Cato on Universal Healthcare

Cato on Universal Healthcare

17 October 2007 · No Comments

An observation made by Michael Tanner on the Cato Institute website caught my eye:

At a recent campaign stop in Iowa, Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards told an audience that under his plan for national health care, preventive care would not just be paid for by the government, it would be mandatory.

Every American would be required to get annual physicals and regular tests such as mammograms and colonoscopies. Although Edwards didn’t spell out the penalties, presumably scofflaws would face fines or worse. It’s easy to make fun of Edwards’ proposal. (Can we look forward to the spectacle of couch potatoes who miss their doctor’s appointments being dragged off in handcuffs?) But we should actually be grateful that Edwards has so clearly illustrated the fundamental question that should be at the heart of any debate over health care reform:

Who decides?

Note—I haven’t fact-checked Mr. Tanner’s interpretation of Edwards’ plan…but I think it is one possible portrayal of what could happen if we start heading down the slippery slope of increased government involvement in personal medical care.

If our tax dollars are at work, the government has (or should have) a vested interest in managing the expenditures. And, when it comes to medicine, such management could involve some obligations on the part of citizens (”you shall go to Doctor So-and-So at 8am on such-and-such a date to be evaluated for your federal health profile….or else”), and/or rationing.

Or, even worse, the government could decline to engage in such management, leading to an ever-increasing tax burden and/or adding to the drag of seemingly out-of-control deficits.

I agree that the idea of ensuring that everyone has the ability to access health care within the resources available to them is extremely attractive. I just get rather uncomfortable with thinking of all the ways a government solution could worsen what we have now…and a bit frustrated by all the discussion of attempting to expand coverage without the important discussion of long-term costs and potential cost-control measures that may be taken.

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