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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper discussing the health insurance debate within healthcare reform discussions, featuring president Obama's speech to a joint session of congress. Though certainly changes need to be made, only what's broken needs to be fixed. Certainly we do not also need to be scrapping the high quality care available to most for mediocre care available to all. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CJ6_KSpolObaHlthc.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
dont do this because theyre bad people, they do it because its profitable." So says president Obama in tonights speech to a joint session of congress, with "this" being
selecting for healthier individuals, favoring large businesses and "cherrypicking" those they choose to serve. Also in the September 9 speech, Obama gave up the figure of 47 million uninsured,
whittling that number to 30 million as perhaps his administration gives up on the goal of including illegal aliens in the government insurance program the Obama administration seeks to push
into law. It appears that the goal of totally reforming all of US healthcare has been shelved, with the focus now being exclusively
on health insurance. The nameless, faceless "government" seeks to provide what it describes as a public option, effectively placing government in direct competition with all of the health insurers
of the United States. Though certainly changes need to be made, only whats broken needs to be fixed. Certainly we do not also need to be scrapping the
high quality care available to most for mediocre care available to all. On the one hand, "something" needs to be done. A
good first step would be with torte reform so that physicians are not required to order expensive and often unnecessary tests for defense in future frivolous lawsuits, while retaining the
ability to hold all providers accountable for their actions. Another would be to take government out of the healthcare business in the form of Medicare reform, but that likely
will not happen because true progress on that front effectively would be political suicide for all of congress. On the other hand, neither do we need to destroy whats
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