When health-care czar Tom Daschle talks about universal health
care, he isn't merely talking about medical care. "A reformed
health-care system also should guarantee that every American has
access to affordable dental care," Daschle writes in his book
Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis.
Among the stories he tells is one of a Maryland boy who died from
an infection relating to a dental abscess. Also, he cites a
research report profiling a woman who suffered reduced employment
prospects after she pulled out her own teeth because her
toothaches were so bad:
Her physical appearance (missing and rotten teeth, a
near-sighted squint, and her generally unkempt presentation)
makes it unlikely that she can fulfill her dream job in a
veterinarian's office, where she would be dealing with the
public. She is more likely to be steered toward jobs like the
one she found shortly before we met her -- conducting a phone
survey during the evening hours at the local university.
As we reform our health care system, the question is, where do
you draw the line? People are suffering throughout this country
everyday for a litany of reasons -- sometimes self-inflicted,
often a matter of bad luck or unfortunate circumstances. Daschle
writes as if the government has unlimited resources to insulate
people from the travails of every day life, and eliminate all
human suffering.
What disease was she suffering from that attributed to her
"generally unkempt presentaion?" Is there a pill somewhere that
makes people want to shower and wash their hair?
When did it become the gubmint's job to make sure people get to
do their "dream job?"
Interested Conservative| 12.12.08 @ 4:11PM
Government by anecdote - it's in the Constitution somewhere.
Henry| 12.12.08 @ 6:34PM
We do not have a general access problem for dentistry (when you
cannot see any dentist.) Sometimes we have a specific access
problem (when you cannot see the dentist you want to see.)
Dentistry works the way medicine would like to work: low-cost,
effective preventive care, good-better-best treatment,and
generalists greatly outnumber specialists. However, medicine is
much more complex and medicine has life or death to deal with.
Dentistry is subject to the market forces that come from
competition, while medicine is seldom affected by market forces,
as it is currently configured.
Daschle is one more example of the hubris-filled, moronic
bureaucrats who think government can solve problems that actually
require more free market forces. God Help Us in the time of the
One.
Crusader| 12.12.08 @ 2:12PM
What disease was she suffering from that attributed to her "generally unkempt presentaion?" Is there a pill somewhere that makes people want to shower and wash their hair?
When did it become the gubmint's job to make sure people get to do their "dream job?"
Interested Conservative| 12.12.08 @ 4:11PM
Government by anecdote - it's in the Constitution somewhere.
Henry| 12.12.08 @ 6:34PM
We do not have a general access problem for dentistry (when you cannot see any dentist.) Sometimes we have a specific access problem (when you cannot see the dentist you want to see.)
Dentistry works the way medicine would like to work: low-cost, effective preventive care, good-better-best treatment,and generalists greatly outnumber specialists. However, medicine is much more complex and medicine has life or death to deal with. Dentistry is subject to the market forces that come from competition, while medicine is seldom affected by market forces, as it is currently configured.
Daschle is one more example of the hubris-filled, moronic bureaucrats who think government can solve problems that actually require more free market forces. God Help Us in the time of the One.