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clearly, state the issue and give the historical background of the Obama care. • How does the topic relate to the Affordable Care Act? How? Does the topic reflect Managed Care or Health Insurance? How? • How does the Medical Workforce impact the Obama care? • Discuss cost and your topic. • How does the Government play a role in the Obama Care? • What is the Public Health’s Role in the Obama Care? • Discuss Information Technology and your topic. • Discuss Ethical issues and Legal Issues in Healthcare and your topic. • What is the future of the Obama Care?
The history of the Affordable Care Act – The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed into law by President Obama on March 23, 2010. It is more commonly known as the Affordable Care Act (or ACA) — and it’s most commonly referred to by its nickname, Obamacare.
The ACA's major provisions came into force in 2014. By 2016, the
uninsured share of the population had roughly halved, with
estimates ranging from 20–24 million additional people covered
during 2016. The increased coverage was due, roughly equally, to an
expansion of Medicaid eligibility and to major changes to
individual insurance markets. Both involved new spending, funded
through a combination of new taxes and cuts to Medicare provider
rates and Medicare Advantage. Several Congressional Budget Office
reports said that overall these provisions reduced the budget
deficit, and that repealing the ACA would increase the deficit. The
law also enacted a host of delivery system reforms intended to
constrain healthcare costs and improve quality. After the law went
into effect, increases in overall healthcare spending slowed,
including premiums for employer-based insurance plans.
The act largely retains the existing structure of Medicare, Medicaid, and the employer market, but individual markets were radically overhauled around a three-legged scheme. Insurers in these markets are made to accept all applicants and charge the same rates regardless of pre-existing conditions or sex. To combat resultant adverse selection, the act mandates that individuals buy insurance and insurers cover a list of "essential health benefits". However, a repeal of the tax mandate, passed as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, will become effective in 2019. To help households between 100–400% of the Federal Poverty Line afford these compulsory policies, the law provides insurance premium subsidies. Other individual market changes include health marketplaces and risk adjustment programs.
The act has also faced challenges and opposition. In 2009, Senator Ted Kennedy died, and the resultant special election cost the Democrats their 60-seat filibuster-proof Senate majority before the ACA had been fully passed by Congress. The Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 in 2012 that states could choose not to participate in the ACA's Medicaid expansion, although it upheld the law as a whole. The federal health exchange, HealthCare.gov, initially faced major technical problems during its rollout in 2013. In 2017, a unified Republican government failed to pass several different partial repeals of the ACA. The law spent several years opposed by a slim plurality of Americans polled, although its provisions were generally more popular than the law as a whole, and the law gained majority support by 2017.
Key events leading up to the
passage of Obamacare (The Affordable Care Act)
Next, follow the timeline of key events leading up to the passage
of the Obamacare law, along with key provisions that went into
place after the law was enacted.
July 2009: Speaker
of the House Nancy Pelosi and a group of Democrats from the House
of Representatives reveal their plan for overhauling the
health-care system. It’s called H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health
Care for America Act.
August 25, 2009: Massachusetts senator Ted
Kennedy, a leading supporter of health-care reform, dies and puts
the Senate Democrats’ 60-seat supermajority required to pass a
piece of legislation at risk.
September 24, 2009: Democrat Paul Kirk is
appointed interim senator from Massachusetts, which temporarily
restores the Democrats’ filibuster-proof 60th vote.
November 7, 2009: In the House of Representatives,
219 Democrats and one Republican vote for the Affordable Health
Care for America Act, and 39 Democrats and 176 Republicans vote
against it.
December 24, 2009: In the Senate, 60 Democrats
vote for the Senate’s version of the bill, called America’s Healthy
Future Act, whose lead author is senator Max Baucus of California.
Thirty-nine Republicans vote against the bill, and one Republican
senator, Jim Bunning, does not vote.
January 2010: In the Senate, Scott Brown, a
Republican, wins the special election in Massachusetts to finish
out the remaining term of US senator Ted Kennedy, a Democrat. Brown
campaigned heavily against the health-care law and won an upset
victory in a state that consistently votes in favor of the
Democratic party.
In January 2010, eHealth published research conducted by Opinion
Research highlighting public perceptions of health-care
reform.
March 11, 2010: Now lacking the 60th vote needed
to pass the bill, Senate Democrats decide to use budget
reconciliation in order to get to one bill approved by the House
and the Senate. The use of budget reconciliation only requires 51
Senators to vote in favor of the bill in order for it to go to the
president’s desk for signature.
March 21, 2010: The Senate’s version of the
health-care plan is approved by the House in a 219-212 vote. All
Republicans and 34 Democrats vote against the plan.
March 23, 2010: President Obama signs the
Affordable Care Act into law.
Actual Events That Occurred As A Result of the Affordable
Care Act – 2011 to 2014
January, 2011: Medical Loss Ratio Requirements: In
2011, insurance companies must ensure the value for premium
payments. If insurance companies don’t spend at least 80% to 85% of
premiums on care (for individual, small group markets and large
group) the difference is sent to customers in a refund.
January 2011: A Florida judge rules that elements
of the Affordable Care Act are unconstitutional.
November 14, 2011: The US Supreme Court agrees to
hear arguments in the Obamacare case brought by 26 states and the
National Federation of Independent Business. It argues that
elements of the Affordable Care Act are unconstitutional.
June 28, 2012: The US Supreme Court upholds the
major provisions of the Affordable Care Act.
August 2012: The White House confirms the ACA’s
“contraceptive mandate” for women’s preventive services without
cost-sharing: HIV screening, contraception counseling, and domestic
violence support services.
November 6, 2012: President Obama is re-elected,
effectively ensuring the ACA will survive.
January 2013: The limit on pre-tax contributions
to flex spending accounts is capped at $2,500 annually.
July 2, 2013: The White House agrees to a one-year
delay for large businesses to provide workers with affordable
health care.
October 1, 2013: Healthcare.gov, the federal
exchange serving 36 states, experiences technical difficulties and
eventually goes offline before reopening on December 2, 2013.
October 1, 2013: Several state-run exchanges
experience enrollment hurdles, including the exchanges in
California, Oregon, Washington, and Maryland. Ultimately, some
perform better than others.
October, 2013: Republicans led by Senator Ted Cruz
shut down the US federal government and curtail most routine
operations after Congress fails to enact legislation appropriating
funds for fiscal year 2014 or to enact a continuing resolution for
the interim authorization of appropriations for fiscal year
2014.
October 17, 2013: Regular government operations
resume after an interim appropriations bill is signed into
law.
November 26, 2013: Eight Senate Democrats tell the
Obama administration that they’re “troubled by the ongoing
technical difficulties” with healthcare.gov and want an alternative
way for insurers and web-based brokers to enroll subsidy-eligible
consumers.
December 2, 2013: Healthcare.gov, the federal
exchange serving 36 states, reopens after experiencing technical
difficulties and eventually going offline for several weeks.
January 1, 2014: The bulk of remaining regulatory
changes in the Affordable Care Act go into effect.
January, 2014: Medical Loss Ratio Requirements:
Health Affairs published its most recent analysis of Medical Loss
Ratio performance by major insurers.
March 6, 2014: The federal government extends the
two-year grace period for individuals enrolled in non-grandfathered
health insurance plans.
May 1, 2014: The US Department of Health and Human
Services announces that more than 8 million people enrolled in a
health insurance plan during the first Open Enrollment Period
(OEP).
March 4, 2015 – King v. Burwell: The U.S. Supreme
Court (SCOTUS) hears oral arguments for King v. Burwell, a lawsuit
challenging U.S. Treasury regulation, 26 C.F.R. § 1.36B-2(a)(1),
issued under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA).
King argues that the ACA only allows subsidies to be distributed
through state-run exchanges, and that regulations implemented by
the IRS exceed the authority granted to it by Congress. (Read
eHealth’s white paper on King vs. Burwell.)
June 25, 2015 – King v. Burwell: The Supreme Court
ruled 6-3 that subsidies could be distributed through
Healthcare.gov, the Federal Exchange, if a state did not set up its
own exchange.
January 1, 2016: The threshold for itemizing
medical expenses on taxes increases from 7.5% to 10% for
seniors.
May 12, 2016: U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer
ruled that the ACA’s cost-sharing reduction (CSRs) subsidies, which
pay a portion of an enrollee’s deductibles, do not have permanent
funding in the legislation. This makes them subject to
appropriations, which means they must be approved by the Congress.
The ruling was placed on hold, pending an appeal.
Tuesday, November 8, 2016: Donald Trump is elected
to be the next president of the United States.
November 20, 2016: Vice President-elect, Mike
Pence, says “President-elect Donald Trump will prioritize repealing
President Barack Obama’s landmark health care law right “out of the
gate” once he takes office.
January 2017: “Grandmothered” health insurance
plans become illegal. Grandmothered health insurance plans are
individual health insurance plans purchased after the Affordable
Care Act was signed into law (March of 2010), but before they
became illegal, which was January 1, 2014. In some states, the
deadline for these plans to be phased out was extended until
2017.
The following changes are slated for implementation over
the coming years, as required by Obamacare.
January 2018: All existing health insurance plans
must cover preventive care and checkups without copayments.
January 2020: The Medicare Part D coverage gap
(“donut hole”) is phased out.