Again, let's start with what a loser is, and work from there, ok?
Maybe it's like the Supreme Court justice's take on pornography...I may not be able to define it, but I know it when I see it.
How about: Obamacare loser: an individual or family that ends up, as a result of Obamacare, with significantly higher health insurance premiums, significantly higher deductibles, or significantly reduced choice in doctors or hospitals, affecting quality of care. Or a combination of the three.
Devil in the details, of course. We would need to define "significantly". How about an increase in premiums or deductibles in excess of 20%? Or provider decrease of a similar amount?
For newbies, my "family" currently pays $363/mo for a high deductible plan with Aetna. Since we're in a position to afford that deductible*, and since in an average year our health care costs are low, it makes the most sense for us financially.
The healthcare.gov site lists our cheapest premium at over $1,100/month. It offers slightly better coverage, but still not great. If we were forced to pay $700/mo more* in premiums (a 300% increase), it would seriously dent our discretionary spending.
As it is, we're breathing easier...
1) Because I hit Medicare age in August, and,
2) For now, our current plan qualifies under the ACA.
But I believe Aetna is pulling out of GA, and I think in August we'll have to start shopping for an individual plan for Karen. I believe, but do not know, that Aetna's decision was not out of the blue but the result of Obamcare.
So, for now, status quo - neither winner nor loser. Again, anecdotes do not inform us of much. We'll know a lot more in a few years about the winner/loser ratio.
*In the time we've had this policy, we have never come close to hitting our deductible.
**For $700/mo, we could make payments on a freakin' Tesla instead! Just making the point that money spent on increased premiums for unwanted or unneeded coverage will be money not spent elsewhere in the economy. Good for insurance companies and their investors, I guess. Not so great for Tesla (and thousands of other companies, large and small).