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But Jepson said his lack of insurance has meant lifestyle adjustments, such as driving less and staying off freeways to avoid accidents. He says he supports Obama's requirement that everyone carry insurance if it can be made affordable. "I would pay for it. I'm just not sure it will really cover everything," Jepson said. To ease fears of an unexpected medical crisis, registered nurse Mary Pitman of Vero Beach, Fla., refuses health insurance and takes the extra cash in her paycheck. Pitman, 54, puts $3,000 per year into a pretax flexible spending account for routine care and another $300 per month in an emergency fund in the event of a major illness. "I have more control over my money this way, and there's a tax advantage," she said. As skeptical as many are about insurers, some are equally doubtful about government's ability to do a better job managing health care. Laura Silverthorn of Tampa, Fla., left a nursing job to start her own business designing and selling temporary tattoos. She and her toddler son have gone without health coverage for nearly two years. While Silverthorn, 36, said she wishes she could afford insurance -- "Just one accident and you're done," as she put it
-- she's also grown disillusioned with government-run programs after working part time reviewing medical charts for Medicaid. "I don't know if I want the government running health care when I see how they run Medicaid
-- there is so much fraud," she said. The only test case for Obama's plan to bring everyone into the health insurance system is Massachusetts. In 2006, it enacted a program to cover all state residents. Those who opt out must pay a $912 annual tax penalty.
Michael Widmer, president of the nonpartisan Massachusetts Taxpayer Foundation, which researched the effectiveness of the state's health insurance mandate, said most people chose to buy insurance rather than pay the penalty
-- even those who are "young, healthy and immortal." "Most are saying, 'If I'm going to have to pay this much in any case, I should be covered,'" he said. While about 65,000 people in Massachusetts were allowed for financial reasons to opt out of the mandate last year, the state now has the lowest rate of uninsured residents in the country
-- 4.1 percent, according to the latest census data. ___ On the Net: Kaiser Family Foundation:
http://www.kff.org/uninsured/index.cfm
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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