I am currently researching universal healthcare in the U.S. as part of a research paper I am writing for college (ten pages), but I am having trouble finding academically accepted sources that don't have a liberal bias that aren't old. Does anyone have any resource suggestions?
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That hospitals can't turn you away if you can't pay doesn't (for emergency care) doesn't make it not a free market system though. That is a rather weak excuse.
And this can't explain why per capita spending on health care is so much higher in the US than elsewhere, with outcomes that are not better.
That said, I also consider that US lifestyles are way more unhealthy, which probably has a good deal to do with those worse outcomes.
Oh, they do now. Which is why European healthcare has rapidly gone from "pretty good" to "acceptable when you can get in" to "I wish I could afford a flight to America" in the span of about 15 years.
Except it's almost the entire damn problem.
People without insurance use the absolute most expensive form of health care for completely unnecessary reasons, and because they don't have to pay for it, they have zero incentive not to.
Now, thanks to Obama, we have government provided 'insurance,' which is just another case of spending other people money on somebody else -- a.k.a. the least efficient way to spend money.
What makes it not a free market is the heavy government regulation and subsidies