Universal Health Care System In The United States

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Pages: 2

Obviously, there is a problem with the United States health care system. Politicians for years have been trying to come up with an accurate decision that actually works, but nothing seems to work. Even though other countries have a universal public health care system, the United States does not. The number of uninsured Americans is around 45 million people. That is very dangerous for them if they were to get injured or developed serious health problems. They simply would not be able to afford to get care.

Health care has been increasingly expensive for businesses and corporations over the years. Also, if the United States had universal health care, doctors would be more focused on your care rather than your insurance policy. If free health care was a thing, people could see doctors in the early stages of their early developing problems, so they could get better before the condition worsens. This makes sense because uninsured people just can't see a doctor, and if they
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Free healthcare sounds great, right? Well unfortunately not everything is free. Someone's got to pay for it, and that someone would be the American taxpayers. Health care would have to be paid for by increasing taxes, or spending cuts in other areas like education and the military. Also, just because some Americans aren't uninsured doesn't mean they are totally denied of their right to healthcare. There are non-profits and government run hospitals that provide to people who don't have health insurance. Another con of free health care would be long wait times. There are stories from Canada and Britain (places where health care is free) where the wait time to receive treatment or a doctor's visit has taken months and even years. This makes sense because with limited financial and human recourses, the government will have to make tough choices about who can receive treatment first. Patients will be forced to suffer longer while waiting for