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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In three pages this paper presents a summary, synopsis, and writer’s personal reflections on director Michael Moore’s 2007 film Sicko. One source is listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGmmsicko.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
2007, he took on the global healthcare system in his documentary appropriately entitled Sicko. This films primary theme is to plead the case for universal citizen healthcare by comparing
the U.S. for-profit system with nonprofit universal healthcare in Canada, Great Britain, France, and Cuba. Moore takes a stand unpopular particularly among political conservatives when he portrays the socialized
nonprofit approaches as far more humane and mutually beneficial than the capitalistic U.S. system, which provides freedom of choice only for the fortunate few who can either afford the price
or receive coverage for their specific medical conditions. Moore offers commentary and dramatic examples of Americans who have healthcare packages, but what they are receiving is either inadequate or ridiculously
expensive. As a result, many of the interviewed subjects have either compromised the types of treatment they receive, or are forced into foreclosure and bankruptcy in long-term care or
costly surgical scenarios. He provides a historical primer on how healthcare maintenance organizations evolved in the United States during the early 1970s when Richard Nixon was President. A
magnetic tape recording of Nixons legal counsel John Ehrlichman apprising the President of the for-profit Kaiser Permanente organization is played. It says, in part: "Edgar Kaiser is running his
Permanente deal for profit. And the reason he can do it, I had Edgar Kaiser come in and talk to me about this. And I went into it
in some depth. All the incentives are toward less medical care, because the less care they give them, the more money they make" (Moore, 2007). Nixons pro-business stance
naturally favored support for Kaiser Permanente, which is now the largest HMO in the United States. As the film reveals, its financial success led to the emergence of other
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