In a country discouraged by last month’s health care rollout and corresponding widespread problems, Erin Kotecki Vest and her family are rejoicing.
Obamacare will save them almost $19,000 each year.
“When the president says no family should lose their home because someone got sick, no family should go bankrupt because somebody got sick, that is us. That is absolutely us,” she told msnbc.
Kotecki Vest, 38, along with her husband and two young children, have been covered under an Aetna plan for at least three years in their hometown of Los Angeles. When her husband received an insurance re-enrollment package from his employer earlier this year, the couple decided to compare other plans.
They thought they would be lucky to save even a few thousands dollars.
DIAGNOSIS
In 2010 doctors diagnosed Kotecki Vest with Lupus, an autoimmune disease where the body’s immune system becomes hyperactive and attacks healthy tissue. In the years since, she has visited doctors multiple times each week to receive what she calls simply “treatment.”
But the procedures go much deeper than a single “treatment.” Three days every other week she undergoes intravenous therapy, which lasts three to five hours each visit. And that, she said, is when “everything is going well.”
Additionally, she takes Rituxin, which is also administered to her intravenously every four months in two different six-hour sessions. Doctors have prescribed her Prednisone for the past three years. Complications from her diagnosis caused her to suffer from a stroke, lose her gall bladder and the majority of her colon, and undergo a hysterectomy.
“I’m usually at treatment because it’s sort of never ending. As soon as I go in one round, it starts up again the next week,” said Kotecki Vest, who added that her health-insurance card is the second most used piece of plastic in her wallet after her debit card. “If I’m not at home, I’m hooked up to an IV.”
She began writing full-time for BlogHer in 2008. But her attempt to work was interrupted by surgeries and treatments before her official diagnosis.
“In a minute, the hospital bills started rolling in from the very first surgeries and the very first treatments,” she said. “We were overwhelmed. That added to the stress exponentially in this house and in my life because all I could think about was: ‘I have to get back to work to pay off these bills.’ What else can you do?”
Kotecki Vest has been on permanent medical leave since the summer of 2010. Despite her family’s savings, the couple decided to re-finance their mortgage before they lost their home or fell behind in paying bills.
NEW PLAN
Kotecki Vest’s “crude estimate” of $18,900 in medical savings, which she announced in a post on her personal blog, is based on her current health care and medication bills–she takes 17 prescriptions each month. Once she confirmed the calculation several times (she expects their estimate is lower than reality), she registered her family–in less than 25 minutes–for a new Blue Shield of California plan under the state-run exchange (HealthCare.gov redirected her to her state’s website).
“It has taken a weight off of our shoulders that I can’t describe,” she said. “I don’t know how to explain to people unless you have been through a horrible illness in your family or a terrible accident that has landed one of your loved ones in the hospital, or living paycheck to paycheck.”









