Having mandatory insurance is great but most people may not be able to afford it. The insurance companies have to increase …show more content…
Furthermore, so many people are finding it difficult to get individual and family health care coverage. For example, it would be even harder to maintain coverage when an insured person loses their jobs or the company down sizes to perhaps have their product made overseas at a cheaper wage or if the company closes because of the state of the economy. The early result is a veritable flood of controversial rules and regulations, administrative decisions, and guidelines directly affecting the lives of millions of Americans (Owcharenko, 2010). The amount of money the United Sates spends for the uninsured each year is into the one-hundred- billion dollars or …show more content…
It is not only the patients that suffer; the doctors are also affected by the ailing health care system. The insurance companies’ cannot have the ability to set their own terms without any penalties. Many doctors desperately want to help their patients but feels like their fighting a losing battle states “that the cost of medical care seems to be outstripping our ability” (Salam 2012, p.1). The insurance companies decide how treatment can occur and for how much, they are calling the shots for the doctors. Insurance and the system are inconsistent and the individuals who need critical health care are being denied because they do not have financial resources to pay for it (Reihan, 2012).
When applying an accurately deontological approach to health care, it could start controversy of interest between equally entitled individuals that will lead into a difficult or supposedly impossible thing to resolve. Americans will be required by law to have health insurance either individual mandates or personal mandates. So now the government going to fine individuals when they don’t have health care? There will be a great number of people that will be fined and will be debit from the government