27 January 2015

The Affordable Care Act and beyond

In today’s frenetic Information Age, the speed at which society is inundated with data leaves little time, or even inclination, to question operational definitions of terms at the center of the most significant social issues of our time—whether on Wall Street, where bankers use “credit default swaps” to bet against clients with their own money, or in health care, which, by definition, is the antithesis of what is provided to the American public. Many economists have stated that the current system is unsustainable. It’s time we get real about health care, before the current system bankrupts the economy of the United States.

We all perform preventive maintenance on things we acquire. From our homes to our cars to our children’s bicycles, all the things that “make life good” require preventive maintenance to perform their functions longer, thereby making life good for a longer period of time. The same is true of the human body.

It's not on my policy!
When was the last time you sent a bill for your oil change to your auto-insurance carrier? My guess is never. If you did, I’m confident your claim would be denied. Does that keep you from changing the oil in your automobile? I assume not. Factors that play into one’s decision to do preventive maintenance on a motor vehicle, which is nearly a necessity in most families’ lives, are that the cost is transparent and within reach of the consumer. I respectfully suggest that the same factors apply to health care. Until there is cost transparency and the most basic services—including an annual physical—are within the ability of 95 percent of the people in America to pay for out of pocket, our system for treating illness will remain on a collision course with collapse.

Nurses need to light the way! 
Photo credit: scyther5/iStock/Thinkstock
There is no doubt that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has placed more Americans on an insurance plan and appears to be slowing the rate of cost growth, but is anyone receiving more health care? When I reviewed many of the health care exchanges, I found that, for the premiums to be within reach of the average American family, the deductible is so high as to discourage participants from seeking preventive care. (It is true that many of the plans do include an annual physical.) However, I have been unable to locate evidence—perhaps it’s not available yet—that indicates utilization of preventive health care services has increased following implementation of the ACA. I suggest we will not see that benefit in the near future, because the system that we are trying to move away from has not promoted preventive maintenance. It is imperative, therefore, that we, as nurses, promote and model wellness as part of our overall efforts to drive health care reform.

Health care reimbursement reform is not health care reform, regardless if that is how it was positioned. Although the ACA is well intended, without true care-delivery reform with an emphasis on prevention and a system that supports such a model, the ability of the United States, the economic powerhouse of the world, to deliver care on par with nations that have far fewer resources, will remain out of reach. As a nurse, I believe all Americans should have access to basic health care, that it should be as much within their means as oil changes are for their cars. I also believe that this right to health care comes with responsibilities.

Needed: Men and women of the lamp
Our responsibilities as nurses are clear. We must continue to advocate for migration away from the unsustainable system of the past to true health care reform that results in holistic health care, not just treatment of illness. Furthermore, we have the responsibility to educate the public that their right to health care comes with responsibilities and that they must be active participants in their own wellness and health.

The Affordable Care Act set the country’s system of disease treatment on the road to change. We have taken just the first steps on that road. Where that road leads is yet to be illuminated. To assure the health and wellness of our fellow citizens, a holistic approach must be taken. Who better than nurses to advocate for such a holistic approach?

To effect changes needed—delivery, financing, and legal—to stop treating disease and start providing for wellness, nurses must remain knowledgeable about the latest practice and policy evidence and be present everywhere, from the halls of academia to the front lines where care-delivery models are improved to board rooms where resource decisions about care delivery are made to legislative halls where regulatory laws are enacted. We were handed the lamp, and it is our duty to continue lighting the road, because the journey is far from over.

For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International. Comments are moderated. Those that promote products or services will not be posted.