Reimbursement and Pay for Performance
This entails day-to-day programs designed to offer monetary incentives to health care providers and physicians to meet efficiency, quality and other defined targets. Larger number of employees, proper health plans, and the purchase of health care services, Earlier lesson show that pay for performance programs engage healthcare providers with lots of competitions thus managing to change their behavior ,Reduction in service provision by health care system basing on pay for performance never observed during the reimbursement process, The pay for performance approach method in the health care systems happens to benefit those who earn more in this program through huge calculated reimbursement acts thus suppressing other working colleagues
Research Paper
Undergraduate
Baby boomers and retirement planning
¶ … retiring baby boomer generation on Gross Domestic Product (GDP), one of the most widely accepted measures of economic growth. Two major components of GDP, consumption and government spending, will be significantly…
Affordable Care Act of 2010 Brief History
Affordable Care Act of 2010
Brief History of this Legislation – How it Became Law
When the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law by President Barack Obama in March, 2010, the legislative process was saturated with tension and heated rhetoric. After a bitter, chaotic period in which legislators attempted to hold "town hall" meetings to explain the benefits of the play – and organized disruptions at those meetings set a nasty tone – it squeaked through the U.S. Congress with hardly a vote to spare. It received no votes from Republican members of the House of Representatives and barely made it through the House (219-212), with all 178 Republicans voting "no." Not one Republican in the U.S. Senate supported the ACA; the vote was 60 Democrats to 39 Republicans.
Why was this healthcare legislation so unpopular with conservatives? The answer to that question is many-faceted, and likely boils down to the fact that Obama was the one pushing the legislation ("Obamacare"); anything Obama proposed throughout the first three years of his administration was attacked and rejected by Republicans, the Tea Party, and independent conservatives. Moreover, this was – according to the opposing forces – a "government take-over" that would create "death panels" to decide if grandma should live or die. Unfortunately, the ACA became law in a toxic political environment – an environment made even more antagonistic by the daily drumbeat of smears and vicious assaults from right wing talk radio hosts – and today while 32,500,000 Medicare recipients have received free preventative screening services, and 54,000,000 Americans have coverage for preventative services (White House), the bill awaits the Supreme Court decision on ACA's constitutionality.