Health Care in the United States

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  • SunisinuS
    Crazy Ass Mofo
    • May 2010
    • 3301

    Health Care in the United States

    Obama's health care law: A trek, not a sprint
    If Obama's health law survives Supreme Court, it will take nearly a decade to put into effect

    By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar,


    WASHINGTON (AP) -- It took only a year to set up Medicare. But if President Barack Obama's health care law survives Supreme Court scrutiny, it will be nearly a decade before all its major pieces are in place.

    And that means even if Obama is re-elected, he won't be in office to oversee completion of his signature domestic policy accomplishment, assuming Republicans don't succeed in repealing it.

    The law's carefully orchestrated phase-in is evidence of what's at stake in the Supreme Court deliberations that start March 26.

    The Affordable Care Act gradually reorganizes one-sixth of the U.S. economy to cover most of the nation's 50 million uninsured, while simultaneously trying to restrain costs and prevent disruptions to the majority already with coverage.

    Despite the political rhetoric about what "Obamacare" is doing to the nation, only a fraction of the law is in effect.
    "We really haven't seen the main game," said Drew Altman, president of the California-based Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit information clearinghouse on the health care system. "The major provisions that will affect the most people and cost the most money don't go into effect until 2014 or later."

    What has taken effect in the two years since the law was enacted has produced both successes and clunkers, and some surprises.

    Few expected a relatively minor provision tacked on late in the legislative process to be its biggest success so far. But allowing young adults to stay on their parents' insurance until age 26 has added nearly 2.5 million people to the coverage rolls, at no cost to taxpayers.

    Despite Republican pledges to repeal the overhaul, it's arguably the Obama administration that has done more to scale it back.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius decided to pull the plug on a long-term care insurance program seen as a budget drain. She also decided that Washington would not dictate a basic health benefits package for the country, allowing each state to set its own, within limits.

    Medicare recipients gained more protection from high prescription costs and better preventive coverage, but older people remain the age group most opposed to the law, concerned that cuts to the program to finance benefits for the uninsured eventually will compromise their own care.

    If the Supreme Court overturns the law entirely, that would present an immediate dilemma about popular early benefits such as coverage for young adults and prescription savings for seniors.
    "These provisions give immediate relief to a small percentage of people, but it's a lot of relief," said economist Len Nichols of George Mason University in Virginia.

    Other early benefits have been a mixed bag.
    Millions of people are getting preventive care that now must be provided at no additional cost to patients. Birth control for women soon will be on that list. Insurance premium increases are getting more scrutiny.

    But a program of tax credits for small businesses has seen little acceptance. The administration is in the awkward position of asking congressional Republicans to help fix it.

    A highly promoted program that provides a lifeline to people denied coverage because they already had medical problems has probably saved lives. But enrollment in the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan has been disappointing, with only about 50,000 people nationwide. Glenn Nishimura, a consultant from Little Rock, Ark., checked it out and found his premiums would come to about $6,300 a year.

    "It's out of my price range," said Nishimura. It makes more financial sense to take care of his high blood pressure and high blood sugars by paying out-of-pocket and gambling that his health will hold up, he reasons. In three years he'll be eligible for better coverage under Medicare.

    If the health care law is upheld, it will bring some relief against such risks for millions of people such as Nishimura.

    Starting in 2014, insurers will have to accept all applicants regardless of prior health problems. Also that year, many middle-class people will qualify for federal subsidies to lower the cost of their premiums. Consumers will have access to competitively priced private insurance through new state-based markets called exchanges.

    At the same time, Medicaid would be expanded greatly to cover millions more low-income people, childless adults who do not now qualify.

    Between the two approaches, more than 30 million uninsured people are expected to obtain coverage. Millions more will gain the security of knowing they can't be turned down for health insurance if they switch jobs.

    That's critical for Natalie Hough, a college sophomore from Hillsborough, N.C. An aspiring artist, Hough has a heart condition that probably would make her uninsurable if she had to apply on her own later in life. Starting in 2014, insurers will not be able to turn away people like her.

    "It's definitely peace of mind, knowing that I can go to a hospital if I need to," she said. "I'm an art major, and I'm not going to make billions of dollars."

    But such changes hinge on whether the law's requirement that most people have health insurance is upheld by the Supreme Court.

    This individual mandate, the main target for the law's critics, also takes effect in 2014. Without it, many experts fear that the new exchanges, the state-based markets for private insurance, won't work. Healthy people would be tempted to postpone signing up until they get sick, raising costs for everybody.
    Administration lawyers have advised the court that if it strikes down the mandate, it also should invalidate the requirement that private health insurers accept customers with health problems.

    If the court leaves the rest of the law in place, the Medicaid expansion could continue.
    But even if Obama's plan to expand coverage survives its test of constitutionality, expect the law's cost-control measures to remain under attack.

    One is an independent board that would have the power to curb excessive increases in Medicare spending by ordering cuts if Congress fails to act first. Republicans call it a "rationing board," although the law specifically bars the yet-to-be-named panel from restricting access. The health care industry opposes the board; efforts to do away with it or diminish its role seem to be gaining ground.

    "It would work like a random tax on medical innovation," said economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a Republican adviser. "If you were an innovator, why would you want to bring something new to market when the biggest payer in the country is periodically lopping off spending?"

    The other main cost-control measure is a tax on generous health insurance plans. Labor unions oppose it.

    It won't take effect until 2018, a year after a second Obama term would have ended.
    ___
    Online:
    Health care law: http://www.healthcare.gov/
    Supreme Court: http://tinyurl.com/3zukoc4

    The latest news and headlines from Yahoo News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.
    Last edited by SunisinuS; 03-11-2012, 04:35 PM.
    Can't Control your Future. Can't Control your Friends. The women start to hike their skirts up. I didn't have a clue. That is when I kinda learned how to smile a lot. One Two Three Fouir fun ter thehr fuur.
  • Nitro Express
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Aug 2004
    • 32942

    #2
    You have to pass it to see what's in it.
    No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

    Comment

    • sadaist
      TOASTMASTER GENERAL
      • Jul 2004
      • 11625

      #3
      Originally posted by SunisinuS
      "It's definitely peace of mind, knowing that I can go to a hospital if I need to," she said. "I'm an art major, and I'm not going to make billions of dollars."

      I'm pretty sure she can do that with or without Obamacare.

      This whole thing is a clusterfuck. On 1 side I think everyone should have their own health insurance so I'm not paying excessively for all the un-insured. On the other hand though I don't want to be forced to buy into anything, especially something government run.

      I still like the idea of opening the inter-state insurance rules so more insurance companies can compete for customers and bring rates down with more selection. But there is no easy simple solution like either party would have you believe.

      Best advice for now - don't get sick.
      “Great losses often bring only a numb shock. To truly plunge a victim into misery, you must overwhelm him with many small sufferings.”

      Comment

      • Unchainme
        ROTH ARMY SUPREME
        • Apr 2005
        • 7746

        #4
        Originally posted by sadaist
        I still like the idea of opening the inter-state insurance rules so more insurance companies can compete for customers and bring rates down with more selection. But there is no easy simple solution like either party would have you believe.
        This.

        regulate it to a certain degree (you have to be accepted despite a pre-existing condition), and include a gov't option for people just in case.

        simple. done.
        Still waiting for a relevant Browns Team

        Comment

        • Nitro Express
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Aug 2004
          • 32942

          #5
          I use to live where we had wonderful government healthcare. It was called the county hospital. If you couldn't pay they either charged the patients who could more or a charity would help. In fact, one of the biggest complaints from the ones who could pay is too many people were taking advantage of the system and they were.

          Obamacare has nothing to do with providing you care. It's about control. It's about dictating to you what can be done and what can't. You are no longer in charge of your own body or the ones you are taking care of like aging parents. It's some sick shit if you bother to read some of it. There are death panels. It's George Orwell level shit.
          No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

          Comment

          • Mr Walker
            Crazy Ass Mofo
            • Jan 2004
            • 2536

            #6
            Originally posted by Nitro Express
            There are death panels.
            Are any of the death panels accepting applications?

            Comment

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