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National Health Care By: Barbara LeBlanc

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Title: National Health Care By: Barbara LeBlanc


1
National Health CareBy Barbara LeBlanc
2
Introduction
  • U.S. consumes more than 1.5 trillion in GDP
    annually (Williams)
  • 45 million (15 of) U.S. citizens with health
    care coverage
  • Case Study 40 year-old, Kimberly Cecil
    (Courier-Journal.com)
  • How many other U.S. citizens are in Kimberlys
    situation?
  • The government must step in, but what should they
    do?

3
Thesis
  • It is immoral for the U.S. government to allow
    the current health care system to maintain the
    status quo. Instead, it ought to reform the
    current system based on Aristotles Doctrine of
    the Mean.

4
U.S. Health Care System
  • The United States is the only industrialized
    nation that does not utilize a national health
    care system
  • Loosely defined system (Health Systems)
  • Insurers, providers, employers
  • Citizen tax dollars are utilized to finance
    government programs
  • Medicare, Medicaid, VA
  • Health coverage among people in the U.S. is not
    uniform across the board
  • Some have insurance through employer
  • Some (those who can afford) may purchase their
    own
  • Other go without coverage due to the cost
  • Costly premiums (Barackobama.com)
  • Health insurance premiums have doubled in the
    past eight years rising faster than wages, and
    contribute to over half of all personal
    bankruptcies today caused by medical bills

5
Moral Concern
  • The current U.S. health care system is in
    violation of citizens
  • Moral right to (human) life
  • All persons have a moral right to physical and
    behavioral health care. Access to basic health
    care is a fundamental human right, necessary for
    the development and maintenance of life and for
    the ability of human beings to realize the
    fullness of their dignity (Health Care is a
    Safeguard and a Right to Moral Life)

6
Moral Concern (continued)
  • The current health care system under the managed
    care program contributes to and is responsible
    for the increasing number of uninsured citizens
  • According to the Department of Social Medicine,
    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
    churchill_at_med.unc.edu
  • Describing the U.S. health care system means
    describing managed care under commercial forces.
    Managed care creates new moral tension for
    practitioners, but more importantly, in its
    current form it intensifies the commercialization
    of health expectations and interactions. The
    largely unregulated marketing of health services
    under managed care has been a major factor in the
    increasing number of uninsured citizens, while
    claims for cost reduction through managed care
    are equivocal. Risk-rating practices integral to
    the current medical marketplace thwart concerns
    for justice in allocation and create
    vulnerabilities for almost everyone.

(The United States Health Care System Under
Managed Care. How The Commodification Of Health
Care Distorts Ethics And Threatens Equity. )
7
Aristotle
  • Ethics, as viewed by Aristotle, is an attempt to
    find out our chief end or highest good Such a
    chief end is universally called happiness
    Happiness is
  • Based on human nature
  • Gained from facts of personal experience
  • Lies in the active life of a rational being
  • Expands his notion through analysis of the human
    soul
  • (Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview)

8
Aristotle Part of the Human Soul
  • Irrational shared with animals
  • Rational distinctly human
  • Purely the rational part of the soul which gives
    one intellectual virtue and the ability to
    contemplate, reason logically, and formulate
    scientific principles
  • Rational and irrational
  • Responsible for controlling ones emotions and
    desires (grief, hope, joy, fear)
  • Together create moral virtue and the focus of
    morality
  • (Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview)

9
Aristotle Moral Virtue
  • Is not instinctive, but learned
  • Too much / too little regulation creates problems
    (e.g. The Doctrine of the Mean)
  • Are character traits

(Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview)
10
Aristotle Doctrine of the Mean
  • Moral virtues are desire regulating character
    traits which are at a mean between more extreme
    character traits (or vices).
  • Determined by situation
  • Develop an excessive character trait vice of
    excess
  • Develop a deficit character trait vice of
    deficiency
  • The Mean lies between the excessive extreme and
    the deficit extreme
  • The mean is rationally determined based on the
    relative merits of the situation
  • Finding the mean in any given situation is not a
    mechanical or thoughtless procedure, but requires
    a full and detailed acquaintance with the
    circumstances

(Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview)
11
Aristotle Doctrine of the Mean
  • The mean is rationally determined based on the
    relative merits of the situation. In this case,
    what are the basic health care needs of each
    citizen
  • Affordable care
  • Accessible care
  • Quality of care
  • Flexibility in health care choices
  • Prevention (e.g. regular screenings)

12
Application of The Doctrine of the Mean
  • The Mean as it pertains to health care must
    determine a solution that moves our country away
    from the current system and into a reformed
    system that ensures health insurance/coverage for
    all
  • Proposed health care reform
  • The Center for Health Transformation (CHT)
    founded by former Speaker of the House, Newt
    Gingrich has a movement in place to
  • Accelerate the adoption of transformation health
    solutions and policies that create better and
    more choices at lower cost
  • The CHT is dedicated to creating a 21st century
    intelligent health system one that is aimed to
    save lives and money for all Americans
  • The goal of this 21st century plan is to provide
  • 100 coverage for all, ensure individuals have
    access to the best information to maintain their
    health, improve health outcomes, improve the
    quality of life leading to longer lives at lower
    cost
  • Members of the GOP Doctors Caucus, a forum of
    Republican physicians for the 111th Congress are
    also working on health care reform to
  • Discuss solutions to improve access to quality
    health care that is patient-centered,
    patient-driven focused on affordability,
    portability and choice in health care

(Center for Health Transformation) (Gingrey,
Murphy Form GOP Doctors Caucus)
13
Counter Argument
  • John Stuart Mill Principle of Utility
  • Actions are right in proportion as they tend to
    promote happiness wrong as they tend to produce
    the reverse of happiness
  • We must choose the policy that has the best
    overall results for everyone
  • As far as possible from pain
  • Rich as possible in enjoyment
  • Utilitarianism focus solely on the consequences
    of a an action
  • Does not take into account ones own self
    interest but instead the interest of others over
    ones own
  • Greatest good for the greatest number
  • (John Stuart Mill Overview)

14
Counter Argument
  • Jeremy Bentham Principle of Utility
  • Recognized the role of pain and pleasure in human
    life
  • Approves or disapproves of an action on basis of
    the amount of pain or pleasure brought about
    (e.g. consequences)
  • Equates good with pleasure and evil with pain
  • Asserts that pleasure and pain are capable of
    quantification (e.g. measure)
  • Measuring pleasure and pain, Bentham introduces
    the following criteria
  • Intensity, duration, (un) certainty,
    nearness/farness
  • Actions that affect numbers of people, we must
    account for its extent

(Utilitarian Theories)
15
Application of the Principle of Utility
  • Revamping the entire U.S. population into a newly
    formed health care system may appear to be the
    best answer for all, however conversion will not
    be without pain (As of now, the government has
    not provided clear answers)
  • Application of Jeremy Benthams criteria to
    health care reform
  • Intensity
  • How can the government feasibly ensure all
    citizens have medical coverage?
  • Duration
  • How long is a citizen able to utilize the 21st
    century health care system?
  • Are there age requirements?
  • Uncertainty
  • Who will pay for the health care reform?
  • Will American taxes go up to pay for the new
    system which ensures all citizens health care
    coverage?
  • How will the government go about converting all
    citizens to a new system?
  • How will the government ensure all citizens
    receive the coverage they are promised?
  • Will citizens have the ability to choose their
    doctor?
  • Nearness/farness
  • How long will it be before the government acts to
    instate health care reform?
  • Extent
  • To what extent will citizens be covered?
  • What if a citizen has a pre-existing condition at
    the time of conversion?

16
Disproving the Principle of Utility
  • At this time, the government has not provided
    clear answers to the feasibility of a health care
    reform.
  • Health care reform should not be viewed as a
    means to happiness, but as The Mean itself
  • The government will not make 100 of the U.S.
    citizens happy by keeping the current system or
    reforming it
  • There is not a one-size fits all solution, but
  • Reform is the best solution
  • As previously stated
  • The Mean is determined based on relative merits
    to the situation
  • Each U.S. citizen is valuable and should be
    afforded the moral law of Right to (human) life
  • Finding the mean for health care reform is not
    a mechanical or thoughtless procedure, but
    requires a full and detailed acquaintance with
    the circumstances
  • The government must put together a strategic plan
    and methodically lay it out to ensure accessible,
    affordable, and quality health care coverage for
    all

(Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview)
17
Conclusion
  • The current U.S. health care system is broken
  • Immoral for U.S. government to allow our current
    program to continue
  • Current U.S. health care system in need of reform
  • Strategic plan must be implemented to ensure the
    Right to human life and affordable, accessible,
    quality health care for all citizens in America

18
References
  • Affordable, accessible coverage options for all
    (pg 6). (n.d.). Barack Obama and Joe Bidens Plan
    to Lower Health Care Costs and Ensure Affordable,
    Accessible Healthcare Coverage for Aall.
    Retrieved February 7, 2009, from
  • http//www.barackobama.com/pdf/issues/HealthCareF
    ullPlan.pdf
  • (slide 4)
  • Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Overview. (2006).
    Retrieved January 24, 2009, from website
    http//www.iep.utm.edu/a/aristotl.htm
  • (slide 7 10, 16)
  • Center for Health Transformation. (n.d.). About
    the Center. Retrieved April 16, 2009, from
    website http//www.healthtransformation.net/cs/tr
    ansforming_healthcare
  • (slide 12)
  • Courier-Journal.com. (2008, July 20). As Health
    Insurance Premium Rises, Working Mom drops
    Coverage. Retrieved April 4, 2009, from website
    http//www.courier-journal.com/cjextra/healthinsur
    ance/stories/cecil.html
  • (slide 2)
  • Gingrey, Murphy form GOP Doctors Caucus. (2009,
    March 13). Retrieved April 16, 2009 from
    website http//gingrey.house.gov/News/DocumentPri
    nt.aspx?DocumentID114470
  • (slide 12)
  • Growing Support For Universal Health Care. (2008,
    March 19). Retrieved February 7, 2009, from
    http//www.insurancespecialists.com/?industry-arti
    cles/?universal-health-care/
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