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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 11 page paper discussing the likely effects of the "public option" in US health insurance reform. A "public option" in health insurance has the ability to affect all sectors of the economy, even as it crowds out private-sector insurance. As Obama has said in the past, the public option is the single "best" route to socialized – i.e., single payer – medicine. On the way, it affects the entire economy. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Page Count:
11 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CJ6_KSeconHlthCrRef.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
his address to the joint session of Congress on September 9, the president said, "Insurance executives dont do this because theyre bad people, they do it because its profitable," 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. The figure is irrelevant, however, in that if there is any public option available to any citizen, the Constitution will require that it be available
to anyone requesting it. Citizenship will not be an excluding factor (Napolitano, 2009). A "public option" in health insurance has the ability
to affect all sectors of the economy, even as it crowds out private-sector insurance. As Obama has said in the past, the public option is the single "best" route
to socialized - i.e., single payer - medicine. On the way, it affects the entire economy. Reform Efforts 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. The White House has given up on the
public option for the moment, but that move of giving up likely will last only until a bill is passed when it then can be restated by executive order. How
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