Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Perspectives On The Affordable Care Act -- Is It Meeting Expectations?
My recent column on the sixth anniversary of President Obama's Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, generated some energetic criticism -- or, rather, half a paragraph of it did. While I acknowledged that many Americans have benefited from the law, I also said that the Obama administration was too eager to give it credit for slowing the growth of health-care spending. This slowdown, I pointed out, had begun in 2002, years before Obamacare was enacted. (I could have added that the decline was not confined to the U.S.) (Ramesh Ponnuru, 4/11)
The Affordable Care Act was first and foremost intended to extend health insurance coverage to a broader segment of the population. It has largely succeeded, with the uninsured rate among the non-elderly population falling to 10.7 %, from more than 18% just before the law took effect. (Dean Baker, 4/11)
We hear it every day from supporters of the Affordable Care Act: The fact that more people have health insurance now than before the law was signed is proof that it鈥檚 working. But this is hardly the best measure of the law鈥檚 success 鈥 after all, what good is health-insurance coverage for middle- and low-income families if they can鈥檛 afford to use it? That鈥檚 the plight millions of Americans find themselves in today. And as a new analysis by my organization shows, it only got worse this year. (Nathan Nascimento, 4/12)
Hype springs eternal 鈥 certainly when it comes to Paul Ryan, whose media image as a Serious, Honest Conservative and policy wonk seems utterly impervious to repeated demonstrations that he is neither serious nor honest, and that he actually knows very little about policy. And here we go again. But what really amazes me about the latest set of stories is the promise that Ryan will finally deliver the Republican Obamacare alternative that his colleagues in Congress have somehow failed to produce after all these years. No, he won鈥檛 鈥 because there is no alternative. (Paul Krugman, 4/11)
WBUR first started CommonHealth to track a law that had an ambitious goal: health coverage for virtually every Massachusetts resident. It鈥檚 been 10 years since that reform effort. To mark the anniversary, we asked a number of health experts to offer their takes on the law. (4/12)
The Affordable Care Act is now six years old. Perhaps more important for Massachusetts, this month marks the 10th anniversary of 鈥淩omneycare,鈥 making it a good time to review that law鈥檚 impact. (Josh Archambault and Jim Stergios, 4/12)