The Turn to the Local: The Possibility of Returning Health Care to the Community

It is not too early to suggest that the attempts to place medical care in private hands (through group insurance arrangements) has not fulfilled its promise-or better, the promises that were made for it. Yet history has not been kind to plans to make government the single payer, and the laudable pro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Business ethics quarterly 2002-10, Vol.12 (4), p.505-526
1. Verfasser: Newton, Lisa H.
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container_title Business ethics quarterly
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creator Newton, Lisa H.
description It is not too early to suggest that the attempts to place medical care in private hands (through group insurance arrangements) has not fulfilled its promise-or better, the promises that were made for it. Yet history has not been kind to plans to make government the single payer, and the laudable progress in medical technology has placed high-technology medical care beyond the reach of most private budgets. In this paper I suggest that the major problem of the U.S. health care system as presently conceived is a failure of legitimacy, and I put forward a proposal that purports to solve that problem. The proposal is to localize health care, on the model of a public school system, on the argument that such localization will answer most of the questions of legitimacy at the core of the private insurance imbroglio, provide a brake for medical costs, while preserving our ability to take advantage of the most advanced medical interventions. I present some initial arguments for the proposal, but await its proof in the dialogue emerging as the present insurance system collapses.
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source MEDLINE; Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Bioethics
Business ethics
Business studies
Community
Community care
Delivery of Health Care - economics
Delivery of Health Care - trends
Democracy
Employer provided health insurance
Ethics
Ethics, Business
Financing, Government
Group insurance
Health care
Health care costs
Health care industry
Health Care Reform - economics
Health Care Reform - ethics
Health Care Reform - organization & administration
Health insurance
Health maintenance organizations
Health Maintenance Organizations - economics
Health Maintenance Organizations - legislation & jurisprudence
Homeowners insurance
Industry - ethics
Insurance
Insurance companies
Insurance providers
Insurance, Health
Lawyers
Local Government
Medical technology
Medically Uninsured
Medicare
Medicine
Physicians
Private Sector
Proposals
Public Sector
Reforms
Reimbursement Mechanisms
Schools
Social Justice
U.S.A
United States
title The Turn to the Local: The Possibility of Returning Health Care to the Community
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