Universal Health Care Research Paper

899 Words2 Pages

The U.S is one of the only industrialized nations that does not have universal health care. United States healthcare is one of the most expensive in the world. The state does not cover you and you are expected to purchase your own or get it covered through your work or college, which is much cheaper than obtaining your own. Millions of American’s around the world struggle to obtain this healthcare in order to afford going to the doctor’s when they’re sick or be prepared if there is ever a medical emergency. This is a problem for many reasons. First off, there are so many different types of doctors and facilities that can care for you but the smaller businesses/doctor’s offices are very specific and will only accept certain types of insurance. …show more content…

About 29 percent have some form of public insurance (Medicaid, Medicare, other public), and 16 percent are uninsured. This final percentage amounts to almost 50 million Americans, including 8 million children, who lack health insurance.” (open.lib.umn.edu). This is clearly a huge problem and the main solution is to cut back costs somewhere else in the budget where we can afford to do so. For example early elective deliveries, births Lucas 2 planned with no medical reason in between 37 and 39 weeks of pregnancy. The frequency of these dangerous deliveries seamlessly exemplifies our country unnecessarily spending large amounts of money. “Excessive and unneeded care makes up for anywhere from “hundreds of billions of dollars, in addition to the half-a-trillion per year experts attribute to lost productivity and disability.” (itechsolutions.in) Early elective deliveries hurt the newborn child and …show more content…

Governor Shumlin devised a plan for producing a single-payer style system, called Green Mountain Care, by 2017. Contrasting to the Affordable Care Act, where there are no uncertainties about omitting millions of individuals from access to coverage and care, this new act assures universal access for all citizens. It will also provide health care as a public service for everyone, funded through reasonable, tax-based contributions. If somebody has absolutely no insurance, the doctors working in the hospital won’t deny them access if it is an absolute emergency of course. Their services must be paid for one way or another so it gets pushed on to the people with insurance therefore they will have higher insurance payments or higher deductibles. “In the years before Obamacare, a whopping $42 billion in health care costs was left unpaid.

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