This is a blog for the Mental Health Policy Class at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.

July 21, 2007

Healing Healthcare (LA Times)

VOTERS IN THE United States rank healthcare second only to Iraq as an issue of concern in the presidential campaign. Close to 45 million people in this country lack healthcare coverage, including 6.5 million in California — roughly 17% of the state's population. Increasingly, Americans realize that our healthcare system, which at $2 trillion a year represents 18% of GDP, with spending expected to double by 2016, is probably unsustainable. That adds up to an economic crisis that must command the attention of the 18 candidates with serious aspirations to become the next president. . . .
The cost question is a painful one because it inevitably leads to the question of sacrifice. If everyone is going to be covered, every treatment probably won't be. Clear conversation on this, however, begins with the recognition that this country already rations healthcare — those without insurance routinely go without care.The complexity of the country's healthcare crisis makes it difficult to debate in the rapid-fire exchanges that too often characterize our modern political campaigns. So it is all the more important that candidates present substantive proposals. America has a chance to grapple with this fundamental issue now. If we succumb instead to slogans, we will long regret it.

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