Dementia is not a disease. It is an outcome of multiple causes, some of which are diseases, but can be related to severe diet issues, the consequences of alcoholism, or aging, or a complete mystery, or a combination of factors.
There's a tendency to demonize the elderly and the aging Baby Boomers to be the root cause of the exponential rise of healthcare. Well since they own so much wealth due to savings and investment, that results in keeping the economy afloat. The reason they can pay for their healthcare more than a younger person is that thrift and hard work earlier. The reason that there was any money at all for healthcare was that they put tax money into it, plus money into private insurance. The reason there are physicians and medical staff are that they did this too.
To think of only something like Alzheimer's as causing dementia and therefore the reason for an explosion of healthcare (like assisted living) discounts the fact that some younger people get it. Some people with Down's Syndrome will end up with it. That Alzheimer's isn't the only reason people get dementia. Etc.
Boy there's a lot of hostile generalities in this topic. It's why I took a breather on it, not due to irritation, but to save me from irritation.
Obamacare is here to stay unless somehow the Supreme Court tosses it out for one reason or the other like federal subsidies. Instead of the pointless task of eliminating it, we should be finding ways to work within the system to improve healthcare for all. Certainly from a Christian perspective or a non-Christian perspective of altruism, if we mean what we say, then healthcare is in keeping with that principle. Just as we have Habitat for Humanity to help provide homes to the indigent who will work alongside of those assisting them, likewise we should expect that the indigent should do preventative maintenance such that their health improves daily versus a decline of health as a consequence of Western living.
Despite the accusation to the contrary, I doubt many folks who dislike it, want to unravel it. Don't assume that it's going to be better without staff though to practically service those new to healthcare.
If I write you a check, but I have no money to draw from in my checking account, then what use is that paper check? Obamacare is just like that as we really don't have the money to pay for it, and only by some screwy federal subsidies can it work. How is that sustainable?