Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4282089 | The American Journal of Surgery | 2006 | 13 Pages |
The history of the role of government in health care is briefly reviewed and more fully discussed in the United States since the establishment of Medicare 40 years ago. Data and other evidence of the unintended consequences of this historic event are presented, identifying thorny and onerous issues that government has created, showing failed attempts at band-aid solutions, and suggesting that our present health care system is in disarray and cannot be rectified by the “incrementalism” approach. The establishment of a high-level commission jointly endorsed by the President of the United States and Congress is recommended to consider and analyze scrupulously all the components of our health care complex and provide a “roadmap” toward achieving a universal health care system that is culturally acceptable, affordable, and of optimal quality while avoiding its administration and total control by an ultimately rigid and unwieldy governmental or insurance-industry bureaucracy.