The conservative group Americans for Prosperity is defending a television ad claiming Obamacare jeopardized the life of Julie Boonstra, a Michigan cancer patient, after fact checkers raised concerns over its accuracy. But the Koch brothers-backed AFP is still refusing to provide documented evidence to back up its characterization of her story.
The ad targets Michigan Rep. Gary Peters, a Democrat running to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Carl Levin. It features a leukemia patient, Julie Boonstra, who says that because of Obamacare her out-of-pocket health care costs have become unaffordable after her previous plan was canceled — meaning she might not be able to obtain cancer medication necessary to keep her alive.
What the ad didn’t mention is that Boonstra had obtained new coverage through her state’s Obamacare health care exchange in a network that included her physician. In addition, the monthly premiums under her new plan were cut almost in half, from $1,100 a month to around $568.
The drop in price for Boonstra’s monthly premium is especially significant because the savings over a year are almost identical to the maximum $6,350 that insurance companies can legally charge an individual for out-of-pocket expenses under Obamacare. That means, on an annual basis, it’s virtually impossible for Boonstra to pay more for care under her new plan.
Lawyers for the Peters campaign contacted managers at the TV stations running the ad and asked them to obtain substantiation for the ad or pull it down. In response, AFP sent a document to the stations that provided no new information about Boonstra’s situation, but instead directed them to a Politico story from September on how some consumers faced higher deductibles and co-pays under their new plans.
When the Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler asked AFP spokesman Levi Russell last week about the apparent discrepancy between the ad’s claims and Boonstra’s actual insurance plan, Russell didn’t deny that Obamacare’s caps would prevent Boonstra’s annual costs from going up. Instead, he said the primary problem was that Boonstra’s costs in any given month before she hits the $6,350 limit could be too high to pay all at once.
This new explanation may have thrown Fox News’ Steve Doocy on Monday, who asked Boonstra in atelevised interview to explain her “new policy with premiums of $1,100.” Boonstra corrected him, saying her new plan actually cost much less but that she was afraid of a new payment schedule.
“Under my old policy, I knew what I could afford every single month because I wasn’t hit with extra charges,” she told Doocy. “Now, I don’t know what I have to pay month to month based on that out-of-pocket expense. Leukemia tests are extremely expensive and I just don’t have the five or six thousand dollars in the bank to cover that expense.”
Boonstra may well be frustrated with having her old plan cancelled, just like many people whose plans were cancelled under Obamacare. And she’s clearly worried about paying higher expenses under the new one. But one of the ad’s central claims is that Boonstra, right now, cannot afford lifesaving treatment thanks to higher costs.
“Now, the out-of-pocket costs are so high, it’s unaffordable,” she said in the ad. “If I do not receive my medication, I will die.”
As Kessler noted in his fact check, it’s impossible to evaluate AFP’s claim that Boonstra’s month-to-month costs have gone up, let alone to the point that they actually threaten her health, without knowing what Boonstra’s bills are and what her payment schedule is. Russell suggested to msnbc that the group was unlikely to furnish such documentation.









