Abstract
In his 1993 health-care reform proposal, Bill Clinton offered health care as a civil right. If his proposal had been accepted, all Americans would have been guaranteed a basic package of health care. At the same time, they would have been forbidden to provide or purchase better basic health care, as a cost of participating in a national system to which they were compelled to contribute. A welfare entitlement would have been created and an egalitarian ethos enforced. This essay will address why such egalitarian proposals are morally unjustifiable, both in terms of the establishment of a uniform health-care welfare right, and in terms of the egalitarian constraints these proposals impose against the use of private resources in the purchase of better-quality basic health care, not to mention luxury care.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,Philosophy
Reference34 articles.
1. The Foundations of Bioethics, pp. 154–80.
2. Canada's Health Care System Faces Its Problems
3. Schieber , Poullier , and Greenwald , “Health System Performance.”
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