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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 12 page paper which critically focuses on the U.S. healthcare policy, evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of its functioning, and considers its future direction. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGushealth.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
(Kronenfeld, 2002). Perhaps this is one of those gray ideological areas between federal and state authority upon which leaders have been unwilling to tread. The matter of establishing
a U.S. healthcare policy has traditionally been treated by the power elite as either a hot potato or a problem that if ignored long enough will eventually go away.
However, on Capitol Hill, the issue looms ever larger like the proverbial elephant in the room apparently no one wants to acknowledge or take responsibility for. Perhaps the best
way to critically examine healthcare policy in the United States, as it presently exists, is to consider it within a historical context. Contrary to popular belief, Americas founding fathers did
recognize the need for a healthcare policy, but were uncertain how to implement one constitutionally. President John Adams took an important first step when he signed the Act for
Sick and Disabled Seamen in 1798 (Hilliard and Yon, 2005). The fifth Congress passed this legislation that provided for proper medical care in existing facilities and also authorized the
construction of additional hospitals, to be financed by deductions from the seamens wages (Hilliard and Yon, 2005). This was the first of many attempts at generating what would hopefully
evolve into a comprehensive U.S. healthcare policy for all Americans, but the public furor regarding President Adamss controversial initiative demonstrated what a prickly political subject this would become. Throughout the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, there was nothing remotely resembling a healthcare policy in the United States, so when the popular ex-President Theodore Roosevelt again ran for the nations top
office as an independent with the Bull Moose Party, he incorporated the need for health insurance for all Americans as an integral part of his platform (Kronenfeld, 2002). Again,
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