There are a variety of different ways that the Affordable Care Act has affected nursing. One specific way in which it has affected it nurses are those that work in poverty or low-income areas. Nurses that choose to work in a public health workforce. Those who can work in a public health are offered a loan repayment option. This program is to ensure that adequate health care professionals are available, in efforts to eliminate the shortage. This repayment program assists with repayment of one-third of loans incurred for a 3-year agreement with that public health agency. The Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) is “programs provide health care to people who are geographically isolated, economically or medically vulnerable” (HRSA,
The four spheres of political action in nursing are government, workplace, professional organizations, and community. They are all interrelated and interconnected. The government enacts policies that govern and affect all spheres. Healthcare policies are often made to ensure access, quality, and affordability of care. It determines the scope of nursing practice at a state level. The workplace serve a specific community and have its own policies to make the organization run efficiently and cater to the needs of the community that it serves. Workplaces follow Federal laws and regulations to ensure public safety. Nurses have to abide by the rules and regulations of their workplace as well as the government. This is also the sphere where nurses can have the most influence.
1. Consider key elements of ACA provided on p. 11 in the textbook. Pick any two and discuss. Whether a particular element of ACA has been already successfully implemented? What are the pros and cons of this element? (4-6 sentences)
For sometime, many US citizens have not had the resources to acquire an adequate health insurance plan. Although faced by many oppositions, the US government has found a solution, The Affordable Care Act. The Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare”, is a US healthcare reform law that focuses mainly on providing more Americans with access to an affordable health insurance. The Affordable Care Act is said to expand the affordability, quality, and availability of private and public health insurance through consumer protections, regulations, subsidies, taxes, insurance exchanges, and other reforms. Signed into law by President Obama in March 2010, hence the nickname “Obamacare”, the
The other main objective of the ACA was to decrease the costs of healthcare insurance. With the Affordable Care Act, Americans will be able to afford insurance, or at least basic coverage (minimum essential
The Affordable Care Act, (ACA) often referred to as Obamacare, was signed into law March 23rd, 2010 and has quickly become a nightmare to millions of citizens nationwide. While there were fortunate people who benefited from the heavily subsidized and affordable healthcare that was not readily available before ACA was passed, many more people found that their once affordable healthcare was no longer an option due to new ACA requirements (how so?). ACA was designed to extend insurance benefits to roughly 30 million uninsured Americans. The Obama administration aimed to extend Medicaid and provide federal subsidies so lower and middle-class Americans could afford to buy private insurance. This act alone forced millions of Americans out of their
22 million. 22 million is the number of Americans who would not have had health insurance if it were not for Obamacare. That is around 4 times the number of people living in Singapore. Whether it be a cancer patient, or an employee working 30 hours a week, they may not have been insured. Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act (ACA), is a health care act implemented in the US law, which was passed in 2010. It works to make health insurance more affordable for Americans, and essentially, improve the healthcare system in the US. But, many people oppose this healthcare act because they believe that the government should not force people to get insured, and pay a penalty for not doing so. However, one has to realise that although they may not have
The Affordable Health Care Act is flawed in numerous ways. The premiums are higher than they anticipated them to be. They tried to make it to where everyone would pay the same amount, however it is more expensive to do this. That reason is people that are very sick are in the same health care plan as people that are healthy, and they never visit the doctor. So, healthy people are paying the costs for sick people to go to the doctor. These rates raise each year, because health care keeps increasing as more people become ill (Taylor, 2012).
The Affordable Care Act created new health care delivery and payment models that emphasize teamwork, care coordination, value, and prevention: models in which nurses can contribute a great deal of knowledge and skill. Indeed, the nursing profession is making a wide-reaching impact by providing quality, patient-centered, accessible, and affordable care.
After the passage of the ACA, Minnesota was chosen to pilot a Medicaid program using ACOs to improve healthcare delivery because of the previous reforms that were made to the state’s Medicaid system. In 2008, the Minnesota state government passed the Health Care Reform Law which implemented the utilization of health homes to provide Medicaid services and a revision of the state’s quality and monitoring system of the Medicaid program (Edwards, 2013). The law was also expanded to use ACOs after the passage of the ACA, in order to provide more comprehensive care for Medicaid beneficiaries (Edwards, 2013). The use of the ACOs “forged a partnership to redesign the health care workforce and improve the coordination of the physical, behavioral, social, and economic dimensions of care” for Medicaid beneficiaries (Sandberg, Erikson, Owen, Vickery, Shimotsu, Linzer, Garrett, Johnsrud, Soderlund, & DeCubellis, 2014). To ensure the success of the program, the state also developed a safety-net program to ensure that Medicaid recipients would continue to receive quality care to meet their health care needs, if the pilot program
Between 2010 and 2050, the United States population ages 65 and older will nearly double, the population ages 80 and older will nearly triple, and the number of nonagenarians and centenarians—people in their 90s and 100s—will quadruple. (KFF, 2015) Trustees of Medicaid are forecasting that in 2024, Medicaid will start running out of funding. Although there is little evidence in the trustee’s projections it is still something that needs to be looked as more and more people are getting older and are needing benefits vs a number of people putting in. Every day there are 10,000 people turning 65 or older.
The Affordable Care Act “provides Americans with better health security putting in place comprehensive health insurance reforms that will; expand coverage, hold insurance companies accountable, lower health care costs, guarantee more choice, and enhance the quality of care for all Americans” states in the Affordable Care Act article. The base of the Affordable Care Act is to help the middle class or financially unstable people get cost effective insurance. This is a major benefit for millions of people especially that don’t have a stable job, young adults and many with families to support, and people who retire and can’t afford paying so much money for medical problems. So with that being said, it will be a long-term benefit for millions to
Without a doubt, I believe Obamacare is one of President Obamas most significant domestic accomplishments. The most serious healthcare issue faced by Americans is the affordability. The Patient Protection Plan and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) or Obamacare took the first step toward making healthcare affordable. The round goal of Obamacare is to increase the amount of Americans covered by health insurance. President Obama believed America is the greatest nation on earth and no illness or accident should lead to any families’ financial ruling. Since Obamacare was signed into law in March 2010, by President Obama, it has impacted several American lives. While some Americans found it to be a financial burden, others feel as though they’ve benefited
Growing up policy was not on my mind, although throughout my childhood my family like many struggled to make ends meet, often relying on my mother’s school loans and the federal programs such as WIC. Up until this point this was my only experience with policy a rather personal one at that. Ever since the presidential elections cycle of 2008 I have wanted to shape the policy debate and to one day be a political actor that can craft policy.
The Author, obviously is writer supporting the rights of americans. He takes a stance the the government is providing too much support to americans health and healthcare. He believes the decisions should be put in each citizen's hands. The article explains how the government has instituted many ways such as funding of $200 million for anti-obesity measures to be taken. Yet with this institute, it is easier for citizens to not care about taking care of the health and well being since their health is being paid for. Radleys opinion is that if we put paying for our own health in our hands instead of the government, then they would rethink about how healthy they are being. Causing a revolution of people rethinking how they take care of themselves