(photo credit: Will O'Neill)
From Mother Jones:
...Obamacare is working. There's no better evidence of this than a brief filed on behalf of the government in King by the Hospital Corporation of America, better known as HCA, the largest health care provider in the country (once run by Obamacare foe Florida Gov. Rick Scott). HCA argues that the legal theory advanced by the plaintiffs is "absurd," but, more importantly, it presents detailed data drawn from its own operations that demonstrate that the health care law is helping patients and the company itself.
One of Congress' goals in passing the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was to cut down on the number of uninsured people using expensive emergency rooms for medical care that would be better delivered in an ordinary doctor's office. HCA notes in its brief that its data from 15 states that use the federal Obamacare exchange show this is exactly what's happening. The company says that in 2014, uninsured patients visited the ER in its facilities 10 times for every one admission to the hospital—a sign that most of those ER visits weren't emergencies. People insured through the exchange are visiting the ER three times for every one admission. HCA estimates that "uninsured patients are 300% more likely than Exchange patients to rely on ER care."
Moreover, the data shows that a person who has obtained insurance through the federal Obamacare exchange is nearly twice as likely to use outpatient care—an indication that they are taking better care of themselves and obtaining care in a much less expensive fashion than those without insurance. "Thus, at the same time that Exchange patients are relying less on the ER, they are receiving more outpatient care than the uninsured, including care (such as chemotherapy) that is typically unavailable in the ER," HCA says in its brief. "That care is being provided in more appropriate and cost-effective settings."
http://www.motherjones.com/...
Read the entire HCA Amicus Brief here:
http://www.documentcloud.org/...
HCA owns 162 hospitals and 113 surgery facilities across the United States.
According to the article, not a single one of the 21 pro-plaintiff briefs in the case was submitted by a business group - not even the Chamber of Commerce. The only supporters of this case are fringe weirdo groups.
And it now looks more and more like the plaintiffs themselves have no standing to sue:
http://www.dailykos.com/...