Medical Ethics: People or Profits?
In Almeda County, a private hospital turned away a woman in labor because the hospital's
computer showed that she didn't have insurance. Hours later, her baby was born dead in a
county hospital.
In San Bernardino, a hospital surgeon sent a patient who had been stabbed in the heart to
a county medical center after examining him and declaring his condition stable. The
patient arrived at the county medical center dying, he suffered a cardiac arrest, and
died.
These two hospitals shifted these patients to county facilities not for medical reasons,
but for economic ones -- the receiving hospitals feared they wouldn't be paid for
treating the patient. What's right? People or profit?
Should there be death or tragedy at the result of poverty and high health care costs, or
should a business such as a hospital lose millions everyday to give health care to those
who can't afford it? An average person like me would feel for the person who could not
afford sufficient health insurance, and as in the case above, the baby inside that
mother's womb didn't choose its financial situation, or its parents. That baby didn't
ask to be born, and it wasn't given a chance to live. It wasn't necessarily the doctors
fault, and it wasn't even his or her decision, because of business. Business has moved
to the heart of health care, a place once relatively cushioned from the pursuit of profit
that drives the rest of the U.S. economy. Throughout the history of the United States,
medical institutions have largely been non-profit establishments existing primarily to
serve the community. But during the past 20 years, the number of for-profit health care
facilities has grown at an exceeding rate.
I think that a society as wealthy as ours has a moral obligation to meet the basic needs
of all of its members. I believe that every American, rich or poor, should have access
to the health care he or she needs, but the rising costs of care and a growing
unwillingness of insurance companies to cover these costs, along with government spending
in other areas, have almost totally restricted access to health care for the poor, the
aged, and those with tragic health problems.
I pointed out earlier that an unborn child shouldn't be turned down for health care, but
neither should a man with a knife through his heart. It is getting harder and harder for
the aged and those with tragic health problems that can afford health insurance, to even
get insured. Take an AIDS patient for example, as of right now, there is no cure and he
is going to die. But how can he pay for the drugs and treatment to prolong his life
without sufficient health care that will cover him when he's healthy, and also when he's
dying. There are millions of cases, the boy who needs a new heart, the elderly man with
a broken hip, or how about a girl playing hopscotch that was a victim of a drive by
shooting. I believe the U.S. has got to find a system where people will have a chance
and a choice to get the health care they deserve. Most people don't deserve to die, and
most doctors don't deserve to make such a high profit from their services. If the
services of doctors of any type become scarce, we as a society will be forced to pay
higher prices for them, but these services are not scarce, the money people have to pay
for them is.
The commercialization of medicine will lead to the abandonment of certain virtues and
ideals that are necessary to a moral community. We have to have a sense of caring,
compassion, and charity toward those that have had less of a chance to succeed. If you
put yourself in the shoes of the people in the cases I've mentioned, you'd want to jump
out of them as soon as you could. I believe that this case comes right down to human
life and greed. I believe our society has marked the poor class as unneeded and
worthless. Why spend money on someone if they don't help you out in some way? The
people who think this way obviously don't think of these people as being human beings,
having feelings, wants, and in this case needs. When people need medical treatment to
save their life, who they are, should not be important. I think that some doctors see so
much of life and death from a physical standpoint, that the emotions of these people fade
to an invisible lining. That invisible lining is their life. That lining is what makes
us human.
Proponents of for-profit enterprise in health care support their position by maintaining
that all persons have a basic right to freedom and thus a right to use their property in
ways they freely choose. They argue that owners of for-profits have no special
obligation to provide free services to the poor. They think that it is being wrongly
assumed that for-profits impose a burden on non-profits by not taking the costs of caring
for the poor. They say that they, unlike non-profit, pay taxes, and in doing so, can be
said to pay their share in serving the poor through tax-supported public programs.
For-profit proponents also would like to argue the health care is a lot like food,
clothing and shelter. Just as these "basic needs" are sold on the market and distributed
according to ability to pay, so too should health care. They think that if some cannot
afford to pay for such basic needs, it is up to the government or voluntary agencies to
see that they secure it.
I believe that for-profit hospitals have gone to the extreme with their rules and
regulations. They do have an obligation just as the rest of the tax payers of this
country to care for the less fortunate. A person can get by with minimal food, clothing
and shelter, but they can't get away with minimal or no health care in their times of
trouble. The government should work on coming up with a solution to this issue, but they
should first focus on the individual businesses like the for-profit hospitals that are
giving up human life for money.
So, I'm asking you, how much are you worth? How much is your life and all that comes
with it, worth? How much is a human life worth? Ten dollars, maybe even a hundred? Of
course you can't answer this question. It is impossible and totally unethical to place a
cost or dollar amount on a human life. If you take that body away, you are still left
with a soul, or what that soul once was. Nothing can replace it, and a doctor or
business men or women, have no right to stop care for an injured person because of their
financial status. Medical businesses can't turn people into money. In this case, a loss
of money is a gain of life, and a fear of a loss of money is a total loss of life,
morals, and humanity.
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