Showing posts with label Affordable Care Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Affordable Care Act. Show all posts

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Federal Law is must for hospitalization act

Today's global business cannot give goods or services away or it will not stay in business very long,but better we call it as a shrinkage.Retail business come to knows a certain amount of loss of inventory is due to shoplifters and the product pricing.For manufacturers shrinkage will produce because such things happens due to employee theft. The cost of these thefts is passed on to consumers who pay for their purchases from these businesses includes also.

But these are really crimes and they are prosecuted when the perpetrators are caught, but customers have to pay for these losses for manufacturers shrinks,and it include shrinkage in their pricing then it makes products more expensive than if everyone paid for them. 

If hospitilization is needed for a patient then the hospitals have to treat every patients who comes into their emergency rooms,all patients have to pay for deadbeats who don’t pay their bills, and this cost is exorbitant for big hospitals.The Affordable care act implies the rights to the patients who need's a sudden hospitalization.

If when the mandated hospitalization insurance come to rule then the federal budget deficit will be reduced if the Affordable Care Act is kept in place.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Health Law Survives Test in Court.

A federal appeals court in Washington upheld the Obama administration’s health care law on Tuesday in a decision written by a prominent conservative jurist and the decision came as the Supreme Court is about to consider whether to take up challenges to the Affordable Care Act, a milestone legislative initiative of the administration.

The four appellate court rulings on the health care law so far, this is the third to deal with the law on the merits, and the second that upholds it will United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Washington issued the 37-page opinion by Judge Laurence H Silberman in the opinion, Judge Silberman, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, described the law as part of the fundamental tension between individual liberty and legislative power.

A right to be free from federal regulation is not absolute, and yields to the imperative that Congress be free to forge national solutions to national problems, no matter how local or seemingly passive in their individual origins,” he wrote in the fact that Congress may have never issued an individual mandate to purchase something before, for a central argument for many opposing the law, “seems to us a political judgment rather than a recognition of a constitutional limitations,” he wrote a 65-page dissent by Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh, a conservative jurist appointed by President George W. Bush, stated that the courts lack jurisdiction until the law’s tax penalties take effect in 2015.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Understand changes in health care under new law

Commercial Law
I don't know about you, but I feel increasingly confused as I try to decipher the various details of the new health care law. One thing I do know is that now, more than ever, we consumers must take control of our own health care.

There are new rights, benefits and protections under the Affordable Care Act, which went into effect on September 23. Some highlights of the law include: no more denial of coverage for pre-existing illnesses in children and adults who have been uninsured more than six months, elimination of lifetime dollar limits on benefits, and children may be kept on their parents' policy until age 26.

This just scratches the surface. To help consumers understand their personal health insurance options, the government has created a comprehensive website. The site, www.healthcare.gov, can be a bit overwhelming when you first start navigating it. Look at small sections at a time and don't try and tackle it in one sitting.

Since this is open enrollment time, many of us have insurance coverage decisions to make for the upcoming year. Whether you are staying with your current provider, making a change or receiving coverage for the first time, it is critical to understand costs, benefits and ultimately what will work best for you and your family.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Health care law provisions to take effect on Thursday

http://commercial-law-gov.blogspot.com/
Six provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that were signed into law March 24 will take effect  September 23.

Some provisions are the extension of coverage for young adults to age 26, free preventive services — such as immunizations for children — on new plans and the prohibition of exclusion of children because of preexisting conditions. The provisions also include the limitation of lifetime limits on insurance coverage for new plans, the regulation of annual limits on insurance coverage for new plans that cost less than $750,000 and the ban on insurance companies from lifting coverage after it has been purchased.

Source: The Commonwealth Fund, which is a private foundation that conducts independent research on health care issues.