Why is it that the United States, which is held out to be the greatest country in the world to live in by many and using many different standards, is the only Western country that does not have some form of socialized medicine? One reason is that opponents continue to refer to any universal health care program as just that, socialized medicine. The label alone is enough to prevent many people from supporting such an effort, without looking any deeper to the facts of the situation or the solutions it offers. The connotation behind the expression socialized medicine is that it is a system that belongs in a communist run country. Socialized medicine refers to a health care delivery system where the hospitals are owned by the government and the doctors and other caregivers, whether in a hospital, office or other setting, are all government employees. And while I agree that this is not the system that would be effective for this country and our problems, we do need a system of universal health care for many reasons.…
With what he found, he comes to a general consensus of how to go about repairing the current system by doing away with it completely. He, like many others, desires a move to a “consumer-driven” system similar to that of almost every other market with freedom of information and consumers in control of costs. In my opinion, the most effective and immediate means to implement his plan is through the use of Health Savings Accounts for individuals. With insurance in place to finance what it is truly intended for, catastrophic risk, he suggests that most all routine or non-catastrophic care be funded fully by the individual through the use of…
In his "Opinion | A Radical Idea for Health-care Reform: Listen to the Doctors,” David Ignatius critiques that the “political doctors’” failure to improve the US’s ever deteriorating health care system and prompts for the people to move towards not just treating diseases but rather preventing them. Ignatius offers both his personal insight as well as professional interpretation regarding the whims of society by providing evidence that contrasts the US’s ever growing health care expenses with the “[decline of] life expectancy in the United States for the first time in nearly 20 years” (2017). At first, the author identifies the wound that is crippling the health care system: the improper funding of medical funds to treat patients; however, as…
I think that if the U.S. was ever able to change its health care system to universal health, we would benefit by adopting this practice in order to prevent bankruptcy. Reid returns to the problems of America’s health care regarding the cost, coverage, and quality on page 226 where he emphasizes the idea that they can be changed. Most importantly, many Americans are blind to the terrible health care system that they have. They try to cover it up with myths about health care overseas. Reid touches on five myths that Americans have which include topics such as everyone having socialized medicine, rationing care and limited choices, bloated bureaucracies, cruel acts of health insurance companies, and describing other systems as being too foreign.…
Although many Americans believe that a Single Payer system in America is a good concept, strife emerges as the sole launch of socialized medicine frightens many. A multitude of people have claimed that the Single Payer system will bleed America dry of it’s money while others suggest it will encourage entrepreneurship. Despite the money stance, plenty of individuals have confidence that Single Payer is the best way to go if we want to save impecunious Americans whilst innumerable healthy and well-off Americans consider the major increase in taxes and the serious decrease in…
Nathan Kaufman makes a very compelling case concerning the unsustainable status of the current health care system. Kaufman speculates that just as the housing market bubble eventually bust, the same is expected from the healthcare bubble. Similarities that are drawn between the housing market crash and how the experts refused to believe the inevitable are eerily similar to the perception concerning healthcare in the U.S. today (Kauffman, 2011). The rapid growth of healthcare costs, without evolving the way patients are treated will only serve to help usher the bursting of the bubble.…
The documentary, Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare, criticizes the current healthcare system designed for profit maximization, a physician’s dilemma between financial incentives and professionalism, and quick fixes rather than prevention of illness. The U.S. government spends $2.7 trillion annually on healthcare, and pharmaceutical drugs account for $300 billion, almost as much as the rest of the world combined (Escape Fire). The mindset that drugs are the only appropriate way to treat disease is invalid. Physician salaries are driven by the number of treatments and drugs that are prescribed and administered. The U.S. healthcare system is a business model where economic…
When it comes to our health care system, most of us agree that America is ready for a change. We need a system that delivers accessible, high quality care, but we can’t achieve this goal with government policies that attack the foundation of our current health care system which is employer sponsored health insurance. The Obama administration and members of congress are pushing legislation to set up a government run health care system. This government run system would operate in competition with private health insurance that is commonly provided by many employers to employees and their families. Employer sponsored health insurance is the backbone of our nation’s health care system and if this health insurance is banished this would affect 160 million Americans. Do you want the future of health care be in the hands of a few politicians, the same politicians that are making themselves exempt from their own policies?…
The current health care system in the United States is in turmoil for many years because of two major problems which continues to be: patient access to care and the cost of care. There are well over 50 million Americans who continue to be uninsured today and a national health care tax called the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 has been passed and challenged and upheld by the United States Supreme Court, as a tax not a law, here recently which is suppose to be an answer to most of our health care insurance issues. Even though most Americans may agree that our health care system is in turmoil and needs to be reformed, not everyone agrees that a national health care tax is the solution.…
2. A medical professional who supports universal health care outlined a History of Universal Health Care Efforts in the U.S. She listed some American beliefs, values and political ideas that help explain why the United States does not provide government-run, free universal healthcare, the way that many other countries do. These beliefs, values and ideas include: interest-group influence, ideological differences, anti-communist and anti-socialist views, the entrepreneurial character of American medicine, a tradition of American voluntarism (meaning we don’t like to be told what to do), and the association of public programs with charity, dependence and personal failure.…
Health care shouldnt only be provided to the ones who could afford it,but it should be provided for all.In this world we shouldnt hold a stingy finger, but our hands should be extend out to help a fellow "brother".With private healthcare the oppoutunities are limited.According to the facts,precentage of the tax"s payers dollars are going into healthcare,wheather you have one or not.Absolute interest has been taken in universal heath care in the United States.The battle over equality has taken root.Everybody should have a chance at "Health".…
Everyone has their own opinion as to what the health care should be like and who the health care should be for, for example, there are so many people who are out there in this world who needs social security but over the years of abuse by people who takes advantage of it, it has became so hard to get for the people who really needs it. Medicaid is another example of health insurance that has become strict to where it is hard to get. You have to be pregnant, labeled as physical disabled, and over the age of 65, which is retirement age. I think that it is harsh for people who would really qualify for it having to fight so hard for it. No one has come up with a solution but some have come up with a logical way to control certain things in health care.…
A health care system is the organizational structure in which health care is delivered to a population. When compared with health care systems in other developed countries, the delivery network in the United States seems disorganized and confusing (Sultz & Young, 2004). The U.S. health care system has been defined as a system without a system, a fragmented system, and a nonsystem (Congressional Budget Office, 1992; Geyman, 2008; Harrington & Estes, 2008b; Shi & Singh, 2001). In my opinion US health care system is inappropriate and expensive compared with many other developed countries. In The Healing of America, T. D. Reid explored why American medicine falls behind other countries in quality while it races far ahead in cost of care. Acording…
There is so little contradiction that government should be engaged in one way or another in creating a solution that gives Americans in need of medical assistance the right to life, liberty and the continued pursuit of happiness. The disagreements come in recognizing the failure of government to properly handle other socialized systems, the amount of government oversight that should be imposed, and the coverage that should be part of any comprehensive national healthcare solution.…
When it comes to the health care system, most people agree that America is ready for a change. A system that delivers accessible, high quality care, is what we need. We can’t achieve this goal with government policies that attack the root of our current health care system. The Obama administration and members of congress are pushing to set up a government run health care system. The government system is operating in competition with private health insurance that is commonly provided by many employers to employees and their families. Employer sponsored health insurance is the backbone of our nation’s health care system and if this health insurance is banished this would affect 160 million Americans. Do you want the future of health care to be in the hands of a few politicians, the same politicians that are making themselves exempt from their own policies?…