obama health care essay

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    expensive health care costs. To combat this, the Obama Care administration created the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act to provide nationalized healthcare. The Affordable Care Act is meant to expand health coverage, lower health care costs and hold insurance companies accountable. The Affordable Care Act will allow more people to be insured but the issue lies in the question, do the costs outweigh the benefits? The Affordable Care Act will be used in an attempt to lower health care coverage

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    Several years ago, after her company was acquired and her husband retired, Donna Dubinsky is left without an employer that could finance her family’s health insurance. Having thought that getting individual health insurance was easy, she naïvely decided to get her family health insurance. She discussed with the insurance broker for options, filled out a very long application, yet only to find rejection letters came in the mailbox. (Dubinsky) So, why was she denied? Was it because her long lists of

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    The Affordable Care Act and the Health Care Industry “Health is the first freedom, for without health, other freedoms are diminished.” Now here in America, we have failed constantly on giving the American people solid, affordable healthcare. The Affordable Care Act has affected the health care industry because of the increasing amount of people being covered for health care, the affordability of applying for healthcare, and the amount of profit being made by the pharmaceutical industry

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    Tax increases, the process of rebuilding America. The National debt has increased to over 18 trillion and the deficit is still in the negative, and the only way to fix it would be tax increases or massive spending cuts.” Mr. Obama says that stabilizing the primary debt ratio would take 1.5 trillion more in spending cuts or tax increases” “Deficit-reduction disorder;The economy” That is an audacious task to perform, even though it is a necessary one. The more responsible option would be to

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    Assignment 1 The Affordable Care Act The affordable care act was signed into law by president Obama in the year 2010. The aim of the act is to ensure Americans get access to quality health care and at the same time, reform the health care system in order to manage costs. The act has different sections that explicitly explain how this aim would be realized. First, the act addresses major reforms to undertake in the health insurance sector to improve access to quality health care. The age of dependent

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    Social Problem The Problem our policy is intended to address is the lack of affordable health insurance as well as the lack of affordable health insurance to persons with pre-existing health conditions. The Extent of the social problem reaches to numbers of persons and populations in the United States. Living without health insurance are in excess of 50 million people in the United States, which is roughly equivalent to 16.7% of the population, or one in six U.S. residents (Wolf, 2010). Defining

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    coverage for all citizens and they’re thereby doing not ensure access to health services (Government hub, n.d.). Meaning other countries offer health coverage without cost. This always disappointed me because America is the richest, and most unequal, country (Sherman, 2015). So why wouldn’t America provide American’s health care insurance (McAlearney, 2003, p. 20). Since the United States does not provide universal health care coverage, we will discuss briefly forms of insurance offered to Americans

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    ACA Pros And Cons

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    the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law, over fifteen million more people have health insurance and have been living healthier lives (Levy). The ACA was an idea for better health care insurance thought up by President Barack Obama to make the lives of Americans better. It works by reducing the costs of health care for those who wouldn’t be able to afford it otherwise. It’s a step towards the U.S. joining the other well developed countries that have universal health care plans. Despite all

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    common medical procedure in today’s society, even though its rates have steadily dropped since 2000. Studies show that one in three women will have an abortion sometime in their life. There has been a constant religious and political debates between health care and abortion services. Many people believe they shouldn’t have to pay for their own abortion, just like they don’t have to pay for their birth control, doctor visits, or dental. This is an accusation that many pro-life people like to use on women

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    Electronic Health Record Implementation Health information technology is a familiar entity for most working nurses in the year of 2017. Many nurses, have lived through the transition from paper charting to online charting. This transition has not always been a progression of ease. Change is never easy. The process of paper charting with pen and paper and the use of paper medication administration records have been the routine process for many years. With the new onset of the electronic health record

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