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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The vicious cycle that keeps low income families from attaining adequate - and oftentimes any - health care is both grand and far-reaching; low-end jobs may not offer employee benefits, and having the wage earner foot the cost of insurance premiums is entirely out of the question when getting food on the table is a struggle. To get a better paying job requires better skills and, in many cases, the ability to read and write. As such, a most viable long-term approach for attaining health care is to empower low income, low literate individuals the opportunity to learn the basic skills necessary for self-improvement so they can land a job with insurance benefits. In the short-term, however, these individuals must also be educated as to preventive strategies for keeping themselves healthy so they do not cause the need for avoidable medical issues, especially when they have such potentially life-threatening conditions as diabetes. Because the "system" does not make it an easy process to attain health care for low income families, they have to learn to keep themselves healthy in order to decrease the need for inaccessible insurance. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCHlthCrLwInc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
wage earner foot the cost of insurance premiums is entirely out of the question when getting food on the table is a struggle. To get a better paying job
requires better skills and, in many cases, the ability to read and write. As such, a most viable long-term approach for attaining health care is to empower low income,
low literate individuals the opportunity to learn the basic skills necessary for self-improvement so they can land a job with insurance benefits. In the short-term, however, these individuals must
also be educated as to preventive strategies for keeping themselves healthy so they do not cause the need for avoidable medical issues, especially when they have such potentially life-threatening conditions
as diabetes. Because the "system" does not make it an easy process to attain health care for low income families, they have to learn to keep themselves healthy in
order to decrease the need for inaccessible insurance. Being that United States insurance companies "are unwilling to reimburse centers and patients for preventive
care" (Klotter, 2007, p. 26), the responsibility falls to community and government subsidies as the primary ways in which to increase the number of centers that promote research and practice
of health communication. Ideally, these centers would duplicate the existing Charles B. Wang Community Health Center in New York, a facility that focuses upon the educational element of early
detection and treatment for such diabetic-related complications as retinopathy. The Center is part of New Yorks Asian community and caters to Chinese Americans by providing educational workshops and a
media campaign (Anonymous, 2004). These types of centers, which have already put New York diabetics on the radar screen, will continue to do so as long as the ever-important
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