors sharing their stories with policymakers to inform policy decisions.
We talked about specific public policy issues that affect AYA cancer survivors, first and foremost, the Affordable Care Act and its patient protections and subsidies to help cancer survivors purchase quality, affordable health insurance. The discussion was especially timely as Congress was again considering the American Health Care Act (AHCA). The fears and concerns expressed by the AYA survivors we met were palpable. They shared with us their worries about their ability to purchase insurance if protections for people with pre-existing conditions are eliminated.
Unfortunately, their fears are warranted.
The new version of the AHCA, with an amendment to appeal to those Members of Congress who believe the original legislation did not go far enough, is even worse than the original. It allows states to opt-out of the important patient protections currently contained in the Affordable Care Act. That means for the millions of Americans in those states, it would gut protections against pre-existing conditions, remove the requirement that health plans cover essential health benefits, and allow insurers to charge people more based on their age and health status. While numerous elected officials have said that protections for pre-existing conditions would be maintained, this bill clearly violates that promise.
The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities explained how the legislation would gut pre-existing conditions:
The AHCA is a threat to the health and well-being for millions of cancer patients and survivors. With it passing the House of Representatives, it is critical that the entire cancer community reach out to Members of the Senate to let them know that we deserve better and that we will not be fooled by empty promises of “protections.”
It was an honor to speak to an active, engaged group of survivors and their loved ones. They are the very people who need to speak up, share their story, and let their Members of Congress know why long-term access to quality, affordable health insurance is so important to cancer survivors.
Looking forward to talking about moving from patient to advocate with @kelseynepote and @katehoughtonAYA this afternoon. #CancerCon pic.twitter.com/8tK7CbO6Dp
— Shelley Fuld Nasso (@sfuldnasso) April 29, 2017
Showing off the power pose for self advocacy with @kelseynepote of @CancerAdvocacy. #cancercon pic.twitter.com/P5mdd4yZWX
— Chris McCarthy (@McCarthyChris) April 29, 2017
This is epic! @CancerAdvocacy @heycriticalmass @sfuldnasso @kelseynepote @katehoughtonAYA #CancerCon #StupidCancer pic.twitter.com/eZh1udr4Sr
— Matthew Zachary (@MatthewZachary) April 29, 2017
Follow Shelley on Twitter: @sfuldnasso
Learn more about the ACA, the protections it provides, and advocacy tips »