Paper 3 and Health Care. Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing contemporary.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
More Security and Stability If You Have Health Insurance, the Obama Plan: Ends discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions. Limits premium.
Advertisements

Chapter Nineteen The American Economy Personal Finances ~~~~~ Insurance Against Hardship.
Medicaid expansion in sc. today’s talk  Background  Politics of expansion  Impact on People  Impact on Business  Impact on the Economy  Final Thoughts.
The Case for Medicaid Expansion. Who We Are We’re a coalition of concerned Kentuckians, over 250 organizations and individuals, who believe that the best.
By: Kevin Tang.  -Senator Robert Wagner tries to pass National Health Act of Fails.  -On November 19, 1945,President Truman outlined a comprehensive,
Policy Proposals Health Care Coverage, Costs, and Financing.
States Look at Universal Health Care Walter Tsou, MD, MPH Physicians for a National Health Program AMSA Regional Meeting December 2, 2006.
1 WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOU? April Health Access is the leading voice for health care consumers in California. Founded in 1987, Health Access is the.
SINGLE PAYER The Next Step for Health Reform (Beyond the Affordable Care Act of 2010) Prepared by Randy Block Co-Chair, Gray Panthers of Metro Detroit.
Government and Health Care Roughly 15 cents of every dollar spent in US is on health care US health care spending equaled $5841 per person in 2002 Governments.
The Economics of Health Care Reform Allen C. Goodman Wayne State University Presented to Adult Learning Institute October 25, 2011
Government and Health Care Roughly 15 cents of every dollar spent in US is on health care US health care spending equaled $5841 per person in 2002 Governments.
Federalism 9/12/2011 Lecture 4. Clearly Stated Learning Objectives Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – understand and interpret.
WHAT JUST HAPPENED? IS IT OVER YET? Health Care. First Question: What is “health care” and what does it do? FACT: People die. They get injured, they get.
House Health Care “Reform” Bill Passed late Saturday night – Proposes to cover 36 million Americans currently without health insurance Major expansion.
Healthcare. Healthcare  America has the “best healthcare system” on earth. But on measures such as life expectancy, infant mortality, and especially.
 You pay a premium into an insurance pool. In the event that you are sick or injured, the insurance policy pays all or part of your medical expenses.
The Social Welfare Policy. What is Social Welfare? A means by which the government provides assistance to those suffering from hardships  Ex: old age,
Health Care We must address the crushing cost of health care. This is a cost that now causes a bankruptcy in America every thirty seconds. By the end of.
Health Care Reform Quynh Smith. Sources of Inefficiency in the Health Care Delivery System   We spend a substantial amount on high cost, low-value treatments.
16 Social Policy. What Is Social Policy? Programs that promote a range of public goals: –Ameliorate risk and insecurity –Promote equality of opportunity.
Health Reform: What It Means to Our Community. Health Reform: Key Provisions o Provides coverage to 32 million uninsured people by o Changes insurance.
CHCWG DRAFT March 2, 2006 Hearing from the American People: Preliminary Overview of Sources and Reports March 2006 Caution: Preliminary Data Do not cite.
The Environment 5/1/2012. Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing.
Presented by Kerrie Ann Hull MSW Student Northwest Nazarene University.
HN 300 Unit 6 Seminar Financing Human Services Madelyn Harvey, PhD.
Federalism 1/26/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – understand and interpret the.
© 2012 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States.
Social Security 4/26/2012. Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing.
The Affordable Care Act. What is it? Affordable Care Act was designed to: – Increase the quality and affordability of health insurance – Decrease the.
ECONOMICS II 2/2/2012. Learning Objectives Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology, political.
Health Care Reform in America Facing Up:. President Obama and Healthcare Reform “Health care reform is no longer just a moral imperative, it’s a fiscal.
Chapter 22 Health Care Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Monetary Policy Monetary Policy – the process by which the government controls the supply of money in circulation and the supply of credit through the.
Medicare, Medicaid, and Health Care Reform Todd Gilmer, PhD Professor of Health Policy and Economics Department of Family and Preventive Medicine 1.
Health Care. Is it a Legal Right No –Not Mentioned in the Constitution –Not wanted by the States –It therefore belongs to the people We view it, however,
Crime. Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing contemporary American.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Our Healthcare Reform Law Why do we need it? What does it do for us?
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 20 Health Care.
Domestic Policy Social Welfare and Health. 3 The Evolution of Social Welfare Policies  Most of our major federal social welfare programs were developed.
The Patient Protection & Affordable Coverage Act of 2010 as Amended (by the Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act) How Its Provisions.
Crime. Crime And Deterrence For Deterrence to work, threats must be made credible –The GodfatherGodfather –Certain –Swift –Severe If Benefits from Crime.
Health Care Reform in America Facing Up:. Madison Federalist 10 According to Madison Federalist 10, what is the number one cause of FACTION??? WHY IS.
FIXING WHAT AILS HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA TODAY PATIENTS OVER POLITICS.
Health Care. Health Care Reform Insuring more people by changing the number The Million number is gone46-47 Million.
OUTLINE OF HEALTH CARE PLAN RICHARD R. SCHNEIDER, MD F.A.C.P., F.A.C.C.
Dennis & Patten Participation in Government Mepham High School Health Care Reform in America.
ECONOMICS 3 2/9/2012. Learning Objectives Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology, political.
Social Welfare Policymaking. What is Social Policy and Why is it so Controversial? Social welfare policies provide benefits to individuals, either through.
 Created under title 18 of The Social Security Act. › Signed in 1965 by President.  Believed Medicare was necessary for elderly people.  Benefits are.
S OCIAL S ECURITY AND H EALTH C ARE LECTURE – ISSUES In the U.S., persons 65 years or older number more than 12% of the population—that is close to one.
Health Care Reform in America. The Stats 47 million people in the US do not have health insurance 792,000 people in CO do not have insurance – 1/5 of.
Domestic Policy. Government Policies and Individual Welfare The promotion of social and economic equality through government policies is controversial.
EXPLORING MARRIAGES AND FAMILY, 2 ND EDITION Karen Seccombe © 2015, 2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Families and the Work.
The Health of the Nation. Judging the Health of a Nation Quality of its doctors and medical institutions Doctors from all over the world come to the U.S.
KAHLIANNE JONES PD2 APRIL 8TH, 2010 Healthcare Reform, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Health Care Reform (Medicare and Medicaid) Emily Ray Period 7.
Health Reform: An Overview Unit 4 Seminar. The Decision The opinions spanned 193 pages, upholding the individual insurance mandate while reflecting a.
Keep Kansas Dollars in Kansas with a Kansas Solution: The Bridge to a Healthy Kansas Insert Meeting Name Your Name Date.
Basic Needs What are the most basic needs that we have as human beings? Food Shelter Health care?
Meeting our health care needs…together. Quality, affordable health care for everyone will help Alabama move forward ► Lower costs – push prevention, early.
Chapter 5 Healthcare Reform. Objectives After studying this chapter the student should be able to: Describe the expansion of healthcare insurance under.
Health Reform: What It Means to Our Community
HEALTH CARE POLICY.
The U.S. Health Care System: An International Perspective
Health Care Reform in America
A QUESTION OF ACCESS.
Health Care Policy Public Policy.
Presentation transcript:

Paper 3 and Health Care

Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing contemporary American society; Use knowledge and analyses of social problems to evaluate public policy, and to suggest policy alternatives, with special reference to questions of social justice, the common good, and public and individual responsibility.

PAPER 3

About Paper 3 What it Contains – Revised Paper 2 paper – an argument for your own position (evidence, moral reasoning, feasibility) – Counter-argumentation – and Conclusion; TOTAL pages of text - 15 Works Cited Rubric

What it Contains: Your Solution Pick/develop a solution to the controversial social problem For your solution – Provide new reasons or those from paper 2 – Provide evidence to support your solution

What it Contains: Counter- argumentation identify the weakest aspects of your solution and defend it against your opponents – who is likely to oppose your choice and why – provide counterargumentation for your solution and defend it against those would oppose your stance.

What it Contains: Your Moral Reasoning Support of your position from a Moral Reasoning perspective Identify your Obligations, Values, and Consequences in reaching your solution. Use the moral reasoning perspective to justify your solution

What it Contains: A conclusion Finally, you get to write a conclusion Finish with two or three strong paragraphs that summarize the Social Problem, the Controversial Policy Solution, and your decision. Be persuasive.

About Paper 3 You must submit two copies – in class on the day and time they are due – submitted to turnitin.com via Blackboard by 11:59 PM on the Day they are due. I grade the hard copy, and if this is late, you receive a grade of zero for that assignment

What the Government Covers Medicaid Medicare SCHIP Veterans Administration Government Employees

Medicaid Health Care as Welfare Single Largest Welfare program for the poor Fraught with problems

Medicare Health Care for Seniors How it worksworks

Medicare Non-Means Tested Increasingly Expensive Fraught with Problems

SCHIP Health Care for Children on the Bubble Increasingly Expensive

Private Insurance Fee For Service Managed Care- 90% of all private insurance

Terms of Health Care Premium Deductable Copayment

How We Get our Health Care

Strengths of the System Best Doctors and Hospitals Most Advanced Treatment Most Research and Development People with Health Care are satisfied With it.

The Problems of the System Access Cost Quality

The Problem of Access

Not 50 Million Americans But 50 million in America

The Problem of Access

Why People do not have insurance Health Care is historically been a private choice Health Care is an opportunity cost

Options for the Uninsured E.R. Self Medicate Do Nothing

Problem 2 Quality Quality is maldistributed We focus on sickness, not health We are overspecialized

Problem 3: Cost Outpacing Inflation Why

Cost- Technology MRI’s Bypass surgery Fake Knees and Hips These help us live longer

Cost- Labor 5.5 People per patient Jobs that require skill and education Recession Proof

Cost- Malpractice Actually not the suits themselves Defensive medicine High Insurance- just in calse

Cost- Greedy people We want to get our benefits back We do not realize the actual costs A “Tragedy of the Commons”

Cost- An Older Population Our last years of life consume much of our health care dollar We are living longer and there are more of us More Care means more $

Cost and Prescription Drugs Average cost is $ in 10 Seniors use a drug Direct to Consumer Ads

PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT The Solution

What is it A law that will get health insurance to roughly 30 million Americans Not a single payer system

What it looks like

How will it Work: Expanding Federal Programs Getting those eligible on programs they are eligible for – Expanding Medicare Eligibility – Expanding COBRA health insurance – Expanding SCHIP Program

How will it Work: Making Changes to Private Insurance Cannot Deny for Pre-Existing Conditions Cannot remove people who use up their coverage The Slackers mandate Subsidies to purchase insurance

How will it Work: Individual Mandates People will be required to have health insurance – Just as we are required to have health insurance Up to 2.5% of income by 2016 This is the tricky parttricky part

What if I have Insurance? In theory it should not change Your employer, however, can just cut you off

When does it start Mandates begin in 2014 Costs should be lowered over time as people have insurance

How can we afford this 1 Trillion over first 10 years – Tax on Tans – Higher Medicare taxes on wealthy and Medicare cuts on providers – Taxes on High-end insurance – Fees on Health Care Industry

WHERE IT STANDS TODAY

“We will immediately take action to repeal this law.” Republican “Pledge To America”

H.R. 2: Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act

S.AMDT 13

Repeal of 1099 Provision: The Compromise Would require businesses to report expenditures of more than $600 Expected to raise 19bn over 10 years Bipartisan support for repeal

KEEPING THE LAW The Democrat’s Strategy

Democratic Strategy Draw a line on health care and do not let the Republicans cross it Use institutional advantages to delay change Focus on the popular parts of the law Re-Cast the GOP into the Party of No (Part II)

Democratic Advantage 1: Laws are Difficult to Repeal They come in with political support and they retain that support Minor changes and fixes only serve to strengthen the existing law! Prohibition lasted for 13 years

Democratic Advantage 2: Marketing Popular Initiatives

Democratic Advantage 3: Divided Government Use Senate Majority to control the Agenda Filibuster when necessary The Presidential Veto as a last resort

Democratic Advantage 4: No new taxes in 2011 or 2012 F SA limits in 2013 Medicare tax increase by 0.9% and 3.8% tax on investments income for high-wage earners in 2013 Individual mandate in 2014 Cadillac Tax in 2018

Democratic Advantage 5: Debt and Deficits

REPEAL THE BILL THROUGH OTHER MEANS The Republican Strategy

Republican Strategy A straight-up repeal was unsuccessful Continue to push the issue through other political avenues Force this as a campaign issue in 2012

Republican Advantage 1: Consensus in the Party The Republicans are unified in the support for repeal. Try to exploit Democratic cleavages between those who want to keep the existing law, and those who may want to strengthen it. Try to switch Democrats to their side

Republican Advantage 2: The Power of the Purse Tie Health Care to every spending bill beginning with the new funding bill in March This risks a government shutdown The GOP lost the last shutdown in the 90’s

Republican Advantage 3 Time Two years to find avenues to dismantle the bill Time to create a GOP alternative for Election Day Time to try additional votes on repeal

Republican Advantage 4: The States GOP Gains in the state legislatures in 2010 provide a different angle of attack 21 states are pressuring for more flexibility Idaho is pushing for more

Republican Advantage 5: The Individual Mandate This is key to the success of the bill And one of the least popular portions Expect Heavy Resistance if the GOP tries Which is exactly what the GOP wants

A Potential Court Ruling in 2012

On Repeal Probably For Repeal Antonin Scalia Clarence Thomas Samuel Alito Probably Against Repeal Ruth Bader-Ginsburg Stephen Breyer Sonia Sotomayor Elena Kagan

On the Fence Chief Justice Roberts Justice Anthony Kennedy

This Makes the Legal Challenge a 2012 Campaign Issue

Environmental, Social, and Political Problems of Population Change

Two Demographic Truths 1.We are all Born 2.We Will all Die What we do in between has ramifications for the Environment and Social Policy.

Copyright ©Allyn & Bacon 2009

Population Growth and The Environment World Population is growing

Population Moves through stages

Consequences of World Population Growth Thomas Malthus Carrying Capacity and environmental damage Food Shortages Depletion of ResourcesResources Conflict

How to Control Population Zero Population Growth Family Planning Incentives

Demographics and Social Security How Population Growth and Change influences Policy

What is it? The Largest Single Federal Program A program that everyone loves A Program that tracks baby namesnames

Why do we love it? Almost everyone gets it It has very basic goals that are easy to reach The average worker gets $1,164 a month

How Do We pay for it? Payroll Taxes – I Pay 4.2% of my salary For 2011 – St. Edward’s matches this Only the first $106,800 of wages are taxed There is an upper limit on taxes… for Now (the most you can pay is $4, ) The most you can get in benefits is $2366

SOCIAL SECURITY IS IN FINANCIAL TROUBLE- ALL BECAUSE OF DEMOGRAPHICS

America is Getting Older

There are Fewer Workers

The Baby Boomers will drain the System

Bankrupt vs. Broke Bankrupt- not being able to meet your obligations Broke- not having any money Either way, we need policy change

The Policy of inaction 1995 Prediction 2005 Prediction

Forecasting in 2006

The 2011 Numbers In 2016 we will begin paying more in benefits than we collect in taxes. Without changes, by 2036 the Social Security Trust Fund will be exhausted* and there will be enough money to pay only about 76 cents for each dollar of scheduled benefits.

How to Solve the Problem There are many solutions All involve risk and create winners and losers Your primary targets are voting constituents

Other Solutions Raise the age Raise Taxes Cut Benefits Means Test Run Public Service announcementsannouncements

Radical Solutions Partial Privatization Full Privatization Amnesty for all Immigrants Amnesty Abolish Abortion

Social Security Has it been a success, and what should we do?