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It is time for America to join civilized world in field of health care
Tuesday, 30 January 2007 14:26

Bill Walz
"Arnold-Care" has center stage in the growing debate about the health care crisis in the country.
The governor of California is proposing a method to extend health care through a system of universal health insurance. "My solution is that everyone in California must have insurance," he stated. "If you canët afford it, the state will help you buy it, but you must be insured."

This is very much like the program passed in Massachusetts, another liberal state with a Republican governor. President Bush has even thrown his hat, full of tax credits for health insurance, into the ring.
I applaud any attempt to remedy the shame of 47 million Americans without health insurance, but health insurance does not equate to good health care. Being missed entirely is that there are many, many more millions who have pathetically inadequate health insurance and that many who have it are being financially drained by premiums, deductibles and out-of-pocket costs.

America spends considerably more per capita on health care than any other country in the world and yet we lag far behind all advanced countries in the delivery of health services. Health-care costs are bankrupting individuals and businesses and costing American businesses competitive equity with foreign businesses that do not have to pay health costs for their workers. Access to insurance isnët the issue, comprehensive health care that isnët an unnecessary financial drain on this countryës citizens and businesses is.

When are we going to stop playing games with this issue? The problem with health care in America is that the profits of insurance, pharmaceutical and hospital corporations and the personal wealth of physicians and malpractice attorneys are valued above the well-being of the citizenry. Sure, we may get a patchwork of state-run programs dictating that, like auto insurance, every person must have health insurance, but that is a band-aid over a gaping wound.

Once again, the real issue is money in politics. The current debate is being driven by the real money players looking to protect their interests, not the American people. The wealthy corporations and professionals that fund campaigns are dictating health-care reform for their benefit and not the citizensë needs, and so, politicians sensing the people want something done, are coming up with plans written by these powerful special interests. Itës called more money to the insurance and health care corporations and the shifting of business costs to the government.


There is one plan free of such duplicity that really addresses the problem. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts has proposed national universal coverage based in the expansion of Medicare to everyone. It is a single-payer system, cutting out the insurance middle-men taking their exorbitant cut. It would allow for real cost management and actually expand provider choice over the current managed-care system since every medical provider would be paid through the same system.


The opponents drag out their tax boogey-man, screaming that this will require tax increases.

Americans have to understand that insurance premiums and exorbitant costs by providers are taxes levied by the capitalist market system. I guarantee the government single-payer system will not cost nearly as much in taxes as everyone is paying in insurance premiums and out-of-pocket costs. And it will be immensely fairer.


It is about time America joined the rest of the civilized world and realized that amongst a societyës responsibilities to its citizens is health care, every bit as much as policing the streets, picking up the garbage and defending the borders. Can we get over this mindless allegiance to capitalism even when it harms us? Can we recognize that health care is a right, and protecting the profits of corporations and wealthy professionals is not the duty of the government?


If you agree, contact Kennedy and your representatives telling them that you support the Kennedy expansion of Medicare plan, a real national health plan, not a plan to push more money to insurance and health care corporations. Do it for your own good and the health of the country.

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Bill Walz is a UNC Asheville adjunct faculty member and a private practice teacher of mindfulness, personal growth and consciousness. Contact at bill.walz-at-worldnet.att.net or 258-3241.

 



 


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