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It's sad to say that today's American health care system falls short of ... A system that was complicated to begin with has become incomprehensible, even to experts. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: By: Kaela Smith


1
Health Care Reform
  • By Kaela Smith

2
Health Care Today
  • Its sad to say that today's American health care
    system falls short of providing high quality care
    and choices for all Americans. This comes as
    shock when considering that the United States is
    believed to be a world leader in developing new
    medical technologies and probing the mysteries of
    disease through basic and clinical research, and
    people from all over the world come to the United
    States for specialized training and treatment
    (Clemmitt, M. 2). There are many problems of
    concern with the current system many an in which
    we need to take into account and its main
    problems and solutions under the new health care
    reform.

3
A LACK OF SECURITY
  • Every month, 2 million Americans lose their
    insurance. One out of four -- 63 million --
    Americans will lose their health insurance
    coverage for some period during the next two
    years.
  • 37 million Americans have no insurance and
    another 22 million have inadequate coverage.
  • Losing or changing a job, becoming ill or living
    with a chronic medical condition can mean losing
    insurance coverage or not being able to obtain
    it.
  • Long-term care coverage is inadequate. Many
    elderly and disabled Americans enter nursing
    homes and other institutions when they would
    prefer to remain at home. Families exhaust their
    savings trying to provide for disabled relatives.
  • Taken from (The Need for Reform).

4
RISING COSTS
  • Rising health costs mean lower wages, higher
    prices for goods and services, and higher taxes.
    The average worker today would be earning at
    least 1,000 more a year if health insurance
    costs had not risen faster than wages over the
    previous 15 years.
  • More and more Americans have had to give up
    insurance altogether because the premiums have
    become prohibitively expensive.
  • Only one other industrialized country (Canada)
    spends more than 10 of their GDP on health care.
    Japan, France and Germany spend 9 of GDP or
    less, and their costs have not risen nearly as
    rapidly as ours.

5
QUALITY THREATENED
  • No one is accountable for the performance of the
    health care system -- not hospitals, physicians,
    other providers, or health insurers.
  • Quality care means promoting good health. Yet,
    our system waits until people are sick before it
    starts to work. It is biased towards specialty
    care and gives inadequate attention to
    cost-effective primary and preventive care.
  • Some insurers now compete to insure the healthy
    and avoid the sick by determining "insurability
    profiles". They should compete on quality, value,
    and service.
  • Insurance company red tape has created a
    nightmare for providers -- with mountains of
    forms and numerous levels of review that wastes
    money and does nothing to improve the quality of
    care.
  • We have the best doctors who can provide the most
    advanced treatments in the world. Yet people
    often can't get treated when they need care.

6
GROWING COMPLEXITY
  • Purchasing insurance can be overwhelming for
    consumers. With different levels of benefits,
    co-payments, deductibles and a variety of
    limitations, trying to compare policies is
    confusing and objective information on quality
    and service is hard for consumers to find. As a
    result, consumers are vulnerable to unfair and
    abusive practices.
  • Insurers have responded to rising health costs by
    imposing restriction on what doctors and
    hospitals do. A system that was complicated to
    begin with has become incomprehensible, even to
    experts. Each health insurance plan includes
    different exclusions and limitations. Even the
    terms used in health policies do not have
    standard definitions.

7
DECLINING CHOICES
  • Insurance coverage for most Americans is not a
    matter of choice at all. In most cases, they are
    limited to whatever policy their employer offers.
    Only 29 of companies with fewer than 500
    employees offer any choice of plans.
  • With a growing number of insurers using
    exclusions for pre-existing conditions, arbitrary
    cancellations and hidden benefit limitations,
    consumers have few choices for affordable
    policies that provide real protection.

8
Health Care Reform
  • Hilary Clinton proposed a Health Care Reform in
    1993. The plan was denied by Congress. With the
    possibility of Hilary Clinton being Secretary of
    State, Presidential Barack Obama should take
    another look into her Reform.
  • The plan also considers and would work way
    better than what we have now. The plan has six
    basic principles, which are stated in the
  • Principle 1 Security Guaranteed,
    comprehensive, benefits.
  • Principle 2 Controlling Costs
  • Principle 3 Expanding Choice
  • Principle 4 Enhancing Quality
  • Principle 5 Simplicity Reducing paperwork and
    cutting red tape.
  • Principle 6 Responsibility Making everyone
    responsible for health care.

9
Exceptions
  • There are Exceptions are provided for (1) the
    self-employed and independent contractors (2)
    part-time workers who have unearned income (3)
    families with incomes below 150 of the poverty
    level (4) seasonal workers and the unemployed
    and non-working (ltSum-Exp.htmlgt).

10
Thesis
  • It will be argued based on John Stewart Mills
    utilitarian theory that Hilary Clintons Health
    Care Reform is to be considered a moral act.
  • -Importance Since she may be Presidential Elect
    Barack Obamas Secretary of State, he should look
    into her plans for reform.

11
John Stewart Mill
  • J. S. Mill wrote an essay to defend Mill wrote an
    essay called Utilitarianism, He wrote this
    essay to defend and support utilitarianism as a
    moral theory.
  • He defines utilitarianisms main and most
    important principle as actions are right in
    proportion as they tend to promote happiness
    wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of
    happiness. By happiness is intended pleasure and
    the absence of pain by unhappiness, pain and the
    privation of pleasure (John Stewart, p.13)
  • The good as defined by J.S. Mill would be the
    presence of pleasure and the absence of pain, so
    that for Mill determining the proper action
    involves adding up the aggregate of pleasure and
    the absence of pains suffered by the members of
    the community (Garrett, Baillie, Garrett, 2001).

12
Applying Mill
  • The large majority of actions intend the good of
    individuals (including ourselves) rather than the
    good of the world. Yet the worlds good is made
    up of the good of the individuals that constitute
    it (John Stewart Mill, 2007).
  • Which basically means if the majority of an
    individuals actions are considered morally right
    this would make the individual a morally right
    person or as Mill would describe good, rather
    than the worlds actions, although, the overall
    good of the world is made of the amount of good
    people in it. If everyone chipped in and cared
    for one another than this would lessen the burden
    and overall cost of insurance for a particular
    individual who is in a tight position.

13
Continue
  • When we are evaluating whether or not an action
    is good by evaluating the happiness that we can
    expect to be produced by it (John Stewart Mill,
    2007
  • With everyone chipping in and helping each other
    out would result in a decrease of poverty, poor
    living standards, and peoples health. Which
    would minimize the mortality rate than if the of
    the overall American population. Hows is this
    possible you ask? Well with everyone chipping in
    and helping with the cost of insurance of an
    individual would lessen the cost for that person.
    Depending on whether or not the person has
    children the person would be able to afford more
    food, attain a better living condition, and
    relieve stress. Stress is the main contributor to
    most illnesses that are preventable.

14
Continue
  • Which requires Mills utilitarian conscience
    (i.e. a strong feeling of obligation to the
    general happiness) by showing how such a feeling
    can develop out of the natural desire we have to
    be in unity with fellow creaturesa desire that
    enables us to care what happens to them and to
    perceive our own interests as linked with theirs
    (John Stewart Mill, 2007).
  • I found this to mean that an individual could
    base all their actions on how it would affect
    not only themselves but others. , basically
    thinking of others happiness before you. To
    relate this to the argument, if the individuals
    could help out and be responsible for one
    anothers cost of insurance by thinking of
    others, as in putting themselves in each others
    shoes. Now if they had the utilitarian conscience
    they would morally help one another out
    regardless of how much or little health care
    necessities they may use

15
Opposing Argument
  • Basically why should others who do not consume as
    much medical need/health care be required to pay
    or for those who do, and/or have to provide more
    than those less fortunate then themselves?
  • They would then argue on likely argue with John
    Rawls theory. By stating that it would be morally
    wrong, because it would go against Rawls Veil of
    Ignorance. The Veil of Ignorance is to view
    everyone as an equal and not looking at the
    race, ethnicity, gender, age, income, wealth,
    natural endowments, comprehensive doctrine, etc.
    of any of the citizens in society, or to which
    generation in the history of the society these
    citizens belong (Richardson, 2005, p. 6). So
    everyone should pay the same amount regardless of
    employment, income, or marriage. I would refute
    this by stating that it would cause stress on an
    individual who has low income and unable to pay
    as much as a wealthier individual, therefore
    causing pain and inflicting a persons right to
    happiness. Also a person should just do it
    according to Mills utilitarian consciences.

16
Conclusion
  • If the Health Care Reform were to be instated I
    believe it would be very beneficial to the
    American Citizens and legal residents of these
    United States for reasons that are stated above,
    based on Mills utilitarian theory. If it is not
    instated I strongly believe the United States
    economy will continue to worsen and individuals
    will continue to be unhealthy, which would then
    cause the mortality rate to increase.

17
References
  • Clemmitt, M. Universal coverage. (2007, March
    30). CQ Researcher, 17, 265-288. Retrieved
  • September 17, 2008, from CQ Researcher Online,
    http//library.cqpress.com/cqresearcher/cqresrre20
    07033000
  • Exceptions 27 Sept. 1993. Online posting.
    politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov. 2008.
    Sum-Exp.html 
  • Principle 1 Security Guaranteed,
    comprehensive benefits 27 Sep. 1993. Online
    posting. politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov.
    2008. Sum-Pr1.html
  • Principle 2 Savings Controlling health care
    costs. 27 Sep. 1993. Online posting.
    politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov. 2008.
    Sum-Pr2.html
  •  Principle 3 Quality Making the world's best
    care better. 27 Sep. 1993. Online posting.
    politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov. 2008.
    Sum-Pr3.html
  •  Principle 4 Choice Preserving and increasing
    what you have today. 27 Sep. 1993. Online
    Posting. politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov.
    2008. Sum-Pr4.html  
  • Principle 5 Simplicity Reducing paperwork and
    cutting red tape. 27 Sep. 1993. Online Posting.
    politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov. 2008.
    Sum-Pr5.html 
  • Principle 6 Responsibility Making everyone
    responsible for health care. 27 Sep. 1993.
    Online posting. politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on
    18 Nov. 2008. Sum-Pr6.html 
  • The Need for Reform. 27 Sep. 1993. Online
    posting. politics_at_Ibiblio. Retrieved on 18 Nov.
  • 2008. NHS-T-o-C.html
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