In: Economics
Paperwork Reduction Act 1980
III. Policy, Changes, and Disparities:
A. Economic Policy and Disparities in Care:
Using current research and information (within the last five years), analyze the relationship between economic policy and disparities in care. How are they connected? How do they differ?
B. Policy Changes:
What impact do recent legislative changes have on healthcare economic policy in general?
C. Disparities Planning: Why are disparities of care factored into healthcare strategic planning?
A. Economic policy refers to the government's policies set to regulate activities and actions in various economy areas. It aims to control taxation, money supply, interest rates, labor markets, and government budgets.
Many researchers have conducted more research on health disparities and economic policies in the modern era. Health care disparities refer to the high burden of illness, mortality, disability, and injury. Also, it covers the differences between the people who have access to care and insurance coverage and those who don't. On other hand, economic policies are guidelines and rules which aiming to encounter these disparities. Arguably, health disparities are the problem, while the economic policy acts as the solution. For instance, the implementation of the affordable care act ACA in 2015 brought a lot of benefits to the people. The states that adopted and expanded these policies made the medical services available to everyone at affordable prices. This has reduced the health disparities and the number of people uninsured.
B. Executive branch. On march 23, 2010, president Obama signed into law one of our nation's health care system in history. The ACA's goals are to increase access, promote quality, and improve the efficiency of our complex and fragmented patient- care effort. Although specific issues deal with various constitutional interpretation, such as the commerce clause, real world repercussions effect clinicians, health care systems, and pharmacies.
C. The term health disparities may cannote in equitable or unjust differences in health, but the term also has been increasingly used over the past several years to describe differences in health without necessarily implying the presence of injustice. This, health disparities is used in the enabling legislation establishing the NCMHD, in NIH definitions, and by the strategic plan.