Sociology Medicare Reform In A Term Paper

PAGES
1
WORDS
385
Cite

Sociology

Medicare Reform

In a February 22, 2008, article on Medicare reform in the Washington Times newspaper, writer Jeb Hensarling discusses the impending Medicare funding shortfall, and how Congress is attempting to deal with the issue. Medicare is the social welfare program that ensures health care and prescription drug coverage for older and disabled Americans, and just like Social Security, it is showing signs of becoming insolvent in the next decade or so.

In summary, the article discusses the current underfunding of Social Security and Medicare, and how important it is to reform these programs as quickly as possible. It discusses the solutions of the White House budget proposals and other answers, such as medical liability reform that would curb the amount of monies available in these types of suits and save health care providers' money in costs, which would supposedly trickle down to consumers. The article also maintains it is time to start reform measures now, before millions of Americans are left without insurance they need when they need it the most.

This article was a wealth of factual information, from the amount of unfunded obligations ($74 trillion) to the amount that deficit will continue to grow as long as some type of reform is not established ($2 trillion each year). It was also interesting to see some of the reforms that are being discussed to help lower costs and that if something is not done now, Americans under the age of 54 probably won't have Medicare when they are ready to retire.

As with many government programs, it seems that Medicare is mired in red tape and not enough money to go around. It seems that people my age will not have any federal funds to fall back on when they are ready to retire if something isn't done, and that our Social Security and Medicare money is going to go to people who are retiring now or in a few years. People in Congress need to work together to reform these social programs before they go broke, and they need to stop fighting about it and just get it done, so Americans that need it the most aren't left without any way to take care of themselves.

References

Hensarling, J. (22 Feb. 2008). Medicare and entitlements. Retrieved 13 March 2008 from the Washington Times Web site: http://washingtontimes.com/article/20080222/EDITORIAL/625269691/1013.

Cite this Document:

"Sociology Medicare Reform In A" (2008, March 13) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/sociology-medicare-reform-in-a-31522

"Sociology Medicare Reform In A" 13 March 2008. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/sociology-medicare-reform-in-a-31522>

"Sociology Medicare Reform In A", 13 March 2008, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/sociology-medicare-reform-in-a-31522

Related Documents

Health and Illness Racism's Role in Health Service Inequalities Racism's Role in Health Service Inequalities Healthcare has been a divisive topic in the United States for the past two decades in the public and private sectors. This has brought the entire subject to the fore in the eyes of most Americans. Whether an individual is one of the people who has been denied equal access to health care or not, it can be

(Menzel, 1990, p. 3) Fisher, Berwick, & Davis alude to the idea of integration in health care, with providers linking as well as creating networks of electronic medical records and other cost improvement tactics. The United States and other nations over the last twenty or so years, have begun a sweeping change in health care delivery, regarding the manner in which health information is input, stored and accessed. Computer use

Welfare Reform
PAGES 8 WORDS 2554

Welfare Reform Working for wages is the principal means for obtaining income and getting ahead in American society. Work is the key to personal independence and an effective way to achieve a meaningful role in our society. Significant participation in the workforce also is a necessary condition for receiving benefits from our nation's major social welfare programs, unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation, Social Security retirement and disability payments, Medicare health insurance, and

As a result, millions of Americans remain unable to bear the heavy financial toll of medical expenses. Indeed, the problem of a lack of insurance for many is related to the problem of the cost of healthcare. So confirms the article by Consumer Reports (CR) (2008), which finds that "health-insurance premiums have grown faster than inflation or workers' earnings over the past decade, in parallel with the equally rapid

Solutions for the Future Even a quick look at budget documents for the next few decades indicate a system burdened with exploding costs of Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare; the latter the powder keg of the debt explosion. A reform of Medicare in which there is "only $1 in Medicare taxes for every $3 in benefits likely to be received in retirement" (Appelbaum & Gebeloff 6) must be a Congressional and

We don't look at their psychological well-being. it's almost as though, psychologically, they're a blank. And we know very little about the differences among black women. Some cope better than others. We don't know who they are, why they cope better, what resources they have access to. If we can understand that, then we can understand the needs of those who cope less well. What I am finding so