Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
6. Project integration management
7. Monitoring evaluation, research and learning (MERL)
8. Ethical Considerations in Resource Mobilization:
9. results based management (RBM)
10. Project Management in the private and public sector
11. Project Management Theories
12. accessing project government funding and public grants
13. Project contracting
14. Project Scheduling
Healthcare
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The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is widely regarded as the most important law that has significantly altered the healthcare industry in the United States of America. More than 50 million American citizens, or roughly 90 percent of the legal population, were able to obtain insurance coverage because of the law. The Act, also known as Obama Care, was signed into law in March 2010. The law required that all citizens obtain health insurance by March 2014 or face a tax surcharge. People are free to select their preferred methods of coverage (Lurie, 2016).
Uninsured Americans despite PPCA
According to Lurie and McCubbin (2016), despite enormous gains from PPACA, a significant portion of Americans remain uninsured, an estimation of 32 million adults was unregistered, half of whom are not even eligible for Medicaid/CHIP or Marketplace tax credits. Because unregistered inhabitants are ineligible for ACA support, the remaining people without insurance included approximately 5.2 million and approximately 11 million undocumented individuals who were residents of America. According to insurance demographics, people aged 19–25 were the most uninsured in 2017. Insurers have an opportunity to additionally push their services to young individuals aged 18 to 25. Fortunately, the ACA includes a provision that allows young adults of this age to be covered under their parents' medical insurance. According to Obamacare actualities and figures, many people are parentless or have parents who do not have insur