It is common knowledge that the ACA has granted more Americans access to health care insurance. As discussed earlier, the increase in insured persons means more patients in the already burdened health care system. The up-front cost of providing care to nearly 16.4 million Americans will be great to health care providers and organizations. The ACA presented new concepts to health delivery that move away from the traditional fee-for-service payment model in hopes to increase quality of care, improve patient outcomes, reduce costs, and increase savings to providers and organizations. The Accountable Care Organization (ACO) is a model implemented by the ACA to allow economic incentives for organizations.…
For this fieldwork assignment I decided to go to a Roman Catholic Church. I was raised Catholic and I went to a Catholic school from second grade to eighth grade so, I had background knowledge on the teaching of the church. I have taken field notes and came across some reoccurring tendencies. All of these reoccurring tendencies support my thesis, which is: one of the many values the Catholic Church holds importance to is having much respect for their God. Throughout this essay I will explain my findings and the correlation between them and my assumption that this particular church holds being respect to a high regard.…
The Affordable Care Act is the greatest overhaul of the US health-care system. One of its key reforms includes health coverage for adults with pre-existing conditions, which generally hadn’t been available until now. The Affordable Care Act was signed into law by President Obama in March 2010. The act will extend insurance to more than 30 million uninsured people.…
The ACA makes affordable health care more achievable for most Americans. “Nearly 15 percent of the U.S. population, an estimated 46 million in 2012, had no health insurance during most of the calendar year. Three-quarters of these uninsured are in families with incomes near or below the federal poverty level...the remaining uninsured have annual incomes ranging from two-and-a-half to four times the poverty level...” (aier.org). The main objective of the Affordable Care Act was to increase the number of people with insurance and make it more affordable and obtainable for all. The ACA also doesn't allow insurance companies to discriminate against pre-existing conditions giving more affordable health care for those who are ill or have numerous health problems. It also prevents discrimination of you gender. “The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has 3 main objectives: (1) to reform the private insurance market—especially for individuals and small-group purchasers, (2) to expand Medicaid to the working poor with income up to 133% of the federal poverty level, and (3) to change the way that medical decisions are made.”(annfammed.org).…
The Catholic Church teaches to love one another as the good Lord Jesus loves you, which is why Catholics, in the Archdiocese of St. Louis, should answer their call to stewardship by giving just a mere 15% of their annual income to the ACA. When one puts it in perspective, God sacrificed his son, Jesus, so that…
Affordable Care Act is enjoyed mostly by pro low and middle income Americans, especially in states that expanded Medicaid eligibility. Since Affordable Care Act works on a sliding scale, Affordable Care Act gives to about 30 million of 44 million uninsured Americans access to health insurance and expand Medicaid over 15 million previously uninsured low-income individuals and families below the 138% FLP mark. In the past, many of these low-income…
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act also called the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law on March 23, 2010. It has been the source of many heated political debates and has been under scrutiny since its inception. Currently, 18 percent of our U.S. gross domestic product is spent on healthcare, that equals out to approximately 2.9 trillion dollars and we don’t have the quality care to show as the results. With the costs continually increasing and the lack of positive results, something has to change in our healthcare system. The Affordable Care Act is the cornerstone to help initiate these changes.…
The Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) is a hot topic in today’s political atmosphere. Advocacy and Opposition both run rampant throughout the country. The goal of the act was to fix the health care concern.…
More than 45 million Americans are uninsured. Even those that do have health insurance often face financial and other barriers when getting healthcare. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) removes most of these financial barriers (Kocher, Emanuel, & DeParle, 2010). The ACA guarantees access to healthcare and creates new incentives to change clinical practice, but some might be surprised to learn that the financial price tag attached goes beyond healthcare costs and taxes which all Americans will pay for costs associated with the ACA are passed (Unknown, 2012).…
The reform act will also have an opportunity to reduce the costs that nonprofit organizations pay as employers and be available to lengthen health care coverage to the individuals who assist within the nonprofit community. As the health care reform act continues to generate changes to our current health care system, all individuals could benefit significantly from conserving how much the health care expenditure are. An important factor in the reform is that profit organizations will not be able to have revenue by rejecting coverage to individuals, so they will be more motivated to keep people…
According to Persad (2015) many aspects of the ACA simply attempt to improve cost, quality, or access to healthcare for individuals across the nation. Under the ACA, Medicare and Medical will expand to cover individuals an even larger section of the population. The ACA is a great opportunity for the uninsured, such as the majority of the homeless population, to gain medical insurance. These health insurances will be funded at the federal and state level. There has been no better time in U.S. history for the uninsured to obtain health…
Health Coverage has been the biggest controversial topic within the American government. Health coverage is too expensive to purchase for many and overpriced for those paying. The Affordable Care Act was introduced to eliminate these concerns and bring good hope to the public in regards to healthcare. The policy will help those without health coverage gain the coverage as equal to the individuals who are already have coverage. Explaining this numerically, millions of citizens will have basic health coverage, without hindering each individual financially. The plan has proven to work and is cost-effective. Idealistically it is wonderful, however, with any policy ideological views differ causing opposition towards the Affordable Care Act.…
The Affordable Care Act is a long, complex piece of legislation that attempts to reform the healthcare system by providing more Americans with affordable quality health insurance and by curbing the growth in healthcare spending in the U.S. Reforms include new benefits, rights and protections, rules for insurance companies, taxes, tax breaks, funding, spending, the creation of committees, education, new job creation and more. (http://obamacarefacts.com/affordablecareact-summary.php)…
Second, the ACA significantly expands the Medicaid program by providing health coverage to new classes of people that previously were not eligible, including adults without children and families with higher incomes. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the cost of the expansion at approximately $100 billion per year, approximately 40% above current levels. The ACA will provide new funds to States that agree to participate in the expansion. Under the existing Medicaid Act, the Secretary of Health and Human Services has the discretion to withdraw all…
Thesis Statement: The Affordable Care Act has made private health insurance rates more affordable for low-to-middle income Americans.…