Obama Health Care Essay

Obama Health Care In the original House bill in 2009, the Affordable Care Act would have required individuals to buy private insurance, but would also have offered a public option in the health insurance exchanges and mandated employers to provide health insurance. Premiums for the public opinion would have varied by region (Chaikind et al. 2009). Both the public option and the employer mandates were removed from the Senate version of the bill and do not exist in Public Law 11-148 that President Obama signed in March 2010. This was a very grave disappointment to liberal and progressive reformers, who had always hoped for a Medicare-for-all plan of national health insurance, but ended up only with mandates to by private health insurance on the exchanges. In both the House and Senate versions of the bill, Medicaid coverage was extended to 150% of the poverty line and Medicare eligibility lowered to age 55, with subsidies to buy private insurance for those with low incomes who were not on Medicaid (Chaikind et al. 2010). Conservatives, of course, imposed the entire reform and virtually none of the Republicans in Congress voted for it, while those at the state level challenged the individual mandate in the federal courts. Recently, the Supreme Court heard arguments on this issue and may very well overturn the Affordable Care Act either partially or completely.

Although the Affordable Health care reform sounds like it would do better good than harm for Americans the insurance companies are having a hard time with making sure they will not be lose money. Having preventative care covered under each health plan this will hopefully help people remain up-to-date on their preventative care and prevent further illness by catching it earlier than...

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Physicians have often opposed health care reform due to the increase work load with more patients to see and not enough doctors and practitioners to see all of them. Along with the work overload, the doctors and practitioners as mentioned above are not getting reimbursed right away for services given which can be very frustrating because that is their income. So even though they are seeing more patients, the reimbursement part is not effective. Many medical students are not going into primary care as mentioned above as well. This will be a problem as there will be more patients in the upcoming years as healthcare reform evolves. We must give the medical students some kind of incentive to do primary care so that there will be enough doctors to provide care to all the patients (Abrams et al. 2011). Under the ACA, there will be increases in Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement payments to primary care providers, improvement in the workforce and technical innovations.
Over 27 million women were uninsured in 2010, while over 40 million reported difficulty paying health care bills or delaying treatment because of cost issues (Robertson and Collins 2011). They have difficulty finding affordable insurance with maternity coverage and face higher costs than men. Some aspects of the Affordable Care Act are helpful to women, such as requirements for mammograms and pap smears in existing insurance plans and tax credits for small-business owners. By 2014, all health insurance policies will also be required to include full maternity coverage and a ban on gender discrimination, and Obama Care will reduce the uninsured rates among women by half within five years…

Sources Used in Documents:

WORKS CITED

Abrams, M. et al. How the Affordable Care Act will Strengthen Primary Care and Benefit Patients, Providers, and Payers. The Commonwealth Fund, 2011.

Chaikind, H. et al. Private Health Care Provisions of HR 3962. Congressional Research Service, 2009.

Chaikind, H. et al. Private Health Insurance Provisions in PPACA (P.L. 111-148). Congressional Research Service, 2010.

Gruber, J. And I. Perry. Will the Affordable Care Act Make Health Insurance Affordable? The Commonwealth Fund, 2011.


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