Argumentative Essay: Universal Health Care In The United States

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There are 47.9 million people in the United States, which is 15.4% of the population, that did not have health insurance in 2012 according to the US Census Bureau. The United States and Mexico are the only two countries of the 34 members of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development that do not have universal health care. Proponents of the right to health care say that no one in the richest nation on earth should go without health care. They argue that a right to health care would stop medical bankruptcies, improve public health, reduce overall health care spending, help small businesses, and that health care should be an essential government service. Opponents argue that a right to health care amounts to socialism and that …show more content…

Despite all the rights and privileges and entitlements that Americans enjoy today, we have never decided to provide medical care for everybody who needs it. In the world’s richest nation, we tolerate a health care system that leads to large numbers of avoidable deaths and bankruptcies among our fellow citizens. Efforts to change the system tend to be derailed by arguments about “big government” or “free enterprise” or “socialism” and the essential moral question gets lost in the shouting. All the other developed countries on earth have made a different moral decision. All the other countries like us, that is, wealthy, technologically advanced, industrialized democracies guarantee medical care to anyone who gets sick. Countries that are just as committed as we are to equal opportunity, individual liberty, and the free market have concluded that everybody has a right to health care and they provide it. One result is that most rich countries have better national health statistics—longer life expectancy, lower infant mortality, better recovery rates from …show more content…

In comparative studies of health system performance in twenty-three developed nations, the Commonwealth Fund, a private U.S. foundation dedicated to promoting a better U.S. health care system, ranked the USA last when it comes to providing universal access to medical care. When the World Health Organization rated the national health care systems of 191 countries in terms of “fairness,” the United States ranked fifty-forth. That put us slightly ahead of Chad and Rwanda, but just behind Bangladesh and the Maldives. (Reid, T. R., The Healing of America. New York: Penguin, 2009, pp. 2-3, para. 2.) But one of the most difficult aspects of the health care industry right now is the billing issues. Doctors must contend with multiple insurance plans, multiple diagnosis coding for billing purposes, and it must all be done within a certain amount of time for proper compensation to be had. Universal health care would eliminate many of these issues because there would be less overall competition for the insurance

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