Jamil Zaki Caring About Tomorrow Summary

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Jamil Zaki: “Caring About Tomorrow” The healthcare reform debate has been recurring in the United States for decades, with proponents and opponents fiercely advocating their positions. At the heart of this discourse lies the concept of universal healthcare, a system in which every individual, regardless of their socioeconomic status, has access to essential medical services. Ideally, everyone in the United States would be able to have their annual check-up, get treatment for chronic diseases, get their teeth cleaned, vision checked, or sicknesses treated, regardless of whether they can afford it or not. When healthcare is treated as a commodity rather than a right, the most vulnerable members of society become absent from the care they need. …show more content…

Ryan Crowley, a senior associate at the American College of Physicians with a history of advocacy for a variety of topics under the umbrella of healthcare, illustrates how lack of affordability is at the forefront of our current healthcare system. The “affordability of coverage” is a common reason for remaining uninsured. Factors that contribute to the affordability of health care include prices of goods and services, premiums, copayments, deductibles, coinsurance, type of health care coverage (employer-based, third party, or government), and benefits included with the plan” (14). To plainly put it, there is no component of an insurance plan that can be considered affordable, especially when you add it all up. Even measures designed to reduce those who are left out to dry with no insurance, like the Affordable Care Act of 2010, which reduced the number of those who were uninsured significantly, leaves a large number of Americans uninsured (Crowley 5). Crowley is demonstrating how currently our best efforts, aren’t good enough and it is a hard truth to hear. It doesn’t make sense that America is considered a positive outlier when it comes to investing and advancements within healthcare, but it still has a large proportion of citizens who cannot afford to access it. Make it make sense to me. At its core, the universal healthcare debate reflects our collective empathy toward both present and future generations, emphasizing our shared responsibility to prioritize the well-being of all members of society. Jamil Zaki, a professor of psychology at Stanford University, who focuses on studying empathy and kindness in the human brain, urges us to stop and think about how beneficial empathy cannot only be for our generation now but down the road as well. In his article, “Caring About Tomorrow”, Zaki articulates, “Crucially, even if empathy is

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