The 20 million Americans who have gained health coverage under the Affordable Care Act don鈥檛 yet know exactly how the presidency of Donald Trump will change their lives — and reactions to that uncertainty range from anxiety to apathy.
鈥淢y phone is ringing off the hook,鈥 said Billy Bradford, an insurance broker in Montgomery, Ala. 鈥淧eople are just in panic mode here.鈥
One call came from an older聽couple who had recently retired. Right now, the couple pays $57 per month for their insurance plan; without the subsidy they receive through the health law, the cost will shoot up to $2,000 a month. 鈥淭hey called me in tears afraid. They would not be hired back at their old jobs and are in poor health,鈥 said Bradford.
But another set of consumers — who perhaps are healthier or feel like they are paying too much for too little coverage — may welcome a change. Trump told the Wall Street Journal on Friday that the law would be 鈥渞epealed and replaced or amended.鈥
On Sunday, Trump was upbeat but vague about what that change might be, telling 60 Minutes: 鈥淚t鈥檒l be great health care for much less money. So it鈥檒l be better health care, much better, for less money.鈥
It鈥檚 been well-documented that the public remains deeply divided over the law, which has been controversial since it passed in 2010. found that 51 percent of respondents are in favor of repealing Obamacare, while 45 percent oppose repealing it. But of those Americans actually enrolled in either marketplace coverage or expanded Medicaid, about 80 percent say they are somewhat or very satisfied with the coverage, according to a .
Denise Martinez Gascoigne, 49, in Greenland, N.H., has been paying $1,130 in premiums each month for insurance for her family of four that she purchases through the state鈥檚 exchange. Their deductible is $5,000 per person. Gascoigne and her husband are both self-employed and earn too much money to qualify for a subsidy.
“It鈥檚 so ridiculous that we pay over $1,100 a month, and we鈥檙e still left footing the bill for whatever prescription or procedure we might need in addition to the health insurance,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 go to the doctor.鈥 Her premium is set to increase to nearly $1,330 in 2017.
Gascoigne, who is a Democrat, is 鈥渧ery disappointed and distraught鈥 over the results of the election and supports a single-payer health system. Nonetheless, she said, she鈥檚 鈥渟omewhat indifferent鈥 to the impending changes to the Affordable Care Act.

Tuan Nguyen, 38, worries what changes to the health law will mean for him and his mother, Tammy Nguyen, 61. (Courtesy of Tuan Nguyen)
But in Crystal, Minn., Xochitl Mendoza Ramirez is far from indifferent. She fears that she will lose her coverage: 鈥淚 felt like throwing up. The past two days, it鈥檚 been me having these moments of crying at work.鈥
Ramirez, 22, has made good use of the insurance she gets through her state鈥檚 expansion of Medicaid, the government鈥檚 program for low-income adults. 鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for the Affordable Care Act, there鈥檚 no way I would have gotten my gallbladder out or even gone to the doctor. I just couldn鈥檛 afford it.鈥 She also relies on the insurance for therapy and medications for bipolar disorder.
Ramirez doesn鈥檛 know how she鈥檒l get health insurance without the Medicaid expansion. She works two part-time jobs in retail, but neither provides health insurance. Any changes to the law are likely to take months or years before they go into effect, but Ramirez is already preparing for the worst. 鈥淎s soon as I found out he was elected, I started making phone calls to get an IUD,鈥 she said, referring to an intrauterine device for long-acting birth control. She found a doctor to do the procedure this week.
Tuan Nguyen, 38, in San Jose, Calif., has been paying $105 for a subsidized plan on the exchange. Recently, he鈥檚 been diagnosed with digestive problems and acid reflux and was pleased that each doctor visit cost him just $5.
鈥淚鈥檓 happy with the plan. I鈥檓 just sad to have it taken away from me right when I really need it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f the subsidy goes away, I鈥檒l have to pay full price. That鈥檚 close to $500 or so. I can afford it, but it鈥檚 something that will definitely take a chunk out of my income. It would be a crunch.鈥

Richard Coppola, 48, says the Affordable Care Act has been a failure, but he is still concerned about what repealing the law would mean for him. (Courtesy of Richard Coppola)
But he鈥檚 much more worried for his mother, who is being treated for Stage 4 lung cancer and receives her insurance through California鈥檚 Medicaid program. Nguyen worries that if the Republicans change the way they pay for Medicaid by making it block grant program, as they鈥檝e promised, the funds for her $8,000-a-month medications could dry up. 鈥淚鈥檝e thought about this the past few days. It鈥檚 been on my mind like crazy,鈥 he said. 鈥淩ight now she鈥檚 getting medication that鈥檚 extending her life. It could allow her to live years instead of months. 鈥 Are they going to pull the plug on her medications?鈥
Rebecca Geitz of Austin, Texas, said her subsidized premiums have been affordable, but her plan 鈥渋s the most useless thing in the world. No one takes it!鈥 When Geitz, 33, did get sick, her copays were so expensive that she said it was cheaper for her to just pay an urgent care clinic out of pocket. Nonetheless, she said, 鈥淚 do know that if a serious emergency happened my coverage would help to some degree.鈥 If the law is repealed, she worries she may not even have that.
Richard Coppola, 48, believes the Affordable Care Act has been a failure. He pays $378 for a plan with a $2,000 deductible, and his premiums are going up to $480 next year. But still, he said, he鈥檚 鈥渢errified鈥 about going back to a world without it. He worries about a system where he could be denied coverage for once having a mole removed years ago. He鈥檚 also concerned about lifetime cost limits being restored and the loss of subsidies for people with low incomes.
鈥淭he ACA is a piece of garbage,鈥 Coppola said, 鈥渂ut the Wild West before was a lonely place.鈥
Update: This story has been edited to add a reference to survey data on Obamacare enrollees’ overall satisfaction with their coverage.