Health

Getting By ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 329-428
Author(s):  
Helen Hershkoff ◽  
Stephen Loffredo

This chapter addresses the issue of health care for low-income people. The United States, virtually alone among developed nations, does not offer universal access to health care, leaving many millions of individuals without health insurance or other means of obtaining necessary medical services. In 2010, Congress enacted the landmark Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA)—popularly known as “Obamacare”—marking an important but incomplete response to the nation’s health care crisis. This chapter examines the ACA in detail, including its impact on Medicaid and Medicare, the major government health programs in the United States, its creation of Health Insurance Exchanges and tax credits to help low-income households obtain private health coverage, and the reform of private health insurance markets through a patient’s bill of rights, which, among other measures, prohibits insurance companies from refusing coverage for preexisting medical conditions. Perhaps the most critical aspect of the ACA was its expansion of Medicaid to cover virtually all low-income citizens (and certain immigrants) who do not qualify for other health coverage. Although several states opted out of the ACA’s Medicaid expansion, the Medicaid program nevertheless remains the largest single provider of health coverage in the United States. This chapter also provides a detailed description of Medicaid, its eligibility criteria and scope of coverage; the Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP), a government-funded health insurance program for children in households with too much income to qualify for Medicaid; and Medicare, the federal health insurance program for aged, blind, and disabled individuals.

2009 ◽  
Vol 2;12 (2;3) ◽  
pp. 289-304
Author(s):  
Laxmaiah Manchikanti

Rapidly rising health care costs over the decades have prompted the application of business practices to medicine with goals of improving the efficiency, restraining expenses, and increasing quality. Average health insurance premiums and individual contributions for family coverage have increased approximately 120% from 1999 to 2008. Health care spending in the United States is stated to exceed 4 times the national defense, despite the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The U.S. health care system has been blamed for inefficiencies, excessive administrative expenses, inflated prices, inappropriate waste, and fraud and abuse. While many people lack health insurance, others who do have health insurance allegedly receive care ranging from superb to inexcusable. In criticism of health care in the United States and the focus on savings, methodologists, policy makers, and the public in general seem to ignore the major disadvantages of other global health care systems and the previous experiences of the United States to reform health care. Health care reform is back with the Obama administration with great expectations. It is also believed that for the first time since 1993, momentum is building for policies that would move the United States towards universal health insurance. President Obama has made health care a central part of his domestic agenda, with spending and investments in Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, and proposed 2010 budget. It is the consensus now that since we have a fiscal emergency, Washington is willing to deal with the health care crisis. Many of the groups long opposed to reform, appear to be coming together to accept a major health care reform. Reducing costs is always at the center of any health care debate in the United States. These have been focused on waste, fraud, and abuse; administrative costs; improving the quality with health technology information dissemination; and excessive regulations on the health care industry in the United States. Down payment on health care reform, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and CHIP include many provisions to reach towards universal health care. Key words: Health care reform, universal health care, national health expenditures, gross domestic product, sustained growth rate formula, physician payments, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Children’s Health Insurance Program, health information technology


2015 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-45
Author(s):  
Georgia Beilmann ◽  
Ying-Jen Lin ◽  
Sabrina Perlman ◽  
Kimberly Ross ◽  
Michael Cavanaugh ◽  
...  

Health care in the United States is undergoing a radical restructuring, mandated in the Affordable Care Act (ACA), designed to improve access to care and increase the efficiency of our health care system. Key features include a revamped health insurance market and increased reliance on electronic technologies for buying insurance and tracking patient care. One goal of these changes is to reduce the unequal burden of disease carried by low-income racial/ethnic minorities. However, the long history of racial/ethnic health disparities in the United States raises concern for how diverse populations will be affected by these innovations. Applied anthropologists are well equipped to produce knowledge and insight to inform how changes are enacted and to maximize positive impact for vulnerable populations. Employing a holistic framework and an in-depth data collection strategy, anthropologists are especially adept at uncovering the insider's perspective. This adds important insight and nuance to understandings of how the ACA's health care innovations affect specific groups.


1974 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Bodenheimer ◽  
Steven Cummings ◽  
Elizabeth Harding

The private health insurance industry in the United States began as a money-collection mechanism for hospitals and doctors, and has evolved into an important profit-making sector of the economy. Blue Cross is dominated by hospital representatives and serves to channel money into the nation's hospitals. Physicians control Blue Shield and are its principal beneficiaries. And commercial insurance companies are closely linked to banks and industrial corporations through the country's large financial empires. Some effects of this elite control over the health insurance industry have been inadequate and distorted insurance coverage, discrimination against the elderly, the sick, and the poor, and rapidly rising medical costs. In addition, the control of Medicare and Medicaid by private insurance institutions has contributed to the enormous inflation produced by these programs. Though governments, consumers, and even the insurance industry itself are beginning to apply controls to the unprecedented medical inflation of the late 1960s, these controls tend to limit access to health care, especially for low-income people. Unless insurance companies are barred from the health care field and a public financing mechanism based on progressive taxation is introduced, health care will never be an equal right for everyone in the United States.


Author(s):  
Bert Kestenbaum

AbstractThis chapter discusses in detail the procedure followed to identify a 1-in-10 sample of persons born between 1870 and 1899 who resided in the United States at the time of their death at ages 105–109 for men and 108 or 109 for women. We tabulate the characteristics of these “semi-supercentenarians” and offer some observations about the level of their mortality. The procedure for identifying semi-supercentenarians consists of (1) casting a net to find candidates and then (2) determining for which candidates can both date of birth and date of death be validated. The net used to find candidates in the United States is different from the nets typically used in other counties: in the United States we use the file of enrollments in the federal government’s Medicare health insurance program. Some of the information needed for the verification step comes from another administrative file – the Social Security Administration’s file of applications for a new or replacement social security card. Verification of the date of death is accomplished by querying the National Death Index. Dates of birth are verified by using online resources to access the records of several censuses conducted many decades earlier.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hasan Sadikin ◽  
Wiku Adisasmito

AbstrakJaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN) yang diselenggarakan oleh Badan Jaminan Sosial (BPJS) Kesehatan telah mulai dilaksanakan dari 1 Program Asuransi Kesehatan di Indonesia Januari 2014. Pelaksanaan program asuransi nasional menemukan risiko. Risiko kejadian fraud (kecurangan) di Indonesia sangat tinggi. Namun,risiko kejadian fraud masih sulit untuk diidentifikasi. Hal tersebut didukung oleh kurangnya kesadaran semua pihak baik dari pasien, provider dan perusahaan asuransi walaupun tindakan tersebut sangat terasa adanya. Penipuan kesehatan merupakan ancaman serius bagi seluruh dunia, yang menyebabkan penyalahgunaan keuangan sumber daya yang langka dan dampak negatif pada akses kesehatan, infrastruktur,dan determinan sosial kesehatan. Penipuan kesehatan dikaitkan dengan meningkatnya biaya kesehatan yang terjadi di Amerika Serikat. Penelitian ini untuk menganalisis tentang pengaruh dimensi fraud triangle dalam kebijakan pencegahan fraud terhadap program Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional yang merupakan alasan untuk penipuan kesehatan. Penelitian ini menggunakan pendekatan kualitatif. Teknik pengumpulan data berupa pedoman wawancara, alat perekam, arsip tertulis dan dokumen. Hasil penelitian mendapatkan analisis tekanan, kesempatan, dan rasionalisasi terhadap risiko kejadian fraud dan menyajikan contoh bagaimana kebijakan telah berdampak di RSUP Nasional DR Cipto Mangunkusumo. Tesis ini kemudian akan memberikan saran tentang bagaimana mencegah penipuan kesehatan masa depan untuk mengurangi pengeluaran kesehatan dan penggunaan sumber daya untuk kepentingan RSUP Nasional DR Cipto Mangunkusumo.AbstractThe National Health Insurance (JKN) held by the Social Security Agency (BPJS) Health started to be implemented from 1 Indonesia’s Health Insurance Program in January 2014. The implementation of a national insurance program found the risk. The risk of occurrence of fraud in Indonesia is very high but it is still difficult to identify its risk. This is supported by the lack of awareness of all parties, including patients, providers and insurance companies although such actions exists. Health fraud is a serious threat to the entire world, which led to financial abuse of scarce resources and the negative impact on access to health care, infrastructure, and social determinants of health. Health fraud is associated with increased health care costs in the United States. This study was to analyze the influence of the dimensions of the fraud triangle in fraud prevention policies towards the National Health Insurance program which is the reason for health fraud. This study used a qualitative approach. Data collection techniques such as interview guides, recorders, written records and documents. The study reported stress analysis, opportunity, and rationalization of the risk of fraud incident and presents examples of how policy has an impact on the National Hospital Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo. This thesis will then provide advice on how to prevent future fraudulent health to reduce health spending and use of resources for the benefit of the National Hospital Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo.


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