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Health Law and Policy

Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

The University of Akron

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Next Stage Of Health Care Reform: Controlling Costs By Paying Health Plans Based On Health Options, Dale B. Thompson Jul 2015

The Next Stage Of Health Care Reform: Controlling Costs By Paying Health Plans Based On Health Options, Dale B. Thompson

Akron Law Review

There are two problems in “demonizing” health insurance plans and MA. One is that it diverts attention from perhaps the most important long-term problem for health care: the need to control rising costs. Recent estimates say that expenditures on health care have grown from approximately seven percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 1970, to nine percent in 1980, twelve percent in 1990, fourteen percent in 2000, and sixteen percent in 2008. Expenditures are projected to be over nineteen percent of GDP in 2019. While it is certainly true that health care insurance plans are not perfect and that there …


Constitutionality Of The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act Under The Commerce Clause And The Necessary And Proper Clause, Wilson Huhn Jan 2011

Constitutionality Of The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act Under The Commerce Clause And The Necessary And Proper Clause, Wilson Huhn

Akron Law Faculty Publications

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is a comprehensive federal statute that attempts to extend health insurance coverage to tens of millions of Americans and to expand health insurance coverage by eliminating exclusions for preexisting conditions, increase medical loss ratios, abolish annual and lifetime limits, and other reforms. A necessary provision of this law (the individual mandate) requires most individuals to maintain health insurance coverage. The individual mandate has been challenged in a number of lawsuits on the ground that Congress lacks the power under the Constitution to require individuals to purchase health insurance. The power of Congress to …