There are side issues of concern that have passed as well.
The medical schools are mandated to accept more "minority" students regardless of aptitude or merit; these will be your future doctors.
There's the tax on medical devices.
There's the additional 3%+ tax on your house.
There's the Death Panel.
And there's probably more of which we're unaware - 2700 pages of it, that even Scalia wouldn't impose the reading of on himself or his staff.
On Tuesday, a radio-show caller from North Carolina was upset that his 63 year-old mother was denied a PETscan by Medicare, and the law is such that she cannot pay to have one with her own money. I'm 58. Will this sort of thing be de riguerre with insurance company policies written by the government?