¶ … Healthcare
There are a number of different moments, some quiet and others rather loud and obnoxious, that the thought has seeped from my mind and spouted from my lips: "Why should I be forced into healthcare?" The simple answer, of course, is that one of the mandates of the Patient and Affordable Care Act requires individuals to obtain healthcare or to pay an ever increasing portion of their income as a fee for not having healthcare. Thus, one is left with one of two options -- to either pay for a service, no matter how dubiously and questionably rendered, or to pay to not have a service. The latter, of course, is commensurate to paying for nothing: simply throwing away money to the wind.
Still, the question persists regardless of which of the aforementioned options I choose, why should I be forced into healthcare? There are certainly few other services (outside of the Internal Revenue Service) that one is forced into in the United States, and the IRS is only forced upon individuals who readily acknowledge the curse of earning money and want to pay the country for the privilege of such a curse. Moreover, there is an ever increasing number of homeless individuals who are realizing this fact and are content to not get forced into the IRS's machinations as well. But one is not forced into automotive services and, it has been quite some time since the draft was forced and one was forced into the armed services....
"Studies of the relationship between managed care penetration in the health care market and expenditures for Medicare fee-for-service enrollees have demonstrated the existence of these types of spill over effects" (Bundorf et al., 2004). Managed care organizations generate these types of spillover effects by increasing competition in the health care market, altering the arrangement of the health care delivery system, and altering physician practice patterns. Studies have found that higher
Transparency empowers consumers to become better shoppers. Economists assert that transparency stimulates productivity, for example, in exchange for money, one individual obtaining fair value. In every aspect, except healthcare, Davis points out, transparency, is supported. The contemporary dearth of transparency in healthcare has led to many Americans not being able to effectively shop for the best quality of service at acute care hospitals. Davis argues that transparency permits consumers,
However, they contradict themselves trough supporting one's right to commit physician-assisted suicide, since this would virtually mean that the individual who is no longer willing to live is not provided with health care meant to prevent him or her from dying (Epstein, 1999, p. 1). Among those opposed to the fact that health care is becoming increasingly better are those who are in their twenties and are obliged to work
Lack of accountability, transparency and integrity, ineffectiveness, inefficiency and unresponsiveness to human development remain problematic (UNDP). Poverty remains endemic in most Gulf States with health care and opportunities for quality education poor or unavailable, degraded habitats including urban pollution and poor soil conditions from inappropriate farming practices. Social safety nets are also entirely inadequate and all form part of the nexus of poverty that is widely prevalent in Gulf countries.
Healthcare Issues, Systems, And Policies America, once the global leader in the health of its population and among the nations with the highest quality and most readily available healthcare services, has now fallen behind almost twenty other countries, including some that only became industrialized in the last third of the 20th century, and with substantial assistance from the United States. While most other so-called "First-World" nations have already embraced several fundamental
Health Care Right or Privilege Health Care Right Privilege Whether health care is a right or a privilege is one of the most intensely debated social questions of the modern era, but phrasing it in this binary way of one or the other masks a deeper problem that is far more complex. The specific issue at hand is the rationing of scarce medical resources. If there were unlimited resources where everyone could
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