What has been the impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on healthcare access, cost, and quality?
Who was newly covered and how is this achieved?
What are exchanges and how are different States approaching them?
What does the Medicaid program have to do with the ACA? How are health insurance premiums being affected?
What variables are in play in the political debate over the impact of the ACA on cost, access, and quality of care?
What are some of the key challenges facing state and national policy makers?
On balance, is the ACA a good or bad law? Provide a clear, fact-based, non-emotional justification for your conclusion.
Is healthcare a right? Why or why not?
What role should the federal government play in healthcare given the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
Please provide answer in the format of paragraph instead of a one by one in a paragraph of at least 250 words. Thank you
Many research studies conducted in order evaluate the impact of affordable care act on health care access reveals that gaining the insurance coverage through the expansions and extension to the population increased the probability of having usual care, with its cost effectiveness and quality of care was pretty good and the studies also states the ACA decreased the number of uninsured Americans but also increased coverage to millions of Americans. The newly covered insurance was that the insurance allowed the children to stay on their parents insurance upto the age of 26, and is being achieved by the wide spread combination of all the usage of the insurance. The exchangers are the individuals who are combined with their medicaid insurance, as these exchanges are costly and they have to be payed by the tax payers and each states are provided with the deadline. If a person is a legal resident of the united states he can buy this ACA when the individual is not eligible for medicare, the main motto of ACA was that all the legal residents with the income of upto138% of FPL would be under the free medicaid service. The political debate happens is that the overall insurance was being covered by the population and increased the people's access to health care. There are different challenges faced by the policy makers are like to assess the individual to cover the insurance and get access to evaluate the states under federal APA is being utilised in the given period of time. Thus ACA is the good law amended as it shows an transparent access of every individual to the health care with proper quality and coverage which in many research showed a statistical improvement of population using health care. Therefore health care is the fundamental right of every citizen born in that country and the health care accessibility, cost effectiveness and quality of care should reach wide spread in the grass root level among whole of the US. But still on the other side The tenth amendment states in a different way and the federal government should take few consideration of making states participate to take up this insurance with few changes,wereby the states clauses are not been affected.
What has been the impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on healthcare access, cost, and...
What are the key components of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the impact of the ongoing legal implementation issues on public health?
• What are the main features of the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA)? • What has been done in an effort to modify the policy and were these efforts successful? • Why do you think that there has been such a polarized debate over the ACA? • Based on recent debates, what is the projected direction of healthcare reform?
The U.S. Presidential Administration of Barack Obama passed the controversial Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is one of the many influences that impact the financial structure of healthcare today. It addresses three balancing goals within the United States' health care system: 1.) access, 2.) costs, and 3.) quality. Based on your perception of the Act's purpose, do you think all three goals can be effectively reached? For example, can you increase access and...
Please discuss in detail: Affordable Care Act (ACA) 1. Describe the background and history. 2. Discuss the why behind this legislation (rationale). 3. Describe the key components and the populations affected. 4. Discuss the impact of this legislation on individuals, populations, healthcare system and cost, access and quality. 5. Discuss current challenges and/or issues. 6. Discuss revisions and/or (possible) amendments
Public health class The affordable care act was designed to reduce healthcare cost and increase access to care for the most vulnerable populations. In class we mostly focused on the ACA goal of increasing access. Do you agree that the affordable care act has increased access to those who most need it? Who is most in need? Why did it succeed/fail? what evidence is there that it has achieved/failed to achieve its goal? how has it achieved/failed to achieve said...
The Affordable Care Act allowed for the expansion of the Medicaid program. As the Act passed through the legal system, many states have decided not to expand their respective programs. Select one of the 50 states and discuss whether they have decided to expand their Medicaid program. What are the implications of this decision? Would this expansion help to improve both access and quality while reducing costs?
In 2 paragraphs, explain how the affordable care act (Obamacare) has influenced Public Health and healthcare delivery in the United States. Start by mentioning why you’re “with” the affordable care act, followed by providing 3 justifications for your opinion and 1 counter argument refuting a common justification supporting the opposite side.
What do you think will ultimately replace the Affordable Care Act? How will that impact HMOs, patient privacy, costs, quality, access, etc.?
The Affordable Health Care Act (AHCA) has significantly impacted healthcare. What aspect of the Act is most important to many and how does it impact Long Term Care?
The Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) put the responsibility of overpriced hospital charges on the public's radar. Instead of forcing hospitals to reduce charges, a greater plan emerged. The price transparency initiative mandated that hospitals and clinics had to put their charges online so patients could see and compare. With more being paid out of pocket due to insurance changes, the public has been interested in shopping prices (and quality, which is also publically reported). This public access drove...