In 2012, healthcare costs topped 2.8 trillion dollars, with an average of $8,915 dollars spent per person. (Wilson, 2014) The rising cost of health care is taking much more money out of the budgets of millions of Americans. (Sultz, 2012) “Health care spending consumed 42% of federal revenues and 6% of household incomes.” (Wilson, 2014) With numbers like that, many Americans are neglecting their health because they simply cannot afford it. Now that the Affordable Care Act has be enacted, it may lift the burden for some of them. “It was not until concerns over the rising cost of health care resulted in cost-containment initiatives that changed the method of reimbursement for medical services.” (Sultz, 2012) This issue is so important because it seems that the segment of population who need the most health care, the elderly, are the ones who can afford it the least. “In 2010 the elderly population, 65 and over, accounted for one-third of health spending but made up just 13% of the population.” (Wilson, 2014)…