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Cost Containment Is Key Article
A copy of the America Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009, H.R. 3200, sits on the desk of Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) after the markup on the health care bill was postponed on Capitol Hill. Health reform's potential to produce savings is one more reason to challenge the argument that we cannot afford to enact health reform. (AP/Susan Walsh)

Cost Containment Is Key

Judy Feder details the provisions in the health care bill that are specifically designed to rein in galloping health care costs.

Judy Feder

The Costs of Delaying the Individual Mandate Article
Delaying the mandate would force insurers to offset the impact of the delay in 2014 by sharply increasing premium prices for 2015. (iStockphoto)

The Costs of Delaying the Individual Mandate

Calls for a one-year delay of the individual mandate due to technical issues with the Affordable Care Act rollout are unnecessary and harmful.

Emily Oshima Lee

Health Reform Means More Jobs for Small Businesses Article
Michael St. Germain, president of Concord Camera, poses at his store in New Hampshire. St. Germain owns a small business and will likely benefit from the new health bill. (AP/Jim Cole)

Health Reform Means More Jobs for Small Businesses

Small business have been some of the hardest hit by rising health care costs, but will also reap some of the biggest benefits from health care reform, writes Lesley Russell.

Lesley Russell

Comments on Essential Health Benefits Article

Comments on Essential Health Benefits

The Center for American Progress's comments on the Essential Health Benefits Bulletin released by the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight on December 16, 2011.

Topher Spiro

Protecting and Increasing Abortion Access Chapter

Protecting and Increasing Abortion Access

Recent restrictions to abortion access threaten to undo decades of progress, but federal and state policymakers can take steps to ensure access is not only protected, but also expanded, thereby improving women’s economic security.

Sara Estep

Still Making Things Worse Report
Repeal of health care would mean that approximately 15 million Americans would do without the help they need to pay for their health insurance premiums, and another 15 million would be denied Medicaid coverage. (AP/Jacquelyn Martin)

Still Making Things Worse

Karen Davenport and Igor Volsky analyze conservative proposals to health reform and find they will only worsen existing problems in the health system.

Karen Davenport, Igor Volsky

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