The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) approved the use of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to provide protection, value of care and reduce health care costs in Medicare. The ACO program is a charitable program which began on January 1, 2012. An ACO represents a group of providers and suppliers of services such as hospitals, physicians, and those involved in patient care. These individuals have agreed to work together to coordinate care for the patients they serve under the original Medicare. The objective of an ACO is to provide continuous, high quality care for Medicare beneficiaries, simultaneously improve quality and lower costs.
Which under the current design addresses long- term care for a limited amount of time, such as for rehabilitation purposes. These services cannot be received outside of a Medicare-approved facility, which means the person cannot reside in their home and receive the long-term care assistance under the current system. Therefore, we propose to amend this portion of the program to extend the funding for long-term care to include home care. Which consist of the relatives receiving monetary compensation for their care. Under the current policy, 41% of the Medicare budget of $50,000,000,000 is being advocated this particular area.
There have been many instances of unauthorized viewing of medical records. Unauthorized viewing of patient records is a violation HIPAA. The HIPAA Privacy Rule requires that “protected health information should not be used or disclosed when it is not necessary to satisfy a particular purpose or carry out a function” (Health and Human Services.gov). The case study in which Joe, a staff member accessed medical information after he was allowed access to the hospital to change lightbulbs and the case study in which the daughter of a nurse accessed medical information as a result of the mother leaving the computer unlocked and unattended, are HIPAA violations (i.e both people accessed the medical information illegally). Joe was tasked with changing a lightbulb, but was curious about a patient he knew on a personal level, his neighbor.
The affordable care act presented the United States with the most extensive overhaul since the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in the 1960’s. The act was a response to staggering statistics on the price of healthcare and the resulting uninsured rate within the United States. The affordable care act uses Individual Mandate and Health Insurance Exchanges to combat major factors causing high insurance cost and low insured rates. As with most reform, the public has not been one hundred percent unified on the potential effectiveness of the Affordable Care Act.
A Second Look at the Affordable Care Act David E. Mann, ABA American Military University POLS210 Abstract Since the passing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), twenty-eight states have either filed joint or individual lawsuits to strike down the PPACA. This document will examine a few key elements that the President of the United States must take into consideration when reviewing the act and moving forward to either ratify the act, replace the act, or leave the act as it is. Topics that will be presented will include; the current issues being debated, two competing thoughts on how to fix the ACA, an evaluation of the preferred solution, and finally the responsibility of each level of government. Patient
What Obamacare stands for wasn’t some average healthcare plan, it was a solution to a growing problem of people that did not have any access to affordable healthcare. Obamacare is known in two parts: The Patient Protection Act and the Affordable Care Act (PPACA). The Affordable Care Act was signed into law on march 24th, 2010
Thesis Statement The Affordable care act mandates that certain specification be met by employers despite their religious and political views. With the freedom of employees to choose their workplace based on principles and beliefs in mind, it should be up to the employer’s discretion whether or not to provide certain insurance benefits. There was a great deal of litigations filed against the Obama Administration following the passing of the Affordable Care Act. In this essay, I will argue that the majority ruling in favor of certain companies was just. Introduction (ACA)
You are a new physician setting up your practice in a new town. You are researching the different MCOs offered in your area and are considering becoming a physician for one of these networks. You have also invited the sales representatives of several healthy plans to speak with you about the benefits of choosing their plans. Based on the above scenario, answer the following questions: • What effects would join an MCO have your clinic regarding staffing, patient volume, and financial stability?
With Obamacare the idea of a universal system of healthcare, it is finally obtainable. It is illegal to go without healthcare in the United States. The Affordable Health Care Act, implemented by the Obama Administration in 2014, gave healthcare to all individuals in the United States. The Obamacare Individual Mandate forces Obamacare under penalty of law. If a person does not apply for Obamacare, and therefore, have no healthcare.
Background The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is officially referred to as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was enacted into law on March 23, 2010. It is estimated that prior to the enactment of the ACA, 44% or 81 million people between the ages 19-64 were either uninsured or underinsured in the United States (Schoen, Doty, Robertson, & Collins, 2011). The populations most likely to be uninsured or underinsured are individuals with earning between 133-200 % below the established federal poverty guidelines (Schoen et al., 2011). Consequently, 80% of individuals with earning under $20,000-$39,999 were uninsured or underinsured (Schoen et al., 2011).
Obamacare (Affordable Care Act) The Affordable Care Act ( Obamacare ) is an act that helps get people insurance that can not afford regular insurance. The Affordable Care Act also helps with people who are just moving into America.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) was passed in March 2010 to deal with America's preexisting medical crisis (pg. 682). Before the ACA there were two main factors leading to the health care crisis, "the increasing cost of health care and the failure to deliver a decent minimum of health care to everyone in need of it" (pg. 693). Furthermore, the cost of health care continued to rise but unfortunately, the health of Americans did not match this trend (pg. 693). Also, because health care used to be tied to employment many people went uninsured because they didn't have employment or because the cost of an employee's insurance was too high (pg. 687). If a person had employment and was able to pay, he or she could still be turned away due to a pre-existing condition (pg.
Affordable Care Act Whitnee West Western Governors University AFFORDABLE CARE ACT On March 23, 2010, President Barack Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) into law. The Affordable Care Act (ACA), or more commonly called Obamacare, became one of the most debated topics around. Prior to the law going into effect there were about 45 million Americans uninsured and with rising health care premiums this number is on the rise. Proponents of the health-care legislation have called it a “landmark legislation” making health care more affordable by reigning in the costs to the people and the economy.
The focus on health reform is constantly changing due to societal needs – in terms of general health, political context and financial hardships. Over the past decades, there have been various health reform efforts, each one improving access to health care. As reported by Hoffman (2009), most efforts have failed either because of “the plan’s complexity, ideological differences, weakened Presidency or decentralization of Congressional Power.” The reasons for failure demonstrate the political weight carried on by reform itself.
Assignment B6: Marketing Phase 1. BRAND NAME OF THE NEW MEDICINE The name of our new drug is Nervarin® (salizumab). Package design: