President Donald Trump and Republicans have promised to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act and that could leave millions of Americans in limbo.

Rep. Val Demings held a meeting in Orlando on Sunday afternoon with concerned constituents, including Gloria Madaus.

Madaus said cancer has destroyed her family.

“It’s frightening, it’s frightening,” she said.

She’s lost six relatives to cancer and is a survivor herself. Madaus think ssituations such as hers could be avoided depending on the way health care coverage is handled.

“Over the years, one by one they died because they couldn't get anything to help them out,” she said.

Madaus was one of the more than a hundred people that showed up to Demings' town hall meeting where health care professionals answered questions.

Demings said if the Affordable Care Act is repealed, it would be devastating for Central Florida, as over 60,000 people in her district alone are covered through the health care act.

“We’re going to fight hard to keep it, God forbid if it was,” Demings said. “We’re going to hit the ground running the next day trying to come up with something that works for the American people.”

Some who attended the meeting argued that the current system is flawed and that the health care law should be repealed.

“We should be able to pay for the type of items in our health insurance that we need and want,” Orlando resident Michelle Barfield said. "I don't need pregnancy coverage anymore, but yet I can’t buy a policy without it.”

Madaus says she hopes Demings can fight to keep Obamacare up and running for the sake of her family.

“I also feel that I should be out here advocating every ounce of my strength to come to these organizations and to these town halls to let them know we will all resist,” she added.