The National Health plan was initiated to provide money-saving solutions through the concept of self insurance. In an era where millions of people are uninsured, costs are rising, and bureaucracy is rapidly expanding, a nationalized health plan might seem like a good, and viable option It may be true that certain medical procedures are avoided if patients have the wrong or no insurance at all. Time and efforts are also wasted in bureaucracy and billings. . Reports of denied treatment have been surfacing as well, causing many people to believe that a nationalized health plan will solve their problems. What they do not seem to realize is the list of problems that it would bring with it. Yes, obvious problems may be solved with such a step, but the factors we will discuss here will show that the Nationalized Health Plan will do more harm than good.
The National Health Plan, which is being, so actively pursued in the congress will cause many small and medium sized businesses to cut down on the number of jobs and increase their healthcare costs. Such businesses do not have very large margins to play with and cannot absorb shocks of this magnitude. In addition, we will have to rely on the government to decide what medical and health care choices are available for people. This will unleash a deadly and various range of procedural problems, which will take, up most of the crucial time in handling them. Medical procedures will be subject to red tape and eventually, people will try to manipulate the whole system. Hence, this field will be marred with corrupt practices and inefficiencies. In the field, of medicine, time is of critical importance and such wastage will only absorb more time and eat up more efforts.
Budgeting will be so much of a hassle for the government that the processes will either start suffering with direct effects on the common man or the government will have to resort to abolishing it.
Americans do not want nationalized due to the reasons mentioned above. But now the government is trying to force it in somehow by giving people the right to sue their insurance companies. If many people will start to sue their insurance companies, the government will have to intervene and force the nationalized health program on the people. People sue their insurance companies when they do not get the coverage they want for the services that they require.
If we consider the nationalized health plans of people living in the United Kingdom and Canada, the elderly report great difficulties in obtaining healthcare facilities. In New Zealand, people over 75 years of age are not accepted in normal circumstances. To the terminal misfortune of that nation's elderly renal failure patients, New Zealand has no independent dialysis facilities. Germany, Australia and Sweden, are now putting free-market alternatives in place to get rid of the problems caused by their nationalized health programs. Hence, we have a lot of examples that prove that ...