The triad of cost, quality, and access has impacted the development of the Affordable Care Act on many levels. The Affordable Care Act aims to improve the quality of healthcare, while maintaining the cost of health care ("Quality of care," n.d.). Under the Affordable Care Act, there is more funding for each state to assist in treating people with chronic illness. The goal is for these patient populations to have high-quality services at an affordable cost (“Quality of care,” n.d.). To ensure that quality of care is provided, the Affordable Care Act requires quality measures to be met in order for organizations to receive reimbursement. Although the United States still needs improvement in providing high quality health care that is accessible
The fertility rate is an important factor when evaluating the health of the public. Despite the United States having one of the best healthcare systems in the world, approximately 13% of women between the age of 18 & 44 have trouble conceiving. Although the US has implemented the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, a landmark policy, assisting millions of Americans in obtaining health insurance, unless altered, the policy could hurt the 3 out of 20 women who struggle with infertility. After evaluating the core essential benefits of the Affordable Care Act, the views of stakeholders, and the state mandates, an easy solution can be established to assist those suffering from impaired fecundity.
HCA is a healthcare provider that was established in 1968. Their main focus is on offering cliental with a number of different services to include: inpatient, intensive care, outpatient, diagnostic and emergency services. To achieve these objectives they operate a variety of facilities such as: outpatient, psychiatric, surgery centers, freestanding emergency care facilities, diagnostic / imaging centers and comprehensive rehabilitation / physical therapy centers. They are structured to create increasing earnings for its policy and shareholders. This is achieved by contracting with private doctors to deliver services to its preferred providers members. At the same time, they receive fees from these entities and they negotiate lower group rates.
With the Advent of the Affordable Care Act, came many changes throughout the medical industry, changes happened in hospitals, health insurance, and doctors. Doctors, more than any other group seem to be affected in a number of way, from the amount of patients, from the increased number of people with insurance plans. It also changed the way a doctor interacts with other parts of medicine. There are some questions arising from this such as; would doctors approve or disapprove of these changes along with do these changes affect the doctors' ability to practice. For the most part, there is no difference the way doctors practice or to their income, but it does have doctors utilize their abilities towards medicine rather paper pushing which could have doctors prefer the post-ACA medical community rather than before.
The implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) will propel changes that were on the horizon for pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms. Pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries knew there was going to be some type of healthcare reform so they began to take the necessary precautions to prepare. The ACA had key provisions related to the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry affecting Medicare and Medicaid. Legislation in the ACA will reduce cost for brand name prescriptions (Rx); this will reduce drug cost for patients, but increase rebates and discounts for pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms, therefore, imposing cost on the firms. The pharmaceutical and biotech industry was key in creating legislation for the ACA, according to CMS (2009), “despite
As the past six years can attest, the way the government implements change is not grounded in making micro changes and fine-tuning them until a certain measure of success is gained and then applying that change at a macro level. The Affordable Care Act was forced on all Americans and was poorly implemented for the overall benefit of all Americans. While many were able to purchase health insurance for the first time, the quality of that health insurance was not high in all parts of the country. This student and her husband were forced to buy insurance on the Kentucky exchange that was extraordinarily poor quality. Premiums were lost, customer service agents spoke very poor English, covered procedures were denied until this student filed
The Affordable Care Act includes a requirement that all citizens must have some level of health coverage. The primary method through which the mandate is attempting to create 100% coverage in health care is by instilling fear into the minds of hardworking citizens as those who ignore the rule will have to pay a hefty fine. This mandate, unconstitutional according to the law, will deteriorate the quality of health care, hamper economic growth and cause spikes in insurance premiums. The hope of universal health care may or may not arise under the mandate but new dilemmas and hardships on U.S. citizens will undoubtedly surface.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 is a law that altogether changed healthcare in the United States. It made protection accessible to between 32 million and 50 million more Americans, or 95 percent of the lawful population. The Act, also referred to as Obamacare, was marked into law on March 3, 2010. It was staged in more than four years. Each citizen was required to have medical coverage by March 31, 2014, or confront a salary impose extra charge. In case they starting at now have a plan, paying little respect to whether through their supervisors, Medicaid, Medicare, or secretly keep it. The people who couldn't get medicinal scope have additional options. They can get it from a therapeutic scope exchange and conceivably
The Affordable Care Act expands access to health care coverage and reforms the health insurance, marketplace (Virginia Senate Finance Committee, 2012). The law gives states the choice to expand Medicaid for any individual whose income falls below 138 percent of poverty. In the state of Virginia, there are approximately 1 million uninsured residents. This is often caused by lack of insurance through employer and inability to pay the premiums if offered. According to the Kaiser family foundation, The Virginia’s Governor has included Medicaid expansion as part of his FY 2017 budget proposal. The overall cost to expand Medicaid in Virginia would likely be $220 million beginning in 2016-2018 biennial budgets not including administrator cost. The
This essay will be reviewing two articles talking about the Affordable Care Act. One article was written and posted on The American Prospect(Citation) and the other was written and posted on The American Spectator(Citation). This essay will explore the differing viewpoints and opinions of the these online publications and how they affect the articles they post.
In my opinion, I feel that competitive bidding would provide long-term cost savings as long as the government takes the necessary steps to prevent fraudulent transactions in regards to excessive cost. The general rule of thumb to keep cost down on medical supplies and medications would have multiple vendors to compete for the business. By doing this it will create a savings for the government. The purpose of the Affordable Care Act is to provide health insurance for everyone, make health insurance more affordable to some people, no denial for pre-existing health conditions, more screenings are covered, and lower prescription drug costs. But on the offer side of the coin the negatives are that the insurance premiums will be higher for a
In 2008, the United States elected Barack Obama as our President. He came into office with determination and promising the citizens great things. During President Obama time in office one of his greatest accomplishment has been passing the Affordable Care Act in 2010. After five preceding presidents were unable to create a universal health insurance plan, Obama provided insurance for 32 million previously uninsured Americans. However, the Affordable Care Act raised many questions from citizens over rather or not the bill was constitutional.
The Affordable Care Act (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act), commonly called "Obamacare," is a federal statute that was signed into law in March of 2010 (PDF, n.d.; Van de Water, 2011). It basically requires the vast majority of people in the United States who do not have insurance coverage to acquire that coverage or face penalties. People who already have insurance through their employers or on their own will not be asked to change companies. Additionally, anyone who is on federally-funded insurance such as Medicaid or Medicare and still qualifies for those programs will not be removed from their insurance. They will still be covered and protected. In order to find out more about the Act and really understand its main points and principles, however, it is very important to be aware of how it became a law and any changes that have taken place to it from its inception all the way through where it is today. Only then can a person have a clear understanding of the Act and form an opinion as to the value it may (or may not) provide to the American public. There is still much speculation and a great deal of misunderstanding about the Act and what it involves.
When attempting to determine the benefits and the negatives associated with national health care in the United States, one inevitably must discern the projected impact of the Affordable Care Act. This act was signed into being by the current president in 2010, and triumphed in a Supreme Court Decision in 2012 in which its legality was upheld as constitutional (No author). The chief aims of this particular piece of legislation are to increase accessibility to health care for Americans, primarily by lowering costs associated with it. It will fully take effect in 2014, by which time citizens will have a variety of options of obtaining health care either through a state subsidy, through Medicaid, or through one's employer or a private plan. Those who do not have health care by this point will be assessed a fine; certain employers who do not offer health care may also be assessed a fine. A thorough analysis of the boons and the detriments of this form of national health care reveals that it is beneficial to the country as a whole.
The origin of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) spans prior to 2010. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, universal healthcare was an interest in the United States. In 1993, First Lady Hilary Clinton discussed the Health Equity and Access Reform Today Act of 1993 as a proposal for universal health insurance for every citizen (Mertens, 2010). It was later killed by special interest groups before taking off in congress and deemed too complex (Cohn, 1994). Since President and First Lady Clinton proposal, various members of congress attempted other alternatives to the universal healthcare.
After reading the reflection article, the author seems to favor the Affordable Care Act. President Obama challenges New Orleans to enroll in a health plan. He wants every local official, families, and friends to tell others about this “affordable” health care insurance. The President figures that spreading the word “by mouth” is the best resource for communities. There are places around the country that are now holding open enrollment for health insurance. According to the article, every uninsured person can afford health insurance at a low cost. In particular, the author states that in Louisiana nearly 8 in 10 people may get coverage with $50 or less a month. Also, pre-existing condition is no longer a major factor of coverage. This really