Responding to opponents’ arguments that the law’s individual mandate to buy insurance violates the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, the groups argue that “accepting services and deciding how to pay for them” is “an economic activity, pure and simple,” under the Commerce Clause.
Other groups filing the brief were the Federation of American Hospitals, Catholic Health Association, National Association of Children’s Hospitals, National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems and Association of American Medical Colleges, which hosts the Council of Teaching Hospitals.
The brief noted that at least 94 percent of uninsured people receive healthcare services at some point in their lives, amounting to more than $39 billion in uncompensated care from hospitals in 2009 alone.
Read the AHA News Now report on the healthcare reform law.
Read more coverage of federal court decisions on the healthcare reform law.
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–President Asks Judge to Clarify Decision Against Reform Law
–For First Time, Judge Strikes Down Entire Reform Law