Obamacare Pros and Cons: Where We Stand Following Its Implementation

Publish date: 2024-06-21

Source: White House on Flickr.

It's arguable, but perhaps no greater legacy will be left from the presidency of Barack Obama than the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which is often referred to as Obamacare.

Since being signed in March 2010, this health reform law completely revamped access to healthcare for millions of Americans, while giving millions of others a headache. Today, we'll closely examine Obamacare, its pros and cons, as well as where we stand about a year and a half later following its official implementation.

To start, however, it would probably help to understand the short-term and long-term goals of Obamacare.

Obamacare's main goalsObamacare really has two main purposes.

First and foremost, it's designed to help lower the rate of uninsured people in the United States. Uninsured persons that receive care in hospitals and can't afford to pay cause hospitals and/or insurers (in the case of underinsured persons) to absorb a loss. In response, medical care costs and health plan premiums move higher for everyone else. Having more people insured allows insurers to spread their expenses over a greater swath of the population, which can in turn help keep medical cost inflation low. The more short-term effect, however, is giving more Americans access to medical care should they need it.

The long-tail goal of Obamacare, which sort of builds off the first point, is to help control the inflation rate of medical costs. The law does this in two ways. The first is described above, with insurers able to spread their medical expenses among a larger percentage of the population. Secondarily, though, if more people are insured, and those people take advantage of their coverage by visiting their primary care physician (PCP) somewhat regularly, then there's a chance that PCPs will catch chronic or serious diseases ahead of time, before they become costly later-in-life problems for the consumer and insurer.

Through two full enrollment periods, Obamacare has allowed nearly 12 million people to enroll for health insurance.

Source: National Cancer Institute via Facebook.

Now that we have a better bead on the story behind Obamacare, let's take a closer examination at some Obamacare pros and cons.

Obamacare pros

Source: Flickr user Nicola Jones.

But, there's another side to this story, too.

Obamacare cons

What we need to remember here is that Obamacare is an evolving law. A switch was flipped that triggered its implementation, but consumers, insurers, and PCPs are all still learning how this law is going to change their lives and the lives of medical patients nationwide. If the above battle between the Obamacare pros and cons demonstrates anything, it's that we can't, with any certainty, declare Obamacare a success, or a failure, as of yet. This is an experiment that's going to need more time to hash out whether this law is truly in America's best interest or not.

The article Obamacare Pros and Cons: Where We Stand Following Its Implementation originally appeared on Fool.com.

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