USA TODAY US Edition

OBAMACARE HELPED SAVE MY LIFE

I voted for Trump. Now I’m a cancer survivor watching in horror as he and his party try to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

- Dennis Wallace

The last Democrat I voted for was Jimmy Carter. The last Republican was Donald Trump. After the past eight months, I am now a health care voter.

My story, and my family’s story, is like so many others. In 2008, after a 20-year career in health care, I became another statistic in the number of uninsured Americans and no longer had a job or employer-provided health care. I had followed the American dream and started my own small business. I am a barber in Tennessee and I love it. I was able to get insurance through my wife’s job

year later, her company closed and moved to Mexico, leaving us without health insurance. We had the option of going on COBRA to extend her company coverage, which we did; but it was expensive and ran out after 18 months — leaving us back at square one. I was then told I could buy health insurance on the private market place, so I did my investigat­ing and found the only plan I could afford was a temporary policy that did not cover pre-existing conditions. As it was my only option, I took it.

SEAT OF THEIR PANTS

After seven months, I began to have difficulty swallowing and had an endoscopy. I was then notified that my insurance company would not pay the bill because I had a pre-existing condition called heartburn. That cost was passed along to me.

As soon as the Affordable Care Act went into effect, I signed up on the exchange and had a second and third endoscopy. I was told I had esophageal cancer. I had surgery and a follow-up procedure and have been cancer free now for three years. I wrote my Republican congressma­n to tell him of my great experience with the ACA and received no response. I wrote my Republican senator and received a nice form letter about how bad the ACA was and how the Republican­s were going to repeal it.

I wrote to the former president Barack Obama’s White House and told them my story and they celebrated with me the news that I was cancer-free and that the ACA had saved my life. I then listened to then-candidate Trump who said that after he was elected president, everyone would be insured.

Over the last seven months, I have watched in horror as the Republican­s in Congress have tried to repeal the ACA, seemingly by the seat of their pants, only so they can say they fulfilled their campaign promise, with no regard to the consequenc­es of their actions. I have watched as Republican leaders abdicated their responsibi­lity to the American people, and pushed whatever will get them to check the box with their big dollar donors — whether it’s repeal without a replacemen­t plan, the “skinny bill,” or this current bill. What is the common thread? Each attempt cuts coverage from millions and raises costs while weakening vital protection­s.

WORST BILL YET

The latest assault, the GrahamCass­idy bill, goes even further. This bill is worse than other repeal bills and would cause untold harm to working families, seniors, people with disabiliti­es and children. It’s similar to earlier legislatio­n that the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office said could cause up to 32 million fewer people to have coverage in 10 years.

Graham-Cassidy would allow insurance companies to once again charge people with pre-ex- isting conditions more and to gut other key parts of the law. It strips money from Medicaid, which serves people with disabiliti­es, seniors in nursing homes, children and other vulnerable population­s. It would let insurance companies charge up to five times more for people over 50 and it eliminates tax credits that make health care more affordable for people with coverage through the ACA.

I understand there are issues with the ACA that need to be addressed, but must we deny millions their health care so politician­s can say they kept a campaign promise? Is it so wrong for Republican­s and Democrats to work together to address these issues, hold committee meetings and public hearings on a bipartisan approach, and demand to know the full impact of the bill they are voting on? No — we must not, we can’t.

We must have affordable health care for all. I know, I’m living proof.

Dennis Wallace, a barber near Chattanoog­a, Tenn., is an esophageal cancer survivor.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO. ?? Dennis Wallace in his barbershop near Chattanoog­a, Tenn.
FAMILY PHOTO. Dennis Wallace in his barbershop near Chattanoog­a, Tenn.

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