Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Wonkbook: The latest medical journal study of Obamacare is by President Obama

By Carolyn Y. Johnson This isn't your typical medical journal article: For one, the author has a law degree, not a M.D. Second, that author is President Obama. In an unusual "special communication" published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, President Obama reflects on his signature health care law, calling it the "most important health care …
 
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U.S. President Barack Obama smiles after joking about a lack of a predicted Republican alternative to Obamacare in 2015. (REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)

By Carolyn Y. Johnson

This isn't your typical medical journal article: For one, the author has a law degree, not a M.D. Second, that author is President Obama.

In an unusual "special communication" published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, President Obama reflects on his signature health care law, calling it the "most important health care legislation enacted in the United States since the creation of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965."

Drawing on a wide range of evidence, Obama states his major, unsurprising findings: 20 million people have gained insurance, bringing the uninsured rate to 9.1 percent in 2015. He notes an increase in the number of non-elderly people who have a physician and access to medicine. He cites a study that found people who gained coverage through expanded Medicaid have greater financial security, reducing the debts sent to collection by $600 to $1,000.

His most controversial argument is probably this: He credits the law with helping to control health care spending, a point that has been much debated. It's unclear how much of the slowdown in the growth of health care spending is due to the Great Recession and how much should be attributed to the law or other factors.

Read the rest on Wonkblog.


 

Chart of the day

The number of police officers killed in the line of duty continues to decline. Christopher Ingraham has more.

police


Top policy tweets

"Shootings that've had zero impact on US gun laws

—5 cops slain
—49 dead in Orlando
—20 first-graders massacred
—Congresswoman shot in head" -- @sahilkapur

"White House economist Furman cool to notion of a universal basic income https://t.co/Gkskc21Jdk" -- @pdacosta

"Looks like Washington state may be voting on a $50 campaign finance voucher program. A worthy initiative. https://t.co/qmikEs4dmL" -- @leedrutman

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