Related Essays
Affordable Care Act (ACA)
• Differentiate between at least three groups of stakeholders impacted by the ACA.
Obamacare or the ACA (Affordable Care Act) was primarily designed and put into effect in the year 2010 with an objective of offering better healthcare insurance coverage for the American people and minimize the heavy costs incurred by the American people to access healthcare (Thompson, 2014). Although ACA has achieved sizeable success in coverage there are still many challenges facing it including slow adoption across America, funding problems and problems getting the support of the public (Center for Public Impact, 2017). The main stakeholders of ACA include the healthcare providers,… Continue Reading...
has been bared for all via the suits contesting the Obamacare mandate. A school of thought believes that the government should get involved even constitutionally in situations when certain states do not have individual capabilities to settle a particular dispute. This school also believes that the main reason why the Constitution clearly specifies national bodies is in order to give Congress the power to arbitrate joint problems faced by the states. I will call this school of thought collective action federalism, based on write-ups by Neil Siegel and Robert Cooter (Moncrieff, 2012). Health insurance packages specific to individual states make… Continue Reading...
able to afford the medical care and attention they need throughout their lifespan. The Affordable Care Act, colloquially called Obamacare, set as its goal eventual universal healthcare coverage. Unfortunately, Obamacare has not promoted the ultimate goal of providing affordable healthcare for all Americans. Mandating healthcare insurance does help reduce disparities in access to affordable and necessary interventions, tests, and treatments. As idealistic as Obamacare is, the policy has not reduced the costs of healthcare but it does represent a step in the right direction towards distinguishing between the profit motive in healthcare insurance and the ethical obligation to create a more caring and egalitarian society.
The Affordable Care Act… Continue Reading...
of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
The Pros and Cons of Obamacare
The Effects of Obamacare on American Small Businesses
Topics:
What are the main arguments for and against Obamacare?
How much should Americans pay for healthcare insurance?
Why do Americans pay more for their healthcare than consumers in some other countries?
Is Obamacare’s individual mandate unconstitutional?
Outline:
I. Abstract
II. Introduction
III. Body
A. Background and Overview
B. Pros of Obamacare / Advantages
C. Cons of Obamacare / Disadvantages
IV. Conclusion
The Future of Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act also known as Obamacare
… Continue Reading...
be divided concerning the repealing process. Only 35% feel that the Trump government should work harder to replace 'Obamacare' while the rest (majority) feel that the existing government should work harder to improve the existing system work. The former seem to be driven by contemptuous competition rather than the well-being of citizens (Lyles 2017). As much as the existing system has challenges, it does not necessarily infer a complete failure. Furthermore, Trump's Bill to Congress is to change many things in the Act. This means that many programs are to be removed regardless of whether they are beneficial to the public or not. This careless attempt seeks to… Continue Reading...
House and TRICARE authorities expending efforts towards public education. Veteran Affairs believes the Act (popularly called Obamacare) has no effect on military veterans' entitlement to and accessibility of the mental health services they were already recipients of, and also doesn't affect TRICARE for Life or TRICARE benefits enjoyed by households on behalf of VA. Rather, the department maintained that VA-enrolled individuals require no added insurance coverage. But the Act would provide them a chance to sign up for further insurance plans through the novel healthcare insurance exchanges which were set to open in the year 2014 (Russell & Figley, 2014). Moreover, it stated that veterans who… Continue Reading...
Repealing and replacing Obamacare was one of the rallying points for President Trumps presidential campaign, but has proven to be difficult even with a Republican-controlled Congress. There are a number of reasons that repeal and replace has been difficult, even though the Affordable Care Act (the ACA) was, at best, an imperfect solution to the modern healthcare crises. Public support for repealing Obamacare has lessened as people have become aware that Obamacare and the ACA are the same thing. Republicans have not been able to develop a plan that would provide better care… Continue Reading...
availing more choices for the consumers and putting the insurance more to accountability than before (Obamacare Facts, 2017). These are benefits that the veterans are meant to get from the Affordable Care Act since the aforementioned challenges that they face in terms of health are effectively covered by this policy.
Approximately six years after the enactment of this Affordable Care Act and the policy is beneficial to the American population and the veterans in particular. This policy has increased the number of Americans with health insurance cover and this expansion covers the veterans, meaning more veterans are now covered than before. The ACA is also… Continue Reading...
also founded on ethical principles like justice and equity. Therefore, programs like Obamacare that promote universal healthcare are essential for upholding the premises of the Constitution. Obamacare was in some ways a stepping-stone from the completely privatized healthcare insurance system that prevails towards a universal healthcare model like those practiced in many other countries with high degrees of success. Healthcare, like education, needs to be framed more like a universal human right than as a privilege, and covered under the auspices of government spending.
There are also pragmatic reasons why universal healthcare makes sense for the American economy. According to the World… Continue Reading...
2002, the above figure grew almost twofold (roughly 46% of overall expenditure). The increase kept up and the federal government covered a substantial percentage, particularly after Obamacare was enacted (Sommers & Gruber, 2017). This growth is attributed largely to Obamacare, population aging and expansion of Obamacare’s benefits and eligibility.
Citizen burden when it comes to funding these expenses, in the form of growing taxes and increased long-term loans, constitutes the chief effect of this upsurge in governmental health expenses. Besides decreasing families’ and organizations’ earnings allocated to other activities, growth in tax gives rise to incentives to participate in activities that help evade these growths’ impacts (Sommers & Gruber, 2017). Greater governmental borrowing for funding the… Continue Reading...
The Affordable Care Act (ACA or Obamacare) witnessed a twenty-five percent growth in insured individuals. But the above growth was accompanied by a concurrent sharp rise in insurance companies’ premiums. Furthermore, it led to a tremendous healthcare sector burden, increasing the nation’s budget twofold, from 1.3-2.5 trillion dollars according to 2009 estimates (Tuller, 2017). The above phenomenon constituted a gross domestic product increase of 3.8 percentage points (pps.), committed to America’s healthcare sector. In Tuller’s (2017) opinion, the healthcare structure is a “hidden thief” that may be held accountable for no appreciable rise in the wages of… Continue Reading...
The individual mandate is arguably one of the least popular provisions of the Obamacare, the health reform law that was enacted in 2010. Obamacare has received considerable attention in the past few years because of rising health insurance premiums. The rising health insurance premiums were at the center of the 2016 U.S. presidential elections campaign. Following President Trump’s election, Republican lawmakers have moved swiftly to repeal Obamacare’s individual mandate. GOP senators are trying to repeal the individual mandate based on the argument that it would give them an extra $338 billion over 10 years for their proposed tax cuts (Luhby, 2017). Additionally, repealing… Continue Reading...
addition to advocating for licensed doctors' interests. It participates in the areas of Obamacare implementation, healthcare IT, Medicare/Medicaid, improvements in care delivery quality and patient safety, etc. Resident doctors, medical students, and all doctors are entitled to apply for AMA membership (Rouse, 2015).
A summary of the functions of each of these boards, their primary focus, and what they do
ANA
The ANA represents the nation's lone full-service agency that speaks for the whole RN labor force in America. In all places, including the Congress, boardrooms, federal-level organizations, healthcare centers (including hospitals), etc., this group represents nurses' strongest voice. It supports a secure,… Continue Reading...
Obamacare.
In the immediate aftermath of his election, Trump walked-back his position on many of his campaign promises. After meeting with President Obama, Trump praised parts of Obamacare and acknowledged that it would be far more complicated to repeal the law than he acknowledged while campaigning. Although he did not abandon the idea of building a border wall, his staff acknowledged that it was unlikely to be a wall along the entire border. However, Trump seemed to remain committed to appointing Supreme Court Justices that would repeal Roe v. Wade. … Continue Reading...
of the inhabitants of Georgia. According to On the Issues as well, both senators are on the record as opposing Obamacare and offering healthcare coverage to more Americans through expanding Medicaid, despite the many state residents that depend on this as their primary means of healthcare.
Georgia's demographic composition and politics are in a state of flux and growing more diverse and more liberal. According to Blustein (2015): "A narrow majority of students in Georgia's public schools are now non-white and the data show that the proportion of white children could diminish to about 30% by 2060." African-Americans are more apt to solidly vote Democratic, and in the future there… Continue Reading...
Obamacare and other initiatives have expanded the social welfare net to a slightly greater degree, America does not have the level of protection that other nations do and American exceptionalism does not call this into question as problematic or view it as a deficit of the American system. Criticisms of America are often projected onto the individual and attributed to a personal failure, rather than a failure of a nation which is assumed to be perfect.
Some scholars have taken a more benign view of American exceptionalism. James Caesar, for… Continue Reading...
critical situation to get a bill passed. Ever since the Obamacare repeal, Republican members of the Senate have been formulating their very own repeal covertly (Merica, Acosta, Fox, & Mattingly, 2017). Continue Reading...
a favorite of Obama's government for his persistent defense of Obamacare at the Court; Eric Holder, ex- Attorney General; and Jeh Johnson, Secretary of Homeland Security.
4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments Impacted
Scalia's relatively civil-libertarian view of Amendment IV left several observers astonished. On particular matters, the Justice backed distinct rules in favor of law enforcement (e.g., the unbiased test for justifying a stop). But with regard to defining fairness and searches, Scalia's formalism and originalism philosophies ensured… Continue Reading...