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Inspite Disparities Affordable Care Act Insures Healthcare

by Julia Samuel on August 31, 2016 at 11:25 PM

Though insurance affordability and disparities by geography, race/ethnicity, and income persist, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has substantially decreased the number of uninsured Americans and improved access to health care.


In addition, changes brought on by the ACA will no doubt impact state and federal budgets. These are just some of the findings revealed in nearly 100 studies, dating back to 2010, pertaining to the ACA. All are pooled together in a research paper, soon to be published in Health Services Research, authored by professors at the University of Miami School of Business Administration and the Florida Atlantic University College of Business.

‘Federal contributions cover all expansion costs during the first three years, which will benefit providers and generate economic activity.’

The article, based on a structured and systematic review of these studies, compiles dozens of key findings about the ACA's impact on the U.S. health care system: Overall Health Insurance Coverage, Access, and Affordability

Dependent Coverage Provision (Young Adults Less Than Age 26)

Use of Marketplace Subsidies

Participation and Competition in Exchanges

Budgetary Effects of the ACA



"Our paper provides the public with a non-partisan, scientific perspective on the initial impact of the Affordable Care Act," said Michael T. French, professor of health sector management and policy, and sociology at the University of Miami School of Business Administration, a co-author of the paper. "With new research studies on the ACA being published every month, another comprehensive status report will be necessary in the near future."

"The scientific research so far suggests that ACA's progress is encouraging, especially in terms of expanding coverage," said co-author Gulcin Gumus, associate professor of Management Programs - Health Administration at the Florida Atlantic University College of Business.



Source: Eurekalert

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