H.R. 3134 Defund Planned Parenthood Act of 2015 was introduced in the House on July 21, 2015 by the Republican Representative Diane Black of Tennessee. This bill passes House amended on September 18, 2015 and is currently places on Senate Legislative calendar under general orders (Civic Impulse, 2016). H.R. 3134 wants to suspend federal funds to FFPA and its affiliates that performed abortion for one year, and the funding is redirected to community health centers instead. However, the federal funds continue if any affiliates are willing to cease abortion services. The restriction on abortion is not apply to cases of rape, incest or endangerment of a woman’s life if an abortion is not performed.…
1. Describe the term HIPAA. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act which is simply known as HIPPA was put into play in 1996 for health care fields and facilities. This act allows patients personal healthcare information to be protected from being used or shared with anyone unless the patient writes a hand consent saying otherwise. Each patient’s healthcare information is kept in medical records, billing records, and health insurance computer systems.…
Health Law’s Eight New Changes HC1: In September of 2010, under the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, the government made eight new changes to its health laws (Carey, 2010). These changes have affected Americans in different ways, depending on the insurance coverage that each individual has (Carey, 2010). The ACA included changes such as raising the age requirement for children on their parent’s insurance plan to twenty-six, prohibiting insurers from denying children coverage due to a pre-existing medical condition,, and prohibiting insurers from canceling an individual’s coverage due to sickness (Carey, 2010). Insurers also cannot charge co-pays for preventative services such as cancer screenings and the individuals get the right to choose their primary physicians and specialists, not the insurer (Carey, 2010).…
Abstract This proposal looks to introduce the readers to a new legislations that will allow all citizens to have equal access along with fair access to a health care system. This plan will outline many key areas that will allow for employers to gain benefits for having coverage options for both full and part-time workers. In addition, this proposal will set a guideline to allow for an equal cost healthcare system for everyone that wishes to have coverage. The current plan, the Affordable Care Act, will be discussed throughout this proposal discussing how this plan is detrimental for the American people and the economy.…
Millions of uninsured Americans now have access to affordable health insurance and in turn, new taxes were implemented to help pay for the uninsured. Over half of uninsured Americans can acquire free or low cost health insurance, and to offset for this you are required to obtain health insurance, request an exemption, or pay a fee. ACA ensures that you can’t be dropped from coverage when you get sick, have pre-existing conditions, or be charged more for being a woman. Because insurance companies are required to cover everyone; insurance rated go up. Medicaid has expanded to cover millions who fall below the poverty level.…
The Affordable Care Act is one of the most talked about and debated subjects that our country has focused on for the past 6 years. The Affordable Care Act is a federal statute that was signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2010. This act was structured to help with hospitals and primary physicians which would transform their practices financially, technologically and clinically to drive better health care for individuals by lowering the costs and improve the methods of distribution and accessibility. By all accounts the initial reason for the ACA was to aid in increasing the availability for health insurance to those individuals that could not afford insurance. The act requires all insurance companies to cover all application within new minimum standards and offer the same rates regardless of preexisting continuous or what sex the individual is.…
The ACA was passed to enable more Americans to have insurance coverage at a lower cost and to decrease spending in the US (US Department of Health and Human Services, 2013). Here are the pros of the ACA; it provide insurance to more than 17 million Americans, prevent insurers from making unreasonable increase to our premium, children under the age of 26 can continue to have coverage under their parent insurance, there is no limit of care compare to when people use to run out of coverage and people with pre-existing conditions cannot be denied coverage. Here are the cons of ACA; it has cause insurance premium to rise due to the present of pre-existing condition coverage example, I use to pay about eighty dollars for coverage and now I am up one hundred ninety dollars, if you don’t have insurance coverage you are fine and taxes are also increasing to cover extra expenses on Medicare (US Department of Health and Human Services,…
With the inauguration of President Barack Obama in 2009, one of his primary goals was expanding health insurance. Although this drew praise from Democrats, Republicans were very concerned about the potential creation of a welfare state. Thus, the fight to implement the Affordable Care Act became a long, drawn out battle that it still being debated today. The concerns over government intervention, effectiveness, and solvency both explain why it was so difficult to pass the ACA and why it is difficult to pass social programs.…
According to the article, Health Coverage Under the Affordable Care Act explains the ways coverage through employers to help improve access and quality for employers and employees in the workplace. The ACA has projected to support and cover those with chronic medical illnesses. Where they can choose coverage in the employer’s plan or choose to unsubsidized insurance through another exchange from a non-group market. Providing eligibility for a tax credit because employees pay more than 9% of income for the premium in the employer’s plan to help them with better quality of care even during their employment.…
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act mandated several types of new arrangements of care. One of these is the Accountable Care Organization (ACO). Explain what ACOs are, whom they serve, and how they are supposed to reduce costs of care. ACO is an organization that consist of doctors, suppliers of health care e.g hospitals, clinics, all health care services, and anyone involved in patient care to provide the best possible care for all medicare patients. This model was adopted by the Affordable Care ACTwith the number one goal of providing timely, accessible and appropriate care for all medicare patients.…
The Affordable Care Act (ACA), is shortened for The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), which is the new health care renewed regulation in America, and is known as Obamacare. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is made up from several milestones in health care, such as of the Affordable Health Care for America Act, the Patient Protection Act. In addition, other milestones which took place in the health care was the ACA, which is also associated with health care sections of the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, and the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act. Furthermore, it consist of modifications to other laws like the Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act and the Health and Public Services Act. From the time…
What has been the historic role of the American Medical Association in the passage of health insurance legislation? Founded in 1847, the American Medical Association (AMA), the professional organization for physicians that initially opposed Medicare, comparing it with socialized medicine. When it seemed that passage was inevitable, The AMA lobbied for the program to cover only the poor elderly. What has been the impact of the Patient Affordable Care Act (PPACA) of 2010 on the U.S. health care system? The PPACA is intended to provide affordable health care for all Americans and reduce the growth in health care costs.…
A major critique of the Affordable Care act pertains to the subsidies the policy has made accessible to low income, since they believe they are being taking advantage of. However, subsidies are the reason millions of people could pay for the Affordable Care Act, and without it many Americans wouldn’t be insured. Luhby implies, “Most Obamacare enrollees aren’t paying the whole full price. Few people pay the full original price for their health insurance due to subsidies. A majority of the 10.2 million enrollees collect federal subsidies, which lower the original price to maximum of 9.6% of their income.”…
In her Reproducing Race: An Ethnography of Pregnancy as a Site of Racialization, Khiara Bridges describes the business of pregnancy in the hospital environment of Alpha Hospital in New York. Bridges discusses the factors that contribute to a women’s pregnancy becoming an isolating and sometimes....experience. This in turn comes to affect how women are treated in Alpha hospital. Race, income and how society views women are important elements amongst a myriad of other factors in Bridges argument that shape a women’s pregnancy and experience in Alpha hospital. In this paper the intersection between a woman’s body, Medicaid and race will be discussed using the frame of society’s opinion and the case example of Alpha Hospital.…
W1 Assignment 2 Discussion Question #1: What are the sources of pediatric primary care in the United States? Are these sources sufficient for providing health-care services to the pediatric population? Why or why not? Pediatric sources of primary care can be in the provided in many different practice settings. From the conventional pediatrician’s office or primary care doctor’s offices to rural health clinics, community clinics, health departments, schools, and in some cases emergency departments or urgent care centers.…