Needed: Health Care for Debilitated Reasoning
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
The local newspaper
reprinted a column from the New York Times, with which it
is in ideological lockstep. It appeared in the editorial section
of the paper, which I would not ordinarily give a second glance.
The headline is what got me: All Children Should Be Covered From
Birth. Was this an editorial about blankets for babies?
What the author
meant by "covered" is "insured." While the idea
of increased government funding for medical care (for that is what
was meant, of course) is not new, I found the article interesting
as a good example of the statist approach to society.
I was about
to write "the statist approach to the problems of society,"
when I realized that, to the dedicated statist, problems abound,
but even if they don’t, they can be, and are, invented. Is the lack
of government health insurance for children a problem? Only two
cases are cited, and one of them was a child with cancer. The author
assures us that two cases cited are among "millions of youngsters"
who, presumably, suffer as a result of the lack of government health
insurance for kids. We’ll have to take his word for it.
I recall when
Medicare went into effect, in 1965, about a year after I’d opened
my medical practice. Was there a problem that Medicare addressed?
I hadn’t been aware of one. People could obtain medical care at
little or no cost at various institutions throughout the city. Indeed,
like many of my colleagues, I volunteered some time each week at
free clinics operated by local hospitals. If Medicare filled some
need in society back then, it was only because a "need"
was created and exaggerated by those who were determined that we
should have Medicare, necessary or not.
The same thing
seems to be happening with Medicare for children. I was impressed
by the slick way this "need" was simply assumed, as though
any contrary view was simply too preposterous to countenance. For
example, the headline: All Children Should Be Covered From Birth.
Sure, why not. All children should be healthy. They should be educated
(more money for schools?). They should be loved (or killed in utero
if they might not be?). They should be warm in winter, cool in summer,
well dressed, well fed (aid to dependent children?).
But let’s not
stop there. How about this one: when they are old enough to earn
a living, all (former!) children should be able to keep what they
earn! Whoops! Now that’s going too far! It’s all perfectly fine
to talk about a right to health care, education, housing, etc.,
but a right to one’s property is reactionary, anti-social, and selfish.
In the two
cases given as examples, the mothers of the sick boys (No fathers
are mentioned. Shouldn’t all children have fathers?) were described
as being unable to get medical coverage for their children, although,
in the first case, some sort of state aid was provided, until the
bureaucrats "fouled up," suggesting that bureaucratic
failure, not cancer, killed the boy. This is because "the U.S.
has no coherent system of health coverage for children." That’s
odd, isn’t it? Here in St. Louis, we have three hospitals dedicated
entirely to pediatric patients. I don’t know if that makes the care
provided "coherent" or not, because I don’t know how coherence
relates to medical care. Throughout the country, there are many
pediatric hospitals. If this abundance of available pediatric care
is not "coherent," would the use of force to compel Americans
to provide health care for some American children add coherence?
Would it be improper to note that Americans SHOULD be free?
After forty-two
years of Medicare, can it be shown that older Americans are healthier
than they were before Medicare was thrust upon them? If so, are
they spending less for medical care? Has their improved health resulted
in less spending for drugs? For nursing homes? For walkers, crutches,
and wheelchairs?
To paraphrase
Field of Dreams: if you provide it, they will use it. Expanding
Medicare to include children might benefit some children, but the
biggest beneficiary, by far, will be Uncle Sam, with additional
bureaucrats, new offices and officers, a few new under-Secretaries
of Health, and a wonderful excuse to spend, spend, spend.
The surest
way to see that people get what they SHOULD have would be to place
Uncle where he SHOULD be: out to pasture.
August
25, 2007
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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