Policy, Politics and Global Health Trends
The Affordable Care Act
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) was recently signed into law in America. This public policy impacts all citizens of the U.S.A. And has been controversial from its inception, not only because many people, who were promised by the President that if they liked their plan they could keep it, ended up having to get a new plan at a higher rate, but also because the very individuals who promoted the policy demonstrated a clear conflict of interest in doing so (Cesca, 2010).
The financial impact of the policy has been a serious one: rates have increased and people who cannot afford to buy health coverage are to be taxed if they do not buy it. Moreover the Act asserts that "healthcare is a right, not a privilege" (Rak, Coffin, 2014, p. 317). However, by "enforcing" everyone to exercise that "right," it stops being one and instead becomes a "tax" burden on American families, who may have reasons for not wishing to purchase health insurance. At the same time, it has been shown that the ACA does little to reinforce the practice of primary care physicians and instead only directs more money to specialized care, further destroying the pool of and accessibility to primary care physicians (Goodson, 2010). This essentially means that more people seeking health care will be required to pay more for "specialized" care. The ACA has, in effect, "scam" written all over it.
As Rosenbaum (2011) indicates, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was a "watershed in U.S. public health policy" because of its aim to reduce the total number of uninsured citizens by over 50% -- resulting in coverage (whether through insurance or Medicaid) for 94% of all Americans (p. 130). Through this Act, touted by supporters as a reform, health care providers are guaranteed payments that before were simply not available for 25% of municipal hospitals "which handle mostly the poor" (Schorn, 2006). Thus, for both non-profit and for-profit hospitals, the ACA has guaranteed a better consistency with regards to client payment fulfillment. Understanding how the ACA came into being reveals even more clearly the driving motive behind the "reform."
Matthews and McGinty (2010) are quite explicit in their description of how health care services has become a profit driven arena, directed by secret panels (the cartel) which provide guidance for groups like The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services: "Three times a year, 29 doctors gather around a table in a hotel meeting room. Their job is an unusual one: divvying up billions of Medicare dollars" (Matthews, McGinty, 2010). This panel operates under the title of Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC) and essentially sets the "pricing" of health care services, indicating how much health care providers should be compensated for their work. This means they oversee the half a trillion dollars worth of Medicare money in the sense that they determine who gets a significant cut. RUC, states DeBronkart (2013), is nothing more than a "giant cabal" under directorship of the American Medical Association (AMA). And as Dr. Lee Hieb (2012), former president of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, has reported, the AMA has not only openly endorsed the ACA, it is "firmly behind this egregious bit of expensive and health killing legislation." Hieb notes how the AMA has become firmly embedded in the formation of government policies, providing since the 1980s an ever-increasingly complex coding system which health care providers are "required" to use when they bill insurance companies or government agencies. The AMA, essentially, has total control over how physicians interact (financially) with their clients -- which is precisely what the ACA reinforces in an even more stringently codified way.
Because RUC has advised allocating more government money to medical "specialists," Medicare coffers have been emptied (Sanghavi, 2009). Thus, the effect of collusion between AMA and government is, ultimately, exploitation of government's pocketbook. But exploiting the pocketbook to the extent that the pocketbook is completely emptied does not help anyone in the services industry. What is wanted are perpetual profits at perpetually increasing rates -- in short, a "fix" (Sanghavi, 2009). Since the "fix" only exacerbates the problem, a "patch" is needed. The answer to this exploitation? More collusion: the ACA is a law that now requires everyone to "pay into" the system -- meaning, the pocketbook, which is then raided and divided by RUC. That pocketbook is now being reloaded annually with more money than ever before. People who did not want or need health coverage have no choice but either to buy in...
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