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Obamacare Unveiled

Student Medical Ethics Society Examines Controversial Health Care Bill from Practical, Ethical and Halakhic Perspectives American health care is facing its most comprehensive overhaul since 1965, and everyone from doctors to patients to employers will be affected. Often referred to as 鈥淥bamacare,鈥 the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) became one of the most contested topics in this year鈥檚 presidential election, and its political, financial and ethical implications are still widely debated. On November 26, 黑料社 All鈥檚 sought to debunk the myths and misconceptions about the controversial health care bill at an event that provided students with a practical walkthrough of the complex bill and analyzed it through the lens of ethics and halakha.
From left, Dr. Kevin O鈥橦alloran, Dr. Herb Leventer and Rabbi Yosef Blau address students at 鈥淥bamacare: The Enigma Unveiled.鈥
Titled 鈥淥bamacare: The Enigma Unveiled,鈥 the event began with a crash course in American medical history by Dr. Kevin O鈥橦alloran, a senior resident at the Montefiore / Department of Orthopedic Surgery who recently published a review article on Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), a facet of PPACA. O鈥橦alloran highlighted the factors that set the stage for health care reform in 2010, noting that more than 16 percent of the population was uninsured that year, private and public health care expenditures in the United States had totaled more than 15 percent of the country鈥檚 GDP, and America ranked seven out of seven developed countries for 鈥渜uality, efficiency, access, equity and healthy lives鈥 according to the Commonwealth Fund. He compared the passage of PPACA to a 鈥減atch鈥 being released for a 鈥済litchy鈥 computer program. 鈥淥bamacare doesn鈥檛 tear down any aspect of the American medical insurance now,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t builds on what we already have.鈥 Speaking about the bill鈥檚 influence on the insurance industry, physicians and the average American, O鈥橦alloran discussed clauses that called for close regulation of insurance companies鈥 profits and services and expanded Medicaid eligibility for the poor. He also offered students a population-based breakdown, explaining how families, pregnant women and senior citizens would be affected. As a doctor, O鈥橦alloran addressed a concern that is especially important to medical school hopefuls: changing physician pay and hospital funding. He focused on value-based purchasing, one of 20 new payment systems and initiatives that Medicare will try out as part of PPACA and that could be emulated by private insurance companies. 鈥淲hat Medicare is looking to do is institute a policy that reimburses physicians based on a patient鈥檚 outcome and sees whether hospitals, doctors and rehab centers are doing their best to help patients improve in a timely and efficient way.鈥 O鈥橦alloran added that these value-based payments were designed to incentivize physicians and hospitals to make more thoughtful and more innovative decisions about patient care, but the impact on physician pay was still unclear and would vary by specialty. Dr. Herb Leventer, adjunct instructor in philosophy at 黑料社 All, took on some of the more frequently circulated fears about PPACA, including arguments that its tax increases would choke America鈥檚 already struggling economy. 鈥淭his is not a job killer鈥攊t鈥檚 going to fund another million jobs in health care, because if we鈥檙e going to have more people insured, we鈥檙e going to need to provide more health care,鈥 Leventer said. He also noted that the purpose of PPACA was not only to extend coverage to the poor, but to enhance coverage for all Americans. 鈥淲e do provide the best health care in the world, but we currently provide it only to those who have lots of money or good insurance. 黑料社 half of our country has neither. 鈥淚n the United States we have two stereotypes about how to live,鈥 Leventer added. 鈥淭here鈥檚 the mythical cowboy, the rugged individual, versus the mythical small town, where everyone pitches in to rebuild the barn that鈥檚 just burned down because they all understand it could be them one day. Much of the debate on health care reform sounds like these two myths: individual autonomy versus social solidarity, competing for the soul of our country.鈥
Chani Herzig, of YU's Student Medical Ethics Society, introduces the panel at the Nov. 26 event.
From the perspective of Jewish tradition, Rabbi Yosef Blau, mashgiach ruchani [spiritual advisor] at YU-affiliated , turned the discussion to a Talmudic conversation about private versus public charity. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a balance between individual giving and what the community sets standards for,鈥 he said. 鈥淎lthough the overwhelming majority of our books were written when preventative medical care wasn鈥檛 understood at all, the same way that halahka shows concern that everyone has a minimum amount of food to eat and clothing to wear, given the ability of society to provide medical care, it would similarly set some kind of requirement to ensure that everyone gets at least that minimal amount of medical care.鈥 The Yeshiva College Pre-Med Club, Stern College for Women Pre-Med Club, Pre-Dental Society, Pre-Pharmacy Club, Public Health Club, and the Stern College and Yeshiva College Student Councils also sponsored of the event. According to Chani Herzig, a junior majoring in women鈥檚 health at and one of the event organizers, the discussion was a much-needed breath of fresh air for students interested in the medical field but confused by contradictory rhetoric about PPACA. 鈥淭his is something which is relevant, changing, and happening now, and people need to know,鈥 she said. 鈥淟ogistically, everything is changing鈥攖he way doctors are paid, the way they enter or don鈥檛 enter into practices, the way they choose specialties鈥攁nd for many of us who are considering going into any part of the medical field, it鈥檚 critical that we know what we鈥檙e talking about.鈥

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