Social Issues Our policy is designed to address the lack of affordable health insurance and the lack of affordable health insurance for people in existing health. The degree of social problems has reached the size of the population and the population of the United States. In the United States, there are more than 50 million people who do not have health insurance. This is about 16.7% of the population, or a sixth of the American population (Wolf, 2010). Those who define this as a problem are the people most influenced by the inaccessible barriers such as illegal immigrants, the elderly, and those who can not be insured for my preexistence.
In 2010, the Obama administration successfully passed an affordable medical law (ACA). This comprehensive legislation includes two separate bills: Patient Protection and Peace Pricing Medical Law and 2010 Health Care and Education Settlement Act. Both are trying to achieve two overall goals. Increasing the number of healthcare workers subscribing to health insurance and affecting consumer and federal costs. In 2013, about a year before the ACA is fully effective, about 15% of the population is not covered by insurance, so 32 million people in the US can not get insurance for various reasons did. ACA entered into force in January 2014, and the proportion of uninsured Americans has declined to 10.9% as of the end of 2016. The US Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that ACA will help reduce the national deficit by $ 100 billion over the next decade.
Patient Protection and Parity Health Management Act The 2010 Patient Protection and Parity Health Management Act (ACA) significantly reduced women's and colored people's non-premium rates (Austin 2015; Hess et al., 2015). Between 2013 and 2015, the non-insurance premiums for blacks declined by 9.2 points, of which 2.3 million black adults joined health insurance during this period (US Department of Health and Human Services 2015). ACA has promoted exchange by country where individuals can purchase insurance or provide discounts and cost sharing benefits to low income people. It was also established independently