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	<title>Asthma Faq &#187; health insurance for small business owners</title>
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		<title>US Lags in Small Business Employment</title>
		<link>http://asthmafaq.com/58/us-lags-in-small-business-employment/</link>
		<comments>http://asthmafaq.com/58/us-lags-in-small-business-employment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 03:42:40 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Group Health Insurance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for self employed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for small business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for small business owners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small Business Group Health Insurance]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a approved fable spouted on  a regular basis by US politicians and business leaders alike: &#8220;The US cramped business sector leads the map in unique jobs and growth.&#8221; In fact, in a recently released examine this year by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), this may be far from the truth, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a approved fable spouted on  a regular basis by US politicians and business leaders alike: &#8220;The US cramped business sector leads the map in unique jobs and growth.&#8221; In fact, in a recently released examine this year by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), this may be far from the truth, particularly when one compares the United States with other developed nations in Europe and Asia.
</p>
<p>The United States comes in the second lowest in a group of 23 developed countries, lagging slack countries like Greece, Italy, Fresh Zealand, Canada, Australia, and Switzerland in the proportion of the working population that is self-employed. This figure is a mere 7 percent of the total workforce. In shrimp manufacturing businesses (those with fewer than 20 employees), the US comes in at the 18th status (with 11 percent of the workforce), lagging slow countries such as Japan, Spain, Norway, and the UK, among others. And in those tiny businesses with computer-based services (and fewer than 100 employees), the US fared no better (on a par with Portugal, and far unhurried countries such as the UK and Germany). This was a particular surprise to researchers, given the strong high-tech sector in the United States overall.
</p>
<p>Says John Schmitt, senior economist at CEPR and coauthor of the relate, &#8220;We believe of ourselves as offering the most business-friendly environment in the world, but almost every other rich country in the world does a considerable better job creating and sustaining cramped businesses [than the United States],&#8221;
</p>
<p>While the United States is perceived as providing a tremendous environment for shrimp business development (including its originate capitalistic spirit, extreme tax rate, buoyant labor force, and constrained regulatory environment) particularly when compared with most of Europe, there is one quandary that stands out as a fair impediment to microscopic business in the United States. That problem: health care.
</p>
<p>The CEPR research found that the high ticket of health care was a severe deterrent to the expansion of the microscopic business sector in the United States. In other countries start-up companies have few problems in this regard because they access government health care resources. In the United States, says Schmitt, &#8220;talented people thinking about starting a fresh business often have to determine between following their dream or going without health insurance.&#8221; No matter how broad the spirit of entrepreneurship, it&#8217;s a difficult choice for many of those thinking of starting their maintain companies or developing their fill products.<br />
<br />There&#8217;s a accepted legend spouted on  a regular basis by US politicians and business leaders alike: &#8220;The US itsy-bitsy business sector leads the design in unique jobs and growth.&#8221; In fact, in a recently released gaze this year by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), this may be far from the truth, particularly when one compares the United States with other developed nations in Europe and Asia.
</p>
<p>The United States comes in the second lowest in a group of 23 developed countries, lagging late countries like Greece, Italy, Recent Zealand, Canada, Australia, and Switzerland in the proportion of the working population that is self-employed. This figure is a mere 7 percent of the total workforce. In miniature manufacturing businesses (those with fewer than 20 employees), the US comes in at the 18th region (with 11 percent of the workforce), lagging tedious countries such as Japan, Spain, Norway, and the UK, among others. And in those little businesses with computer-based services (and fewer than 100 employees), the US fared no better (on a par with Portugal, and far slack countries such as the UK and Germany). This was a particular surprise to researchers, given the strong high-tech sector in the United States overall.
</p>
<p>Says John Schmitt, senior economist at CEPR and coauthor of the narrate, &#8220;We judge of ourselves as offering the most business-friendly environment in the world, but almost every other rich country in the world does a distinguished better job creating and sustaining cramped businesses [than the United States],&#8221;
</p>
<p>While the United States is perceived as providing a immense environment for petite business development (including its initiate capitalistic spirit, grievous tax rate, buoyant labor force, and constrained regulatory environment) particularly when compared with most of Europe, there is one pickle that stands out as a factual impediment to dinky business in the United States. That problem: health care.
</p>
<p>The CEPR research found that the high note of health care was a severe deterrent to the expansion of the microscopic business sector in the United States. In other countries start-up companies have few problems in this regard because they access government health care resources. In the United States, says Schmitt, &#8220;talented people thinking about starting a unique business often have to resolve between following their dream or going without health insurance.&#8221; No matter how broad the spirit of entrepreneurship, it&#8217;s a difficult choice for many of those thinking of starting their hold companies or developing their absorb products.<br /></p>

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		<title>Americas Uninsured (Health Insurance)</title>
		<link>http://asthmafaq.com/57/americas-uninsured-health-insurance/</link>
		<comments>http://asthmafaq.com/57/americas-uninsured-health-insurance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Jan 2010 09:09:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Group Health Insurance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for individual]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for small business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health insurance for small business owners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small Business Group Health Insurance]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A blog of one&#8217;s own

Uninsured in the United States

Blogging is a relatively novel technology that has helped shape how people communicate.  With the support of the internet, minority groups have been able to secure public befriend and attention from their blog posts.  The internet has gained mass popularity in the previous 15 years [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A blog of one&#8217;s own
</p>
<p>Uninsured in the United States
</p>
<p>Blogging is a relatively novel technology that has helped shape how people communicate.  With the support of the internet, minority groups have been able to secure public befriend and attention from their blog posts.  The internet has gained mass popularity in the previous 15 years growing at an exponential rate; it allows us to come anyone anywhere at the accelerate of light.  Blogging is valuable because the average person can now project their message to millions of people online almost instantly.  Blogs have become a key tool for minority groups to acquire their thought across without spending a lot of money.  They have empowered and given a explain to, people without adequate health insurance, and will be able to back more people in the future if the trend of blogging continues.
</p>
<p>More than 44.8 Million people in the United States do not have health insurance (Wattenberg).  This causes a grand deal of exertion for the average person living in the United States.  The query is whether or not health insurance is worth the amount of money they will have to expend or if they even have the money to consume on it.  They then will gawk at the opportunity cost; this is what they will have to give up if they don&#8217;t hold health insurance.  When struggling to build this decision they often eye at themselves as healthy and won&#8217;t need or can&#8217;t afford health insurance.  Health insurance costs on average of $10,880 dollars per family, however most companies screen a ample piece of,this cost, thus making it cost on average $2,713 per year (Appleby).  These numbers are staggering for the average family in America who compose only $48,201 per year.
</p>
<p>The uninsured in the USA are a seemingly invisible group to political elite and law makers.  The dilemma with Universal healthcare is that it would, in theory, give everyone an equal opportunity at who gets what doctor.  In other words there would be no &#8220;better&#8221; hospital to visit if you were wealthy or had some sort of influence.  The documentary <u>Sicko </u>Michael Moore outlines what happens to people without health insurance in the USA, and it also largely covers what happens to people who have health insurance but their thought limits how worthy care they can receive.  The documentary also includes what happens to people who live in countries who have universal healthcare.  The documentary was an outrageous bias towards Universal Healthcare, but it outlined many facts.  The following quote comes from the Institute of Medicine, was featured in the movie <u>Sicko</u>, and indicates the severity of the US healthcare quandary.
</p>
<p>According to the Institute of Medicine, &#8220;lack of health insurance causes roughly 18,000 unnecessary deaths every year in the United States. Although America leads the world in spending on health care, it is the only wealthy, industrialized nation that does not ensure that all citizens have coverage.&#8221; (&#8220;<em>Insuring America&#8217;s Health: Principles and Recommendations&#8221;)</em>
</p>
<p>This is a scary number of people that die each year from the lack of financial means in the United States.  With the institution of Universal Healthcare that number would be down to zero.
</p>
<p>The scary facts about United States original healthcare system are that the United States Government is doing dinky in the procedure of making this number go down.  Hillary Clinton, one of the biggest supporters of Universal Healthcare, was bought out by the drug companies and doctors in the get of campaign money.  She is the second highest recipient of money from the unique healthcare system; thus causing a conundrum (Christensen).  How can the government fix the recent predicament when the candidates themselves are in the pockets of the healthcare system and substantial drug manufacturers?   Most belief it as a plight, but do not know the extent of the problem; the healthcare companies are spending more and more money hiring people to fight congress over healthcare plans.  In fact, there are 2,084 lobbyist and only 535 members of congress (Mayor).
</p>
<p>The uninsured are a tall marginalized group in the United States that are not being represented by the government with adequate representation.  The drug companies have the most to lose if the United States government adopts universal healthcare.  They will lose the most because true now they are making their fortune off the novel health insurance concept in the United States.  They originate their money off not treating everyone and from their high premiums.  The recent Bush administration has been urged by the drug companies to not agree to a universal healthcare system.  They offer payouts to high political figures such as George W. Bush himself.  This money is unprejudiced a allotment of the amount of money that these drug companies receive every year from American families.
</p>
<p>The uninsured American has no diagram to argue with the insurance or drug companies over how mighty their care will cost them.  To keep it simply, they can&#8217;t.  The following is a quote from Kuro5hin.org which posted this argument about bargaining rights of the uninsured:
</p>
<p>&#8220;An individual who needs medical care has no bargaining power whatsoever with a hospital. He can either agree to pay whatever he is charged, or he can die. There are no other choices. In some cases, the government will force him to catch medical care &#8211; if he is a minor child in a family that does not wish to pick up him any for religious or financial reasons, or if he is considered not to be in possession of reason &#8211; but he will mild be billed. Refusing medical care for a risky or fatal condition is something most people won&#8217;t do &#8211; and may, in fact, be considered evidence of insanity which takes away the patient&#8217;s apt to refuse treatment at all. He can&#8217;t hump out because the stamp seems unreasonable. In some cases negotiation is fruitful, but often it isn&#8217;t.&#8221;
</p>
<p>This following scenario is a precise place that far too many Americans face who are uninsured.  They have no contrivance to pay off their bill so they can only determine to refuse care instead, often doing this to back their families financially.  Their bills often bag so high that if they chose to die, it would be better financially.  So are we putting a designate on human life?
</p>
<p>Petrified by the frosty shoulder that the U.S. Senate shows the uninsured, I looked into staunch life accounts of uninsured persons in the United States and their chilling stories.  The following account touched me because it is of a hard working miner named Lenny who worked all his life in unforgiving conditions. He survived a mine fire which killed 91 of his co-workers.  This didn&#8217;t end Lenny from returning to work, because after all he had three kids and with his job gargantuan health care.  Unfortunately for Lenny he had health care up until the mine he worked for laid everyone off.  This left Lenny with serious health problems from working underground for twenty years. He would eventually need medical care; so he applied for a job that offered medical assistance, and the only procure was that it took 60 days to go into accomplish.  The following comes from (Sered and Fernandopulle):
</p>
<p>&#8220;The luck that had made Lenny one of the survivor&#8217;s of the 1972 mine fire had urge out. Only 30 days after he began the job, he fell down onto the pavement in chubby cardiac arrest. Paramedics flew him to Spokane, Wash., to a cardiac unit. His recovery was far better than anyone expected, but he was saddled with spacious medical bills. A year later, he was sent to the hospital for angioplasty and eventually open-heart surgery. The doctors saved his life, but Lenny is serene suffering acute headaches as a result of falling to the pavement when he experienced the initial cardiac arrest. The cardiologist sent him to an otolaryngologist, who then sent him to other specialists for treatments; none has eliminated his headaches.
</p>
<p>The bill for his various surgeries, consultations, medications, and treatments is more than $140,000&mdash;it might as well be $1 billion in terms of Lenny ever being able to pay it. His sole income at this time is the $400/month pension he receives from the mining company.
</p>
<p>The second ending to Lenny&#8217;s anecdote is a bit different. Speaking with feeling about the first time he had to ask for public assistance, tears arrive into his eyes, which seems incongruous for a man who went encourage down into the mine as soon as the smoke from the deadly fire had cleared out. &#8220;We have worked all of our lives, even went to work sick,&#8221; Lenny says. And now, instead of the dignity of automatic access to care, he depends on the golden heart of the county indigent assistance program.&#8221;
</p>
<p>Lenny&#8217;s case is not an isolated one by any means; many people are uninsured and fraction similar stories about how the flaws of the unusual healthcare system.
</p>
<p>Recently the blogging phenomenon has allowed many people with internet access to be able to fraction their healthcare stories with the world.  Many people who can&#8217;t afford insurance can&#8217;t afford the cost of high accelerate internet which is required in order to blog.  However, many public libraries offer this service and this allows many to have a disclose when they wouldn&#8217;t previously.  Healthinsuranceblog.com offers many different facts about the benefits of healthcare and what could happen if you don&#8217;t have it.  The blog does not give sincere life accounts of people who are uninsured, but they attend raise awareness of what it means to not have insurance.  The blog brings up a ample point about why Universal Healthcare in the United States is unlikely, we don&#8217;t have the money to provide healthcare for everyone.  The government currently does not have the allocated funds to mask insurance for everyone.  With a tax it might be able to afford healthcare, but currently there is not enough money.  Over 55% of the uninsured don&#8217;t pay taxes (healthinsuranceblog) and there would have to be higher taxes for everyone while only some people aid.  Health Insurance Blog is a political blog that outlines what the upcoming presidential candidates attend for health care.
</p>
<p>Healthcare is often a matter of life and death for many.  Without health insurance, the uninsured cannot afford routine doctors visits so if there is something obnoxious with them it is not detected until it&#8217;s too leisurely.  Most of the illness that people catch can be easily treated with gracious care, but since most people terror the cost of a doctors or hospital visit they are left untreated.
</p>
<p>Uninsured persons utilize political candidates to assist win their message to the public about how well-known their situations are.  On the website healthinsuranceblog.com the democratic author talked about how politicians are getting the public aware of what it is like to be uninsured:
</p>
<p>&#8220;In the Democratic Party primaries of 1988, for example, candidate Michael Dukakis talked about a young single mother who had two jobs and calm could not <a href="http://www.insuremyhealth.com/getaquote">afford medical insurance</a> for herself and her children. In 1992, Bill Clinton did the same, changing the fable only slightly. This time it was the case of a woman with diabetes who could not derive health insurance because of her chronic condition. And now, in the 2008 primaries, Hillary Rodham Clinton (whom I worked with on the White House Health Care Reform Task Force in 1993) describes a similar case. This time it is a single woman, with two daughters, who cannot pay her medical bills because her congenital heart defect makes it impossible for her to <a href="http://www.insuremyhealth.com/">get medical insurance coverage.</a> And Barack Obama describes similar cases, with the eloquence that characterizes all of his speeches. He frequently refers to his fill mother, who had cancer and had to difficulty not only about her illness but about paying her medical bills.&#8221;
</p>
<p>Healthcare cannot wait grand longer.  Americans are dying every day because they can&#8217;t afford to go to rep a routine doctors visit or they can&#8217;t afford their medication.  I looked at the earning of the CEO of GlaxoSmithKline which is one of the larger providers of health insurance, Jean-Pierre Garnier the CEO made $9.4 million dollars last year.  How is it stunning that many people in the United States are uninsured and can&#8217;t afford to earn the support they need, and the CEO&#8217;s of the companies that are denying them affordable healthcare are making a titanic salary.  When people have to work two jobs unprejudiced to be able to afford to pay for their medications, why should insurance and drug companies continue to be making such a tremendous profit?
</p>
<p>Internet savvy users who happen to be uninsured illustrate their hardships over the internet.  Oftentimes, people without healthcare who have problems have a hard time expressing their feelings about their situations because they either can&#8217;t afford to exercise the internet or are too frustrated.  The internet, along with blogs, has become a tool for people to relate their notion without the censor of mainstream media.  Blogs are written by people who have a mutter and without an agenda (for the most fragment anyway; there are also corporate blogs).
</p>
<p>Health care blogs are written by numerous people including, doctors, people without health insurance, and supporters of healthcare for everyone also known as universal healthcare.  The commonwealthfund.org is an internet station that describes stories of people without healthcare and their hardships.  The residence is made for people to obtain awareness of how dreadful it is to not have healthcare, and even mosey down the stereotypes of people without health insurance.  One stereotype I former to have is that people without health insurance are indolent, and or did not work hard enough to be able to afford it so it was be their fault for not having it.  After looking at this status that gives minorities a assure, I learned that even college-educated men and woman have a hard time getting health care.
</p>
<p>One profile on commonwealthfund.org was of a college graduate named Ryan who had to decide whether or not to get a job based on income or healthcare.  He was a healthy young individual who did not mediate he would need healthcare so he decided to prefer a job teaching which did not offer worthy benefits.  Ryan fell down on his apartment stairs and afflict his knee, he now has very high hospital bills to pay off.  He later had to pick a job that paid less but offers health benefits.  Ryan ended up getting care for his knee in Chili because they did not charge as worthy and offered equal or better service.  The expect I have to ask after reading Ryan&#8217;s fable that he told was why should anyone have to decide between a career or a job that offers health benefits?  What happened to what we were told as kids: &#8220;we can be anything we want to be? &#8221;  The truth is with our original opinion many Americans are finding themselves working for adequate health service.
</p>
<p>Blogs have become an top-notch gain of education for people who did not know about what is happening to the uninsured.  With the novel popularity of blogs, many are using their yelp to disprove current misconceptions about what is it like to not be fully covered by their insurance company when they need care.  After reading all the Profiles of the uninsured on commonwealthfund.org I wanted to know more about how we could score their stories across to more people.  The upcoming election for president has given the most power to the uninsured.  The biggest jam that is being addressed besides the Iraq war is the topic of affordable healthcare for all.  The fact is that healthcare is only affordable for the average American making under $50,000 for a family is one that is mostly covered by their employer.  But with the economy falling without or small growth since 2001 has not made it accessible for miniature companies to provide healthcare for their employees.
</p>
<p>Limited business owners are finding it increasingly difficult to afford the cost of healthcare for employees.  Itsy-bitsy businesses have to deal with high taxes by the government on their income (this number is usually around 35% but can very spot by status), this is a high number so the amount of funds left after paying for overhead is very shrimp.  The goal of tiny business it to expand and grow, but how can they afford to do that with all the costs they have?   If healthcare cost less for business owners the economy would follow suit.  It would grow, and I dare say we would be out of the recession that we are currently in.  There is slight in obtain of growth in the United States compared to other developing nations.
</p>
<p>Universal Healthcare to many Americans is not distinguished to them because they are already covered; however I am concerned about it because the United States is doing so poorly economically.  Blogs have been indispensable in addressing the command of how considerable money in being spent by individuals every year.  In 2003 1.3 trillion dollars was spent on healthcare by the American people.  This is an alarming amount of money that is going to something that is under regulated as far as mark goes.  The drug companies and insurance companies are taking a enormous fraction of all Americans income each year.  Healthcare blogs have played a astronomical role in getting the public&#8217;s attention at this whine.  They often originate issues aware to us that we may not have known about; blogs unlike mainstream media are not censored and do not have a corporate sponsor.  Americans who do not have health insurance glean their stories about their hardships on blogs or others write about them on their behalf.
</p>
<p>I found a family member in my family who did not have health insurance.  I learned last year she had a major operation on her encourage, and I often wondered how she was going to pay for it.  I conducted an interview with her and what I found out was disturbing.  I have to say I am slightly bias towards this because she is a family member; however it does not acquire the facts any less chilling.
</p>
<p>My Aunt Lisa Herbert is a working class woman who did not execute high school or succor any formal schooling after she dropped out.  She got pregnant at the young age of 15 and had her first child at the age of 16.  Lisa had a tough life from her teenage years.  She had a hard time raising a kid at her age; she went through multiple husbands and boyfriends who would promise to buy care of her children but left her financially ruined.  Lisa&#8217;s sage regarding medical insurance starts two years ago in 2006.  From all aspects she had a hard life but she wanted to peaceful construct something of herself, she got a job at a Dunkin Donuts as was promoted posthaste to manager.  She was enjoying for the first time in her life financial freedom even if it was small; she had the sense of independence.  She went to work objective as she has always done one day in the winter; she fell on the ice leading up to the Dunkin Donuts she worked at.  She fractured one her vertebras, however not life threatening, neither were her injuries threatening enough to create her become a paraplegic.  However she was smooth injured.  Lisa could not crawl or be mobile for over 6 months; now imagine this as she described to me, she was finally becoming financially independent and was proud to become a manager, then after one accident she landed in the hospital.  She did not have pleasant insurance; she had what Dunkin Donuts provided for her.  She was &#8220;lucky&#8221; in the sense that because she did not have the financial means to sue them. Dunkin Donuts gave her the pay for the 6 months that she was not working.  She took this as a gift, but from my point of idea she could have got more out of them if she had money.  Lisa then had to pay overwhelming medical bills (the staunch amount was not disclosed) that mounted on her already oppressed site.
</p>
<p>Lisa&#8217;s legend is not an isolated one or even a rarity in the United States.  Many workers who are working either retail or chain restaurants are not making it financially. The rising cost of healthcare that is not provided from the companies that they are working for is overwhelming and often times unaffordable.   The blogging community is objective starting to seize up issues of social injustice that is being done to marginalized groups such as the medically uninsured in the United States and giving them a bellow.  These groups should not be silenced because they do not have enough money to pay for pleasurable care or routine visits.
</p>
<p>I want to address one indispensable speak that the readers of this paper may be having; I have talked a lot about universal healthcare and how the uninsured need care as well.  Many Americans that I have spoken to said that they don&#8217;t want execrable quality care if we decided to do universal healthcare.  I have a personal chronicle I want to piece to obvious up any confusion with the quality of nonprofit hospitals or hospitals that offer free care.  When I was the age of 15 I had a severe flat foot plight, with health insurance that covered nearly 99% of all medical bills my parents had to pay over $3,000 out of pocket for treatment in order to earn custom made orthotics for my feet and other care.  They did not work.  I ended up going to a hospital in Springfield Massachusetts that offered free orthopedic care to anyone under the age of 18; we did this only because all the &#8220;specialists&#8221; we visited did not succor my condition.  My doctor I had was the top orthopedic surgeon at the hospital and could rival any at a paying hospital.  He suggested a novel treatment for my feet without surgery and gave me free orthotics that actually helped. My family had the money to acquire nearly any doctor that would wait on me however this was the only doctor that knew what he was doing that we visited so far.  He was mild paid but by donations (he drove a 7 series BMW so he was getting paid a lot).  I consider that Americans that are opposing universal healthcare have a crooked opinion on what it means to not have insurance pay for their care.  I want to address one more thing, I found out about this hospital from a healthcare blog (can&#8217;t remember which one) which had other patients writing about their care and how they were helped by this hospital.
</p>
<p>Universal healthcare to many is something that we want and strive for in America; but the inquire we have to ask is can we afford it?   A gaze was done on the National Center for Political Analysis website outlining what would happen if we adopted universal healthcare today.  According to the location if we were to perceive at another universal healthcare concept such as Sweden&#8217;s, America would suffer far beyond what it is suffering today.  Due to lower funding to hospitals through taxes instead of the healthcare providers, we would experience the following, a prance in current staff for hospitals, reduction in staff at hospitals and clinics, reduction in beds at hospitals to house patients, undertrained people taking on higher responsibilities such as surgery (Larson,1).  This makes it hard for us to contemplate universal healthcare in America when there are so many negatives.  However should the voices of the uninsured that are dying simply because they can&#8217;t afford their premiums be silenced?
</p>
<p>Many of the uninsured living in America now are between the ages of 20-30, these by all means are young healthy individuals who feel like they will never need insurance until past the age of 30.  They reflect, what are the odds of getting sick?  They are classified by the insurance agencies as &#8220;young invincibles&#8221; these are the people who do not have the average $3,000 a year to employ on health insurance let alone if their employer even offers it.  Jake Hollner is by all rights a young healthy individual who at the age of 24 is working for Home Depot and is an artist share time.  He missed the insurance that Home Depot offers as it is only offered once a year in a two week time frame.  He belief to himself that he did not have the money to afford insurance (he was only making $6 an hour) so why bother?   The money he would set from the insurance could be save to his medical bill if he had a onetime accident.  He suffered from stomach ulcers since his undergraduate years in college, these ulcers unbiased starting coming befriend so he decided to bite the bullet and go to the doctors for back.  He paid $200 for the visit and $73 for the prescription.  This was his entire paycheck for the week but he was blooming legal?   The ulcers did not go away after he took his medication; he had to do the unthinkable for an uninsured person, he went to the emergency room.  He lost his gamble with not having insurance he ended up paying a fortune for his ulcer coverage because he was without health insurance.  The steady costs were not disclosed.  Jake before the doctor visit could barely afford rent and other living expenses including health insurance (Amsden, 1).
</p>
<p>There are other stories such as Jake&#8217;s out there, where young people who are rarely sick do not have the coverage they need in case of an emergency.  The healthcare providers commented on this blog which Jake&#8217;s memoir was on.  They gave him a link to salvage affordable healthcare through them, the provider is Blue Sinister Blue Shield.  Even if there was &#8220;affordable&#8221; healthcare to many, how could someone like Jake who was only making $6 an hour be able to fix his other expenses?   There is no cutting corners in his case, he has no money and is living on necessities.
</p>
<p>With the institution of universal healthcare people such as Jake would not have to pay a lot to find coverage since he does not manufacture a lot.  Why is it that in America the better off richer class doesn&#8217;t want to attend everyone else?  Universal healthcare redistributes the wealth that we are not getting a section of.  When the majority of our wealth is going to the 1/10 of the top 1% in our country how can the rest of us afford to live?   In theory, their money would attend fund everyone else with healthcare from their taxes.  Wouldn&#8217;t it be better to live in a community where everyone helps each other, and there is no one who has to decide between eating or taking their child to the doctor&#8217;s office?
</p>
<p>Universal healthcare is a topic that cannot be ignored any longer.  We have too many people living amongst us who simply cannot afford the absurd premiums that the insurance companies are charging.  The people that are dying because they cannot afford regular doctors visits are accurate people who have families and people that rely on them.  This is a change that will need to be addressed as our fresh president comes into office in the year.
</p>
<p>Amsden, David. <u>A Generation Uninsured.</u> 26 March 2007. 10 4 2008 .
</p>
<p>Appleby, Julie. <u>USA Today.</u> 12 February 2004. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Blarney. <u>Kuro5hin.</u> 30 October 2003. 2006 .
</p>
<p>&#8220;Blogging it.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 34.37 (13 Sep. 2004): 42-42. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Residence Library, Keene, NH 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Dalmia, Shikha. &#8220;Saying No to CoerciveCare.&#8221; <u>Wall Street Journal &#8211; Eastern Edition</u> 31 Jan. 2008: A16. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Status Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. st-live&#038;scope=site>.
</p>
<p>Devore, Chuck. &#8220;Schwarzenegger&#8217;s Universal Healthcare Suffers Setback.&#8221; <u>Human Events</u> 64.5 (04 Feb. 2008): 7-14. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Plot Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>healthinsurance. <u>Health Insurance Blog.</u> 25 March 2008. 2008 .
</p>
<p>McCabe, Patrick. <u>Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.</u> 27 April 2005. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Moore, Michael. <u>Sicko check up the facts.</u> 2008 .
</p>
<p>NCPA. <u>Lessons from Sweden&#8217;s Universal Healthcare.</u> 24 4 2008. 24 4 2008 .
</p>
<p>(NCPA)&#8221;Outliers.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 37.34 (27 Aug. 2007): 68-68. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Dwelling Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Susan Sered and Rushika Fernandopulle, M.D. <u>The Current Wealth Fund.</u> 2 February 2005. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Thielst, Christina Beach. &#8220;Weblogs: A Communication Tool.&#8221; <u>Journal of Healthcare Management</u> 52.5 (Sep. 2007): 287-289. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Situation Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>&#8220;Wanna play politics, kid?  D.C. welcomes you to the titanic leagues.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 37.41 (15 Oct. 2007): 36-36. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Residence Library, Keene, NH. 21 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Wattenberg, Ben. <u>PBS.</u> 2003. 12 4 2008 .<br />
<br />A blog of one&#8217;s own
</p>
<p>Uninsured in the United States
</p>
<p>Blogging is a relatively unique technology that has helped shape how people communicate.  With the aid of the internet, minority groups have been able to get public wait on and attention from their blog posts.  The internet has gained mass popularity in the previous 15 years growing at an exponential rate; it allows us to come anyone anywhere at the run of light.  Blogging is essential because the average person can now project their message to millions of people online almost instantly.  Blogs have become a key tool for minority groups to net their notion across without spending a lot of money.  They have empowered and given a utter to, people without adequate health insurance, and will be able to assist more people in the future if the trend of blogging continues.
</p>
<p>More than 44.8 Million people in the United States do not have health insurance (Wattenberg).  This causes a gigantic deal of exertion for the average person living in the United States.  The put a question to is whether or not health insurance is worth the amount of money they will have to use or if they even have the money to use on it.  They then will eye at the opportunity cost; this is what they will have to give up if they don&#8217;t rob health insurance.  When struggling to form this decision they often scrutinize at themselves as healthy and won&#8217;t need or can&#8217;t afford health insurance.  Health insurance costs on average of $10,880 dollars per family, however most companies veil a substantial fraction of,this cost, thus making it cost on average $2,713 per year (Appleby).  These numbers are staggering for the average family in America who accomplish only $48,201 per year.
</p>
<p>The uninsured in the USA are a seemingly invisible group to political elite and law makers.  The spot with Universal healthcare is that it would, in theory, give everyone an equal opportunity at who gets what doctor.  In other words there would be no &#8220;better&#8221; hospital to visit if you were wealthy or had some sort of influence.  The documentary <u>Sicko </u>Michael Moore outlines what happens to people without health insurance in the USA, and it also largely covers what happens to people who have health insurance but their belief limits how considerable care they can receive.  The documentary also includes what happens to people who live in countries who have universal healthcare.  The documentary was an coarse bias towards Universal Healthcare, but it outlined many facts.  The following quote comes from the Institute of Medicine, was featured in the movie <u>Sicko</u>, and indicates the severity of the US healthcare predicament.
</p>
<p>According to the Institute of Medicine, &#8220;lack of health insurance causes roughly 18,000 unnecessary deaths every year in the United States. Although America leads the world in spending on health care, it is the only wealthy, industrialized nation that does not ensure that all citizens have coverage.&#8221; (&#8220;<em>Insuring America&#8217;s Health: Principles and Recommendations&#8221;)</em>
</p>
<p>This is a scary number of people that die each year from the lack of financial means in the United States.  With the institution of Universal Healthcare that number would be down to zero.
</p>
<p>The scary facts about United States novel healthcare system are that the United States Government is doing tiny in the arrangement of making this number go down.  Hillary Clinton, one of the biggest supporters of Universal Healthcare, was bought out by the drug companies and doctors in the effect of campaign money.  She is the second highest recipient of money from the novel healthcare system; thus causing a conundrum (Christensen).  How can the government fix the new pickle when the candidates themselves are in the pockets of the healthcare system and big drug manufacturers?   Most notion it as a dilemma, but do not know the extent of the problem; the healthcare companies are spending more and more money hiring people to fight congress over healthcare plans.  In fact, there are 2,084 lobbyist and only 535 members of congress (Mayor).
</p>
<p>The uninsured are a expansive marginalized group in the United States that are not being represented by the government with adequate representation.  The drug companies have the most to lose if the United States government adopts universal healthcare.  They will lose the most because factual now they are making their fortune off the recent health insurance view in the United States.  They get their money off not treating everyone and from their high premiums.  The original Bush administration has been urged by the drug companies to not agree to a universal healthcare system.  They offer payouts to high political figures such as George W. Bush himself.  This money is impartial a portion of the amount of money that these drug companies receive every year from American families.
</p>
<p>The uninsured American has no contrivance to argue with the insurance or drug companies over how worthy their care will cost them.  To establish it simply, they can&#8217;t.  The following is a quote from Kuro5hin.org which posted this argument about bargaining rights of the uninsured:
</p>
<p>&#8220;An individual who needs medical care has no bargaining power whatsoever with a hospital. He can either agree to pay whatever he is charged, or he can die. There are no other choices. In some cases, the government will force him to bag medical care &#8211; if he is a minor child in a family that does not wish to gather him any for religious or financial reasons, or if he is considered not to be in possession of reason &#8211; but he will aloof be billed. Refusing medical care for a uncertain or fatal condition is something most people won&#8217;t do &#8211; and may, in fact, be considered evidence of insanity which takes away the patient&#8217;s accurate to refuse treatment at all. He can&#8217;t slither out because the effect seems unreasonable. In some cases negotiation is fruitful, but often it isn&#8217;t.&#8221;
</p>
<p>This following scenario is a valid space that far too many Americans face who are uninsured.  They have no method to pay off their bill so they can only determine to refuse care instead, often doing this to assist their families financially.  Their bills often derive so high that if they chose to die, it would be better financially.  So are we putting a mark on human life?
</p>
<p>Insecure by the cool shoulder that the U.S. Senate shows the uninsured, I looked into valid life accounts of uninsured persons in the United States and their chilling stories.  The following account touched me because it is of a hard working miner named Lenny who worked all his life in unforgiving conditions. He survived a mine fire which killed 91 of his co-workers.  This didn&#8217;t close Lenny from returning to work, because after all he had three kids and with his job ample health care.  Unfortunately for Lenny he had health care up until the mine he worked for laid everyone off.  This left Lenny with serious health problems from working underground for twenty years. He would eventually need medical care; so he applied for a job that offered medical assistance, and the only regain was that it took 60 days to go into execute.  The following comes from (Sered and Fernandopulle):
</p>
<p>&#8220;The luck that had made Lenny one of the survivor&#8217;s of the 1972 mine fire had rush out. Only 30 days after he began the job, he fell down onto the pavement in elephantine cardiac arrest. Paramedics flew him to Spokane, Wash., to a cardiac unit. His recovery was far better than anyone expected, but he was saddled with great medical bills. A year later, he was sent to the hospital for angioplasty and eventually open-heart surgery. The doctors saved his life, but Lenny is serene suffering acute headaches as a result of falling to the pavement when he experienced the initial cardiac arrest. The cardiologist sent him to an otolaryngologist, who then sent him to other specialists for treatments; none has eliminated his headaches.
</p>
<p>The bill for his various surgeries, consultations, medications, and treatments is more than $140,000&mdash;it might as well be $1 billion in terms of Lenny ever being able to pay it. His sole income at this time is the $400/month pension he receives from the mining company.
</p>
<p>The second ending to Lenny&#8217;s fable is a bit different. Speaking with feeling about the first time he had to ask for public assistance, tears advance into his eyes, which seems incongruous for a man who went attend down into the mine as soon as the smoke from the deadly fire had cleared out. &#8220;We have worked all of our lives, even went to work sick,&#8221; Lenny says. And now, instead of the dignity of automatic access to care, he depends on the golden heart of the county indigent assistance program.&#8221;
</p>
<p>Lenny&#8217;s case is not an isolated one by any means; many people are uninsured and piece similar stories about how the flaws of the new healthcare system.
</p>
<p>Recently the blogging phenomenon has allowed many people with internet access to be able to allotment their healthcare stories with the world.  Many people who can&#8217;t afford insurance can&#8217;t afford the cost of high bustle internet which is required in order to blog.  However, many public libraries offer this service and this allows many to have a say when they wouldn&#8217;t previously.  Healthinsuranceblog.com offers many different facts about the benefits of healthcare and what could happen if you don&#8217;t have it.  The blog does not give loyal life accounts of people who are uninsured, but they wait on raise awareness of what it means to not have insurance.  The blog brings up a trustworthy point about why Universal Healthcare in the United States is unlikely, we don&#8217;t have the money to provide healthcare for everyone.  The government currently does not have the allocated funds to veil insurance for everyone.  With a tax it might be able to afford healthcare, but currently there is not enough money.  Over 55% of the uninsured don&#8217;t pay taxes (healthinsuranceblog) and there would have to be higher taxes for everyone while only some people attend.  Health Insurance Blog is a political blog that outlines what the upcoming presidential candidates benefit for health care.
</p>
<p>Healthcare is often a matter of life and death for many.  Without health insurance, the uninsured cannot afford routine doctors visits so if there is something ghastly with them it is not detected until it&#8217;s too behind.  Most of the illness that people obtain can be easily treated with suitable care, but since most people awe the cost of a doctors or hospital visit they are left untreated.
</p>
<p>Uninsured persons exercise political candidates to relieve glean their message to the public about how distinguished their situations are.  On the website healthinsuranceblog.com the democratic author talked about how politicians are getting the public aware of what it is like to be uninsured:
</p>
<p>&#8220;In the Democratic Party primaries of 1988, for example, candidate Michael Dukakis talked about a young single mother who had two jobs and serene could not <a href="http://www.insuremyhealth.com/getaquote">afford medical insurance</a> for herself and her children. In 1992, Bill Clinton did the same, changing the epic only slightly. This time it was the case of a woman with diabetes who could not accept health insurance because of her chronic condition. And now, in the 2008 primaries, Hillary Rodham Clinton (whom I worked with on the White House Health Care Reform Task Force in 1993) describes a similar case. This time it is a single woman, with two daughters, who cannot pay her medical bills because her congenital heart defect makes it impossible for her to <a href="http://www.insuremyhealth.com/">get medical insurance coverage.</a> And Barack Obama describes similar cases, with the eloquence that characterizes all of his speeches. He frequently refers to his possess mother, who had cancer and had to exertion not only about her illness but about paying her medical bills.&#8221;
</p>
<p>Healthcare cannot wait distinguished longer.  Americans are dying every day because they can&#8217;t afford to go to pick up a routine doctors visit or they can&#8217;t afford their medication.  I looked at the earning of the CEO of GlaxoSmithKline which is one of the larger providers of health insurance, Jean-Pierre Garnier the CEO made $9.4 million dollars last year.  How is it resplendent that many people in the United States are uninsured and can&#8217;t afford to score the befriend they need, and the CEO&#8217;s of the companies that are denying them affordable healthcare are making a sizable salary.  When people have to work two jobs honest to be able to afford to pay for their medications, why should insurance and drug companies continue to be making such a stout profit?
</p>
<p>Internet savvy users who happen to be uninsured illustrate their hardships over the internet.  Oftentimes, people without healthcare who have problems have a hard time expressing their feelings about their situations because they either can&#8217;t afford to exhaust the internet or are too frustrated.  The internet, along with blogs, has become a tool for people to say their belief without the censor of mainstream media.  Blogs are written by people who have a drawl and without an agenda (for the most fraction anyway; there are also corporate blogs).
</p>
<p>Health care blogs are written by numerous people including, doctors, people without health insurance, and supporters of healthcare for everyone also known as universal healthcare.  The commonwealthfund.org is an internet station that describes stories of people without healthcare and their hardships.  The residence is made for people to rep awareness of how unpleasant it is to not have healthcare, and even slither down the stereotypes of people without health insurance.  One stereotype I ancient to have is that people without health insurance are slothful, and or did not work hard enough to be able to afford it so it was be their fault for not having it.  After looking at this set that gives minorities a direct, I learned that even college-educated men and woman have a hard time getting health care.
</p>
<p>One profile on commonwealthfund.org was of a college graduate named Ryan who had to decide whether or not to bag a job based on income or healthcare.  He was a healthy young individual who did not assume he would need healthcare so he decided to occupy a job teaching which did not offer expedient benefits.  Ryan fell down on his apartment stairs and damage his knee, he now has very high hospital bills to pay off.  He later had to grasp a job that paid less but offers health benefits.  Ryan ended up getting care for his knee in Chili because they did not charge as grand and offered equal or better service.  The seek information from I have to ask after reading Ryan&#8217;s chronicle that he told was why should anyone have to settle between a career or a job that offers health benefits?  What happened to what we were told as kids: &#8220;we can be anything we want to be? &#8221;  The truth is with our modern belief many Americans are finding themselves working for adequate health service.
</p>
<p>Blogs have become an qualified create of education for people who did not know about what is happening to the uninsured.  With the new popularity of blogs, many are using their hiss to disprove celebrated misconceptions about what is it like to not be fully covered by their insurance company when they need care.  After reading all the Profiles of the uninsured on commonwealthfund.org I wanted to know more about how we could gain their stories across to more people.  The upcoming election for president has given the most power to the uninsured.  The biggest jam that is being addressed besides the Iraq war is the topic of affordable healthcare for all.  The fact is that healthcare is only affordable for the average American making under $50,000 for a family is one that is mostly covered by their employer.  But with the economy falling without or microscopic growth since 2001 has not made it accessible for exiguous companies to provide healthcare for their employees.
</p>
<p>Limited business owners are finding it increasingly difficult to afford the cost of healthcare for employees.  Diminutive businesses have to deal with high taxes by the government on their income (this number is usually around 35% but can very place by position), this is a high number so the amount of funds left after paying for overhead is very runt.  The goal of little business it to expand and grow, but how can they afford to do that with all the costs they have?   If healthcare cost less for business owners the economy would follow suit.  It would grow, and I dare say we would be out of the recession that we are currently in.  There is dinky in gain of growth in the United States compared to other developing nations.
</p>
<p>Universal Healthcare to many Americans is not essential to them because they are already covered; however I am concerned about it because the United States is doing so poorly economically.  Blogs have been considerable in addressing the sing of how noteworthy money in being spent by individuals every year.  In 2003 1.3 trillion dollars was spent on healthcare by the American people.  This is an alarming amount of money that is going to something that is under regulated as far as heed goes.  The drug companies and insurance companies are taking a ample fragment of all Americans income each year.  Healthcare blogs have played a tall role in getting the public&#8217;s attention at this reveal.  They often accomplish issues aware to us that we may not have known about; blogs unlike mainstream media are not censored and do not have a corporate sponsor.  Americans who do not have health insurance regain their stories about their hardships on blogs or others write about them on their behalf.
</p>
<p>I found a family member in my family who did not have health insurance.  I learned last year she had a major operation on her encourage, and I often wondered how she was going to pay for it.  I conducted an interview with her and what I found out was disturbing.  I have to say I am slightly bias towards this because she is a family member; however it does not originate the facts any less chilling.
</p>
<p>My Aunt Lisa Herbert is a working class woman who did not accomplish high school or back any formal schooling after she dropped out.  She got pregnant at the young age of 15 and had her first child at the age of 16.  Lisa had a tough life from her teenage years.  She had a hard time raising a kid at her age; she went through multiple husbands and boyfriends who would promise to lift care of her children but left her financially ruined.  Lisa&#8217;s myth regarding medical insurance starts two years ago in 2006.  From all aspects she had a hard life but she wanted to smooth manufacture something of herself, she got a job at a Dunkin Donuts as was promoted hastily to manager.  She was enjoying for the first time in her life financial freedom even if it was small; she had the sense of independence.  She went to work unbiased as she has always done one day in the winter; she fell on the ice leading up to the Dunkin Donuts she worked at.  She fractured one her vertebras, however not life threatening, neither were her injuries threatening enough to form her become a paraplegic.  However she was collected injured.  Lisa could not slump or be mobile for over 6 months; now imagine this as she described to me, she was finally becoming financially independent and was proud to become a manager, then after one accident she landed in the hospital.  She did not have safe insurance; she had what Dunkin Donuts provided for her.  She was &#8220;lucky&#8221; in the sense that because she did not have the financial means to sue them. Dunkin Donuts gave her the pay for the 6 months that she was not working.  She took this as a gift, but from my point of notion she could have got more out of them if she had money.  Lisa then had to pay overwhelming medical bills (the exact amount was not disclosed) that mounted on her already oppressed location.
</p>
<p>Lisa&#8217;s myth is not an isolated one or even a rarity in the United States.  Many workers who are working either retail or chain restaurants are not making it financially. The rising cost of healthcare that is not provided from the companies that they are working for is overwhelming and often times unaffordable.   The blogging community is objective starting to engage up issues of social injustice that is being done to marginalized groups such as the medically uninsured in the United States and giving them a hiss.  These groups should not be silenced because they do not have enough money to pay for first-rate care or routine visits.
</p>
<p>I want to address one well-known convey that the readers of this paper may be having; I have talked a lot about universal healthcare and how the uninsured need care as well.  Many Americans that I have spoken to said that they don&#8217;t want nefarious quality care if we decided to do universal healthcare.  I have a personal narrative I want to piece to determined up any confusion with the quality of nonprofit hospitals or hospitals that offer free care.  When I was the age of 15 I had a severe flat foot quandary, with health insurance that covered nearly 99% of all medical bills my parents had to pay over $3,000 out of pocket for treatment in order to gather custom made orthotics for my feet and other care.  They did not work.  I ended up going to a hospital in Springfield Massachusetts that offered free orthopedic care to anyone under the age of 18; we did this only because all the &#8220;specialists&#8221; we visited did not benefit my condition.  My doctor I had was the top orthopedic surgeon at the hospital and could rival any at a paying hospital.  He suggested a recent treatment for my feet without surgery and gave me free orthotics that actually helped. My family had the money to regain nearly any doctor that would befriend me however this was the only doctor that knew what he was doing that we visited so far.  He was detached paid but by donations (he drove a 7 series BMW so he was getting paid a lot).  I believe that Americans that are opposing universal healthcare have a hooked conception on what it means to not have insurance pay for their care.  I want to address one more thing, I found out about this hospital from a healthcare blog (can&#8217;t remember which one) which had other patients writing about their care and how they were helped by this hospital.
</p>
<p>Universal healthcare to many is something that we want and strive for in America; but the request we have to ask is can we afford it?   A stare was done on the National Center for Political Analysis website outlining what would happen if we adopted universal healthcare today.  According to the space if we were to gawk at another universal healthcare belief such as Sweden&#8217;s, America would suffer far beyond what it is suffering today.  Due to lower funding to hospitals through taxes instead of the healthcare providers, we would experience the following, a toddle in current staff for hospitals, reduction in staff at hospitals and clinics, reduction in beds at hospitals to house patients, undertrained people taking on higher responsibilities such as surgery (Larson,1).  This makes it hard for us to deem universal healthcare in America when there are so many negatives.  However should the voices of the uninsured that are dying simply because they can&#8217;t afford their premiums be silenced?
</p>
<p>Many of the uninsured living in America now are between the ages of 20-30, these by all means are young healthy individuals who feel like they will never need insurance until past the age of 30.  They assume, what are the odds of getting sick?  They are classified by the insurance agencies as &#8220;young invincibles&#8221; these are the people who do not have the average $3,000 a year to exercise on health insurance let alone if their employer even offers it.  Jake Hollner is by all rights a young healthy individual who at the age of 24 is working for Home Depot and is an artist share time.  He missed the insurance that Home Depot offers as it is only offered once a year in a two week time frame.  He view to himself that he did not have the money to afford insurance (he was only making $6 an hour) so why bother?   The money he would do from the insurance could be place to his medical bill if he had a onetime accident.  He suffered from stomach ulcers since his undergraduate years in college, these ulcers unbiased starting coming support so he decided to bite the bullet and go to the doctors for wait on.  He paid $200 for the visit and $73 for the prescription.  This was his entire paycheck for the week but he was handsome moral?   The ulcers did not go away after he took his medication; he had to do the unthinkable for an uninsured person, he went to the emergency room.  He lost his gamble with not having insurance he ended up paying a fortune for his ulcer coverage because he was without health insurance.  The proper costs were not disclosed.  Jake before the doctor visit could barely afford rent and other living expenses including health insurance (Amsden, 1).
</p>
<p>There are other stories such as Jake&#8217;s out there, where young people who are rarely sick do not have the coverage they need in case of an emergency.  The healthcare providers commented on this blog which Jake&#8217;s myth was on.  They gave him a link to pick up affordable healthcare through them, the provider is Blue Substandard Blue Shield.  Even if there was &#8220;affordable&#8221; healthcare to many, how could someone like Jake who was only making $6 an hour be able to fix his other expenses?   There is no cutting corners in his case, he has no money and is living on necessities.
</p>
<p>With the institution of universal healthcare people such as Jake would not have to pay a lot to glean coverage since he does not fabricate a lot.  Why is it that in America the better off richer class doesn&#8217;t want to encourage everyone else?  Universal healthcare redistributes the wealth that we are not getting a portion of.  When the majority of our wealth is going to the 1/10 of the top 1% in our country how can the rest of us afford to live?   In theory, their money would succor fund everyone else with healthcare from their taxes.  Wouldn&#8217;t it be better to live in a community where everyone helps each other, and there is no one who has to determine between eating or taking their child to the doctor&#8217;s office?
</p>
<p>Universal healthcare is a topic that cannot be ignored any longer.  We have too many people living amongst us who simply cannot afford the absurd premiums that the insurance companies are charging.  The people that are dying because they cannot afford regular doctors visits are valid people who have families and people that rely on them.  This is a change that will need to be addressed as our original president comes into office in the year.
</p>
<p>Amsden, David. <u>A Generation Uninsured.</u> 26 March 2007. 10 4 2008 .
</p>
<p>Appleby, Julie. <u>USA Today.</u> 12 February 2004. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Blarney. <u>Kuro5hin.</u> 30 October 2003. 2006 .
</p>
<p>&#8220;Blogging it.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 34.37 (13 Sep. 2004): 42-42. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Station Library, Keene, NH 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Dalmia, Shikha. &#8220;Saying No to CoerciveCare.&#8221; <u>Wall Street Journal &#8211; Eastern Edition</u> 31 Jan. 2008: A16. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Plot Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. st-live&#038;scope=site>.
</p>
<p>Devore, Chuck. &#8220;Schwarzenegger&#8217;s Universal Healthcare Suffers Setback.&#8221; <u>Human Events</u> 64.5 (04 Feb. 2008): 7-14. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Site Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>healthinsurance. <u>Health Insurance Blog.</u> 25 March 2008. 2008 .
</p>
<p>McCabe, Patrick. <u>Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.</u> 27 April 2005. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Moore, Michael. <u>Sicko check up the facts.</u> 2008 .
</p>
<p>NCPA. <u>Lessons from Sweden&#8217;s Universal Healthcare.</u> 24 4 2008. 24 4 2008 .
</p>
<p>(NCPA)&#8221;Outliers.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 37.34 (27 Aug. 2007): 68-68. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Station Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Susan Sered and Rushika Fernandopulle, M.D. <u>The Popular Wealth Fund.</u> 2 February 2005. 2008 .
</p>
<p>Thielst, Christina Beach. &#8220;Weblogs: A Communication Tool.&#8221; <u>Journal of Healthcare Management</u> 52.5 (Sep. 2007): 287-289. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Residence Library, Keene, NH. 26 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>&#8220;Wanna play politics, kid?  D.C. welcomes you to the vast leagues.&#8221; <u>Modern Healthcare</u> 37.41 (15 Oct. 2007): 36-36. <u>Academic Search Premier</u>. EBSCO. Keene Spot Library, Keene, NH. 21 February 2008. .
</p>
<p>Wattenberg, Ben. <u>PBS.</u> 2003. 12 4 2008 .<br /></p>

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