Why the us shouldn t have universal health care?

The idea of free healthcare for all sounds too good to be true, and that’s because it is. While universal healthcare or ‘Medicare for All’ has been a hot button topic in recent years, it’s important to understand the dangerous implications such policies would have on America as we know it.

It’s Just Not Affordable!

While politicians may argue that universal healthcare will save taxpayers money in the long run, this simply isn’t true. In fact, implementing a nationalized health care system could cost upwards of $32 trillion over 10 years without even providing better quality medicine (and who doesn’t love huge debts?)

You’ll still find yourself lining your pockets to fund something you’re not entirely sure works.

Regulated Healthcare Is A Ticking Time Bomb

When the government takes control of anything there are bound to skew results (just like most high school elections). As more people head into emergency departments, provide them with low-quality equipment primarily made somewhere outside US soil behind locked doors, and wait times go up thanks to an increased demand on services, naturally our health care delivery itself begins banging its head against bureaucracy wall numerous times within seconds (healthcare regulators don’t even bother wearing helmets.) That means dependent variables for researchers everywhere!

But what happens when there aren’t enough doctors or facilities available? Patients suffer from misappropriated funds or badly managed budgets allocated by states officials due “mismanaged systems” which affects their inability gaining basic access they need! That translates directly into long waits at clinics and hospitals resulting in harm or delay when patients who require immediate action end up getting referred several times back until all hope seems lost altogether while significant amount someone else paycheck soars beyond imagination minimum wage criteria; magically appearing legislation written only fine print paper just waiting patiently after debate seasons wind down.

Now imagine needing life-saving surgery but having to wait weeks or even months because there aren’t enough doctors to perform it. This scenario is already happening in Canada, where patients can face waits of up to six months for certain procedures (and we want that here?!)

Forget Choice And Personal Responsibility

One of the most fundamental principles underlying America’s foundation is its emphasis on personal responsibility and freedom of choice. However, a nationalized health care system would strip away those values entirely.

Under such policies, the government decides what kind of treatments you are eligible for and how much they cost regardless if you like it or not. You won’t be able choose your doctor either which may lead onto expensive heathcare bills thanks to inexperienced professionals dishing out medical advice only undermining current practices within industry practice standards.

Not being able to decide what’s best for yourself based solely on budget constraints means leaving all ability rational household owners might be afforded while impacting innovation directly. When healthcare providers are incentivized by costs around their services through open markets dynamics available due competition among hospitals – paying attention quickly fades fast as momentum carries us towards blind spending without any insight into sharing results publicly so future generations have more knowledge when making decisions about their own lifesaving experience!

Many advocates argue that people should have access to healthcare no matter their economic status just claiming “it’s humane”. While this seems logical at first glance remember this possibility isn’t free — someone has to pay for it whether insurer obtained from taxes/ pocket insurance options made privy pricing wars against corporate giants’ interests during political haggling seasons nationwide (which often favors only few).

It won’t be long before “non essential medics” see sizable lay-offs since insurers cut down employment /and limit clinic/legal opportunities in efforts keeping costs at bay serving only select group interest biased heavily toward corporations working behind closed doors avoiding transparency regulations many countries enforce strictly.

Our Current System Needs Fixes Not Overhauls

The existing health care system has its fair share of flaws, but that doesn’t mean it needs to be dismantled altogether.

Instead, we should focus on reforms that address the underlying causes of rising healthcare costs such as medical malpractice lawsuits or over-prescription practices happening nationwide every single day/ bad decisions made politically in attempts making compromises affecting large swaths of people only putting theory into practice without doctor’s insight.

These problems can be solved within the current framework more efficiently and at lower costs, so why scrap it for something untested?

Final Thoughts

Universal healthcare might seem like a silver bullet solution for America’s health care woes (trust us its not). While providing affordable and accessible care is important there are better ways to achieve this than by standardizing coverage in one-size-fit-all plan options enforced; lets open up the market to competitors who look beyond margins keeping interest serving hundreds millions worldwide looking for hope when none seemed possible before having option with innovation leading forward together!

Random Posts