Health Care

The tide of political priorities among white evangelicals may be turning.

Molly Marsh 4-01-2007

Taking the church's temperature on health care.

Gordon Bonnyman 2-01-2007

We know how to create a better system. All we need is the moral outrage.

David Batstone 12-01-2005
We are stuck with half-baked measures to contain runaway medical costs.
Just How Many is 45 Million?

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 2003 fully 45 million people in this country had no health insurance. That’s up 1.4 million from 2002 and 5.2 million from 2000. "The uninsured problem is serious yet largely ignored," Jeanne Lambrew, a professor of health policy at George Washington

Bette McDevitt 3-01-2001
'When the children are well enough to go home, it is a gift to me.'
Emily Dossett 9-01-2000

Faith-based health ministries provide medicine...and hope.

Emily Dossett 9-01-2000

Perhaps the strongest effort toward health care reform is the Universal Health Care Action Network and its current U2K Campaign, "Universal Health Care in the Year 2000."

James C. Peterson 5-01-2000

There are currently about 900 genetic tests available. They can be helpful to understand, plan for, prevent, or treat genetically related conditions. With the approaching introduction of "gene chip" technology (which enables biologists to scour huge chunks of genomes in search of the genes that promote disease), large numbers of genetic tests are likely to become quick, relatively inexpensive, and routine.

Such accessible genetic information has many implications. One crucial area is that of employment.

Popular fears have been expressed in novels and movies that employers will use these genetic tests to choose employees not for their ability but for their genetic potential. If the employers did so, they would be misunderstanding human genetics. Human beings are so complex that a rich genetic endowment can be unfulfilled and a relatively poor one can be substantially transcended. Companies seeking to predict future performance would do far better to look at past performance and current-ability-based tests than to look at genetic heritage.

Employers are likely to try to use genetic tests to limit what they spend on medical care. To survive long term, businesses depend on producing more revenue than they consume, either by raising income or reducing expenses. Medical care is often a major factor in company costs.

Most employees in the United States are covered by company self insurance. Many of the others are under experience-based policies where a company’s premium changes with how much medical care employees need. In either case, medical care for employees and their dependents is a significant part of the employer’s outlays. Awareness of this impact is heightened for management by the concentration of medical care expenses in one subset of employees. In any given year, 5 percent of employees incur about 50 percent of health care expenditures, and 10 percent need about 70 percent of these resources.

Gordon Bonnyman 9-01-1998
The HMO system cries out for reform.
Julie Polter 1-01-1996
The future of health care is on the chopping block.