health-dummy-full

The Examination: How many pages is 'Obamacare'?

August 7, 2013  |    |  2 min read

THE EXAMINATION – This column looks for answers to what should be simple questions.

This week’s question: How many pages is ‘Obamacare’?

A simple search yields a wealth of fascinating estimates. And, like most things, the answer is simple, yet complicated. The easy answer is the law, as passed in 2010, weighs in at 906 pages. You can download it in PDF form from the U.S. Government Printing Office website.

Call the law what you will, Obamacare, The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, or Public Law 111-148 (the official, boring title), it’s still just 906 pages.

Some have pegged the law to be much longer. Tom Giffey at the Leader-Telegram newspaper, wrote a great article in July of 2012 detailing how other interpretations have inflated the page count to over 2000 pages.

The fifth result in my Google search is from a site called policymic from March of 2013. The headline reads: “The Obamacare Law is 20,000 pages Long and Would Be 7 Feet Tall If Stacked Page-By-Page.”

What? I was pretty sure that had to be wrong.

Here’s the tweet, from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) highlighted, and misconstrued in the article from policymic.com.

Sen. McConnell is talking about regulations, not just the law itself. Whew. The law itself is a manageable read over a long weekend. The regulations are another story. A much longer, complicated story as Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post wrote about this in May of 2013 in “The Fact Checker – The Truth Behind the Rhetoric”. He details how the number of pages of regulations ranges from  13,000 to 33,000 pages, depending on how you count it.

Plenty to read, for sure, and I’m only on page 40 of the law.

It’s a page turner. I can’t wait to read the regulations.

 

 

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …

June 1, 2026

World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…

Related Stories

President Donald Trump, left, and former Vice President Joe Biden

Life and Death Issue: Presidential Candidates on Health Care

Flatland examines the presidential candidates' positions on health care, which 68% of registered voters say will be a very important issue in deciding how they vote.

Read More >
Healthcare key on the computer keyboard

Age of Coronavirus: Pandemic Exposes Health Insurance Gaps

With roughly half of the nation - about 156 million people - getting health insurance through their employers, industry experts say the COVID-19 public health crisis could morph into a health insurance disaster.

Read More >

Take 5 For Your Health

KU Researchers Aim To Improve Health Of Kansans With Disabilities University of Kansas researchers plan to use a $1.5 million federal grant to help Kansans with disabilities catch up to their non-disabled peers in several health categories. Jean Hall, director of KU’s Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies, will lead a team of partners…

Read More >