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Fort Wayne: The Case Against Universal Healthcare07/18/08Fort Wayne: The Case Against Universal Healthcare
I think it is because I was spoiled living Fort Wayne, IN. I had the greatest doctor from the moment I was born. Dr. Muhler was awesome. Graduated from Notre Dame. Very knowledgeable. Voted by doctors in his community as the doctor they would most like to be treated by. Heck, his father invented fluoride toothpaste for Proctor & Gamble. Realizing I was coming to Fort Wayne at the end of this month, I figured I would try to schedule a physical with Dr. Muhler, but alas, the next physical appointment available is in November. Ohh well. But this got me thinking, it wasn't just Dr. Muhler. Fort Wayne, as a whole, has an awesome healthcare community. It is a community that no where else I have lived or been to has been able to compete with. If my gallbladder needs to say goodbye to my kidney, I want Dr. Justice yanking that sucker out. If I inadvertently knock somebody up, the first face I want my first child to see is Dr. Alexander. If I get cancer, the person making my body feel on fire due to the chemo had better be Dr. Rhinehart. But this post isn't about all the doctors I psuedo-know. It's about Universal Healthcare. Because it hit me how important having a doctor who is knowledgeable and trustworthy is to your overall health. When we don't feel comfortable with a situation, we are inclined to neglect it. Be it a relationship, or a job, or our healthcare. This would be Universal Healthcare's impact on the American medical community. People are given less options. They feel less in control. And they ultimately become distrustful of the whole process. We then would seek out medical care where we can get control. Just like how I was attempting to get a physical close to 600 miles from my home, so will millions Americans if Universal Healthcare becomes a reality. But instead of 600 miles, it will be 6,000 miles as we leave the country to find our best options. It's called medical tourism, and it would be an inevitable consequence of Universal Healthcare.1 1 comment
There is a bunch of misconceptions about the whole issue of "universal healthcare" going on. One of the biggest ones seems to be that the choice is either business-as-usual or a completely socialized healthcare like UK or Canada. In reality we don't need to (and should not) go the route of NHS.
An universal health insurance would be a much better option. It could be organized in a similar way the Fed or PBS/NPR are organized and it would not lead to more restrictions on choice of doctors than the present system of managed care. Of course neither supplemental private insurance nor privately paying for medical services should be prohibited by law. It is very clear that the present system is far from optimal. Leave a comment |
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