A Second Look at the Affordable Care Act David E. Mann, ABA American Military University POLS210 Abstract Since the passing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), twenty-eight states have either filed joint or individual lawsuits to strike down the PPACA. This document will examine a few key elements that the President of the United States must take into consideration when reviewing the act and moving forward to either ratify the act, replace the act, or leave the act as it is. Topics that will be presented will include; the current issues being debated, two competing thoughts on how to fix the ACA, an evaluation of the preferred solution, and finally the responsibility of each level of government. Patient …show more content…
(Chaikind, Copeland, Redhead, & Staman). Supporters of the act contest that the requirement to purchase health insurance is economic in nature because it regulates how an individual participates in the health care market, through insurance or otherwise. The inverse is stated by opponents that Congress cannot have the power to require a private citizen to have insurance and because there is a tax penalty attached to it it is unconstitutional. (Chaikind, Copeland, Redhead, & …show more content…
One being the need for a digitized information system in which the data is used to assess what’s working and what’s not more intelligently. This would allow for there to be an assessment of quality or quantity of treatment. (Health care reform debate in the United States, n.d.). Mayo Clinic President and CEO, Denis Cortese describes the four “pillars” of success in reforming the United States health care system by: Focus on value; Pay for and align incentives with value; Cover everyone; Establish mechanisms for improving the healthcare service delivery system over the long-term, which is the primary means through which value would be improved (Health care reform debate in the United States, n.d.). David Leonhardt of the New York Times describes another assessment in which many ailments are treated differently, however have the same outcome. The point in his article is that different treatments cost different amounts, sometimes very significantly different, yet both get the same result. By doing comparative effectiveness research, patients can get the quality care they deserve but at a much cheaper cost. (Health care reform debate in the United States,
One of the author’s reasoning for how taking away ACA would affect Medicaid is back in 2016 legislation tried to step away from it, but former President Barack Obama repealed it because could eventually affect the lives of millions of people. The authors also cover how ACA changed Medicaid for the better, for example creating a program for just children’s coverage, inventing a new method to determine eligibility, and even creating new benefit options for families and small businesses. The author describes how the new Presidential administration can repeal or alter Medicaid through Section 1115. The authors main argument is that by repealing ACA would eliminate the Medicaid system which in turn will allow millions of people to be
This question represents at least half of the medical community, and makes people question the intended and unintended consequences in a profit - driven health care system, the supposition of quality health today, and whether they
“Healthcare Reform 101,” written by Rick Panning (2014), is a wonderful article that describes, in an easy-to-understand language, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, signed into law March 23, 2010. The main goal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was to provide affordable, quality healthcare to Americans while simultaneously reducing some of the country’s economic problems. Two areas will be covered throughout this paper. The first section will include a summary of the major points and highlights of Panning’s (2014) article, including an introduction to the ACA, goals of the signed legislation, provided coverage, and downfalls of the current healthcare system. The second part will be comprised of a professional
The affordable care act is a United States statue signed into law by President Obama in March of 2010. It represents the most significant improvement to the U.S. healthcare system since 1965 with the addition of Medicare and Medicaid. Also known and commonly referred to as Obamacare, it was enacted to increase the affordability and quality of health insurance, diminish the rate of the uninsured by expanding public and private insurance coverage while reducing the cost of healthcare for individuals and the government. This law will require Hospitals and doctors to reconstruct financial practices along side with technologically and clinically to advance better outcomes, reduce cost and improve methods of accessibility.
The Affordable Care Act, (ACA) often referred to as Obamacare, was signed into law March 23rd, 2010 and has quickly become a nightmare to millions of citizens nationwide. While there were fortunate people who benefited from the heavily subsidized and affordable healthcare that was not readily available before ACA was passed, many more people found that their once affordable healthcare was no longer an option due to new ACA requirements (how so?). ACA was designed to extend insurance benefits to roughly 30 million uninsured Americans. The Obama administration aimed to extend Medicaid and provide federal subsidies so lower and middle-class Americans could afford to buy private insurance. This act alone forced millions of Americans out of their
You are absolutely right . We, as medical providers have a widely acknowledged role in improving health and preventing illness. Every interaction with a patient is an opportunity to improve long-term health. I think that partnering with other local services, such as pharmacies, schools and community groups , we can can ensure that the 'whole is greater than the sum of the parts' in the fight to improve health and well-being in the community.
E. (2012). The Affordable Care Act after the Supreme Court Decision. Journal Of Financial Service Professionals, 66(6), 27-29. Penn, J. D. (2009). Nationalized health care, stimulus and privacy rights.
Moreover, the act, in relevance to various Health and Human Services initiatives, such as the Blue Button, will encourage third parties to provide various add-on services, including secure storage of data solutions for personalized health records, APIs and platforms of health that facilitate personalized, mobile devices. Such mandates will probably stimulate innovation in bio-informatics and biometric as regulators aspire to cut Medicare costs via bundled payments and motivate protocolization by providers of care. Protocolization refers to the adoption of evidence-based, standardized and accepted treatment protocols. It is an inherent concept in the ACA and connected incentives for Accountable and Care Organizations (ACOs) and incentivized reimbursement plans in the post-ACA Medicare setting. The consequences of protocolization are reduced discretion for payers, patients and physicians in selecting treatment alternatives, but with increased control over outcomes of treatment and experience of cost.
Another goal for this law was so that more U.S. citizens, or Americans, could have access to affordable health insurance of good quality and to also reduce, or decrease, the growth of healthcare spending in the United States of America. This act/law expands the availability, quality, and the affordability of public, as well as private, health insurance through regulations,
Affordable Care Act Whitnee West Western Governors University AFFORDABLE CARE ACT On March 23, 2010, President Barack Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) into law. The Affordable Care Act (ACA), or more commonly called Obamacare, became one of the most debated topics around. Prior to the law going into effect there were about 45 million Americans uninsured and with rising health care premiums this number is on the rise. Proponents of the health-care legislation have called it a “landmark legislation” making health care more affordable by reigning in the costs to the people and the economy.
Background The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is officially referred to as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was enacted into law on March 23, 2010. It is estimated that prior to the enactment of the ACA, 44% or 81 million people between the ages 19-64 were either uninsured or underinsured in the United States (Schoen, Doty, Robertson, & Collins, 2011). The populations most likely to be uninsured or underinsured are individuals with earning between 133-200 % below the established federal poverty guidelines (Schoen et al., 2011). Consequently, 80% of individuals with earning under $20,000-$39,999 were uninsured or underinsured (Schoen et al., 2011).
Obamacare is really called The Affordable Care Act and it was created to increase health insurance quality and to make sure that anyone including some poor people can afford it. Also, Obamacare requires them to cover for pre-existing conditions. In other people’s opinions they think that some poor people don’t have enough money to pay for health care because they’re not spending it wisely. Some politicians are trying to replace Obamacare with a new medical plan. I think they still should have Obamacare because poor and sick people can afford it and if we get rid of it then those poor people can’t have health care.
Before the Affordable Care Act was put into work, over 45 million Americans were uninsured. The Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, was then made to help those who were uninsured. It allowed people with financial struggles with the same opportunity as everyone else to have a healthcare plan. Even though the law was passed in 2010, it took a full year of back and forth to get it passed in the Senate. Obamacare may help you get coverage, but charge you an annual fee if you don’t have one.
This law which was passed requires that all the individuals in the US should take the health insurance or pay a penalty tax; employers with 50 or more employees to provide health care coverage to its employees or face a tax penalty thereafter; it establishes insurance exchanges through which individuals and most families will receive tax payer funded premium subsidies; it requires the expansion of Medicare by raising %716 billion for medical care; it imposed 21 additional taxes on the health insurance plans, medical devices, businesses and families at a cost of $1.1 trillion. The estimated cost to achieve this project according to CBO was put to be $2 trillion which was far more than the presidents promise to keep the cost down at $1 trillion (republicans,
Introduction: Affordable health care, which is what everyone wants. In the documentary “Sick around the World” the host T.R. Reid travels to several countries to learn about their unique healthcare systems and how they work. Now in the United States we have the Affordable Health Care Act or what some people call the Obamacare which was passed into law on March 23, 2010 by President Barack Obama. (HHS). Since then it has been shrouded in controversy and debate among the American public and within members of our government system.