Healthcare Coverage: Unequal based on Wealth

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In a perfect world all patients would receive the same level of healthcare and they would all be treated equally based on their illness. Although, living in a capitalist society not everything is meant to be equal. Our country was founded by settlers looking to escape from punitive taxation and were looking to be free from all other countries and start a new country. The United States is known as the place for people to chase the American Dream, where you work hard and the fruits of your labor can potentially payoff, overwhelmingly in some cases. However, not everyone can or will realize their American Dream since space is limited at the top. The richest Americans are able to enjoy larger homes, nicer cars, and lavish vacations. These are material items, but there is something else that they are able to buy that is not material, that is the right to life. The best healthcare can be viewed as subjective, but having more money you can buy almost anything, including the best care and options that people with less resources cannot. Therefore, people at all income levels experience different levels of healthcare. Many Americans are given access to healthcare, including those living in poverty, but that does not mean they receive the best or equal care as those who are wealthy, which is unethical.

Even if we lived in a capitalist society where everyone had access to the same basic healthcare program, the rich would arguably still be able to afford better care. The wealthy are able to pay more in co-payments, prescription costs, and the ability to go outside of the healthcare system and travel elsewhere to seek help. When you have disposable resources then the sky is the limit, where the poor have very limited options. Th...

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...never the government talks about positive rights a portion of the country will express distention, but this would be a utilitarian idea and many people would benefit from this change. Unfortunately, there is no magical switch that can be flipped to have healthcare equality in the United States overnight, but over time with a public healthcare program we can ensure that everyone is given the same basic care and continue working toward healthcare equality.

Works Cited

Liz, S. (n.d). Hospital inequalities widen the care gap. USA Today.

Income Inequalities , Health and the Garrison State by Christopher Schaefer

Dracup, K., & Morris, P. E. (2007). GLOBAL POVERTY: A CHALLENGE FOR CRITICAL CARE. American Journal Of Critical Care, 16(6), 528-530.

Schaefer, C. (2012). Mind the Gap wealth disparities, the deficit and our economic future. Lilipoh, 17(66), 50-53.

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