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June 29th marked the official opening of Michael
Moore’s newest mockumentary, Sicko. And in true Moore form, it is
controversial and in-your-face. The subject this time is a critique on the American
Healthcare system, and as before, Moore takes a liberal stance on a pet cause: healthcare
reform. Here is a summary of his proposal:{1}
1. Every American must have full, uninterrupted healthcare
coverage for life.
2. Private, for-profit health insurance companies must be
abolished.
3. Profits of pharmaceutical companies must be strictly
regulated like a public utility.
After researching several movie reviews from every part of
the political spectrum, I am concerned about Moore’s use and misuse of
statistics and convolution of facts that are taken out of context. However, I
think this provides an excellent opportunity to open the discussion on the
Christian perspective on healthcare. I will mainly address the idea of
universal healthcare coverage (Moore’s point 1) and offer a slightly different
perspective on private health insurance companies (Point 2). I’ll save
pharmaceutical company regulation for another article.
The Biblical Perspective
Before we can apply biblical truth to
today’s cultural issues, let’s make sure we know what is biblically clear about
healthcare. Several places in the Bible, God admonishes his people to care for
the “orphans” and “widows.”{2} Orphans and widows are the vulnerable in society.
In today’s society, that status falls mainly to the elderly, the chronically
ill, the poor, etc. The Bible is quite clear about the need to care for these
people as well as an individual’s responsibility in the matter: When you reap your harvest in your
field and have forgotten a sheaf in the field, you shall not go back to get it;
it shall be for the alien, for the orphan, and for the widow, in order that the
Lord your God may bless you in all the work of your hands. When you beat your
olive tree, you shall not go over the boughs again; it shall be for the alien,
for the orphan, and for the widow. When you gather grapes of your vineyard, you
shall not go over it again; it shall be for the alien, for the orphan, and for
the widow. And you shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt; therefore I am commanding you to do this thing.{3}
This principle is exemplified when Boaz allows Ruth to glean
from his field, drink from his water vessels and eat at his table.{4}
The biblical model seems to be that those with plenty are to
take responsibility for those that are vulnerable. While government
intervention is not explicitly mentioned, the mention of orphan- and widow-care
in the Law implies a universal understanding of a duty to care for “the least
of these.” It also seems to indicate that those who are healthy (i.e. who can
work in the field, harvest their own crops, etc.) are to be held accountable
and responsible for themselves. In practical terms, how do we apply this to our
own culture and healthcare systems?
Modern-Day Applications
In Kerby Anderson’s article on National Healthcare,{5} he
suggests three needs in today’s healthcare structure, each related in such a
way that one would perpetuate the others:
The Need for Personal Responsibility
He brings to light an important point about human nature:
when someone else pays, we are less likely to consider the quality and cost
before buying. When the government subsidizes healthcare or health insurance, people
tend to be less thoughtful on cost, and the result is the high prices of healthcare.
“If there were more personal accountability, people would comparison shop and
bring market pressures to bear on some of the healthcare costs.”
I find it fascinating that health insurance requires so
little personal responsibility, while car insurance demands so much. When I buy
car insurance, it is only used in the event of an accident, either caused by nature
or another driver. I have my own account that I use for my basic car care needs
(gas, oil change, registration, tires, cleaning, brakes, etc.). I shop for the
cheapest gas prices, the best “bang for my buck” on oil changes, and will go
out of my way for a cheaper car wash. Why? Because it is coming out of my
pocket. When I was in an accident, the insurance company was paying, so my car
went to the body shop they specified and the company paid the price the shop
requested.Honestly, I was less concerned about how much the insurance company
paid than whether I got my car back in one piece.
Why
is it that most people want insurance to pay for their basic check-ups that occur
annually or biannually? If individuals paid for their “regular maintenance,” this
would not only decrease the cost of health insurance, but it would also free up
some resources for the “orphans” and “widows” of our society so that they, too,
might have regular, preventative healthcare.
The Need for Portability
Anderson continues:
Americans usually cannot take their
health insurance with them if they change jobs. A fair tax system would offer
no tax subsidy to the employer unless the policy was personal and portable. If
it belongs to the employee, then it would be able to go with the employee when
he or she changed jobs…. Health insurance should be personal and portable. After
all, employers don’t own their employees’ auto insurance or homeowner’s
insurance. Health insurance should be no different.{6}
This is a critique on the requirement of employers to
provide health insurance, and also argues for private companies to be made available
to individuals. My husband and I are young, healthy individuals, and were
paying $450 per month on his prior health insurance, until he changed jobs. The
problem is that $450 counted as part of his earnings, and when he left his job,
we lost the amount paid into the insurance. Our car insurance and renter’s insurance
was unaffected by his job change, but our health insurance ceased. We now see
that it would have been more valuable to have a portable insurance option, such
as a private company or a tax-deductible health account into which we would
deposit money directly. This would also tie into the idea of individual
responsibility for one’s health finances, and, again, applies to those that can
afford it while the vulnerable are provided for.
The Need for Price Fairness
Anderson writes:
Price fairness is another issue. Proponents
of socialized medicine would force people with healthy lifestyles into a one-tier
system with people who smoke, drink too much, use drugs, drive irresponsibly,
and are sexually promiscuous. A better system would be one that rewards responsibility
and penalizes irresponsibility. Obviously we should provide for the very young,
the very old, the chronically ill, etc., but we shouldn’t be forced into a
universal risk pool and effectively subsidize the destructive behavior of those
who voluntarily choose sin over righteousness.{7}
Going
back to our car insurance/health insurance comparison, my husband and I have
been with our car insurance company with a clean record for so long that our
rates went down. Also our rates decreased when he turned twenty-five because he
was no longer a “high-risk” driver. This encourages cautious driving and places
the responsibility on the driver. The universal healthcare model does just the
opposite, because no matter your lifestyle, the government will take care of it.
I think if we’re honest with ourselves about human nature, a monetary
compensation or savings for maintaining proper health would be one effective way
to combat behavioral diseases such as obesity and type II diabetes.
Problems with Universal Healthcare, or Why Michael Moore
May Not Know What is Best for the Country
Business Costs
I am no economist or a business analyst, so I will defer to Anderson’s example of Herman Cain, president and CEO of Godfather’s Pizza. Mr. Cain
confronted President Clinton about many of the hidden costs of healthcare
reform that affect businesses. He came with spreadsheets that pointed out just
how much it would cost his business if employer mandates were put in place, and
it also pointed out how President Clinton had vastly underestimated the cost on
businesses.
Or what about Michael Moore’s suggestion of having totally
socialized healthcare? He gives several countries as an example, including France, but never mentions that all of these countries pay significantly higher tax rates
than we do. This would place a burdensome cost on individuals and companies.
As Kerby warns in his article, “Healthcare reform may cost
much more than we think it will. The direct costs may not seem like much, but
don’t forget to count the indirect costs to you and to American business.”
Moral Costs
There are several issues to consider here, but let us focus
on the one that is already taking place in many other countries with socialized
healthcare: rationing. Universal coverage of healthcare increases overall
demand, which means that you will have to decrease the supply of health care
benefits provided to each individual citizen, especially since there is less
profit and hence less reason to increase overall supply. . This is inevitable
in a universal healthcare system, and, as recently reported in the Scotsman,
is already happening in countries with socialized healthcare:
It is no longer possible to provide
all the latest [medical technology] to absolutely everybody without notable
detriment to others…Rationing is reduction in choice. Rationing has become a
necessary evil. We need to formulize rationing to prevent an unregulated,
widening, post code lottery of care. Government no longer has a choice…When it
comes to the list of conditions, it’s all about quality of life. It would be
about the prioritization of clinical need.{8}
A utilitarian approach to a persons’ quality of
life is definitely not within the Christian worldview,{9} but that is precisely
and inevitably the direction of a socialized healthcare system.
Our current healthcare system does have some
flaws, but I do not think throwing government money at the problem is the best
solution. Looking at the biblical model of individual responsibility, we can
glean from the text how God’s timeless truths can be effective when applied to
our culture today.
Notes
1. www.michaelmoore.com
2. Exodus 22:22, Jeremiah 7:6,7, Isaiah 1:17, 1 Timothy 5:3, James 1:27, English Standard Version (ESV).
3. Deuteronomy 24:19-22 (ESV).
4. Ruth 2:8,9,14-16 (ESV).
5. Kerby Anderson, "National Health Care," Probe, 1994, www.probe.org/faith-and-politics/government--public-policy/national-health-care.html.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.
8. Moss, Lyndsay "NHS rationing is 'necessary evil,' say doctors" Scotsman, June 26, 2007, news.scotsman.com.
9. See Kerby Anderson, "Utilitarianism: The Greatest Good for the Greatest Number," 2004, http://tinyurl.com/35eko8
© 2007 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Heather Zeiger graduated magna cum laude from the University of Texas at Dallas with a B.S. in chemistry and a minor in political science. She received her M.S. in chemistry, also from UTD; her research was in organic synthesis and materials. She interned at Probe Ministries prior to graduate school and now serves with Probe as a Research Associate and Program Coordinator. She is married to David, another former Probe intern, and is the mother of one cat.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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