Equal access to Obamacare for all Americans – including lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders.
It's a tall order, but ensuring it happens is now part of the mission at the U.S. Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights. The agency is a nearly $40 million operation that historically has investigated discrimination charges against hospitals and other providers in cases that typically involved the disabled or minorities.
By year's end, if not before, the OCR will detail just how it plans to go about doing its new job of helping LGBT Americans gain equal access to the benefits outlined in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).
Once it does, one of the more important battles in the fight for LGBT rights in the United States will have been won, at least on paper.
"Significantly, this is the first time that sex discrimination in health care is prohibited by a national civil rights law," HHS noted in its budget paperwork in early April.
PPACA is unequivocal on this point, promising health care regardless of race, color, national origin, disability, age or gender.
"Health is an LGBT equality issue," said Kellan Baker, associate director for LGBT research and communications at the Center for American Progress. "If we don't have our health, we don't have anything. I would say that the ACA and the changes at HHS are some of the most significant opportunities for LGBT equality that we have seen in a long time."
Hashing out just how to make it all work will be top of mind for the OCR in coming months. There will be a series of "listening sessions" before the final rules are crafted.
Equal rights are of keen interest to many Americans, but among those "listening" most intently are those in the LGBT community. Employers, insurers and the benefits community at large are paying close attention, too.
As advocates will point out, 51 percent of small business offer coverage to same-sex partners of employees, and more than 60 percent of Fortune 500 companies do the same. PPACA promotes the expansion of these practices and authorizes the coming insurance exchanges to offer coverage that includes same-sex couples and their children.
The health system's problems can be especially pronounced in the LGBT community, advocates say, and discrimination that's based on real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity is commonplace.
Access to health care services, including preventive care such as cancer screenings, are a huge part of the problem.
According to a 2011 report from the Center for American Progress, gay men and lesbians experience elevated rates of certain cancers, including breast cancer, melanoma, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, because of the difficulty they have in accessing health care. Also, lesbian and bisexual women are at greater risk than heterosexual women for chronic diseases linked to smoking and obesity.
The Center for American Progress is a left-leaning group, leaving it open to attack by skeptics. But its statistics about the health of the LGBT community are viewed as reliable as anyone else's, albeit incomplete.
The problem with LGBT health statistics in general is that, while there are more than 9 million Americans who identify as LGBT, federal and state governments have not routinely collected data on people's sexual orientation or gender identity.
That started to change in January of this year, when the federal government began to collect sexual orientation on its most important health assessment tool, the National Health Interview Survey. But there's a long way to go before enough of this data is collected, and doing so won't be easy.
Based on the numbers that are available, the National Academy of Sciences, in a report released in 2011, agreed that gay and transgender people often face "barriers to equitable health care" and receive substandard care when they seek it.
"Fearing discrimination and prejudice," it said, "many lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people refrain from disclosing their sexual orientation or gender identity to researchers and health care providers."