Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

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Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.  – Martin Luther King, Jr.

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   Happy Independence Day! One of our readers, Diana Gallaher, posted the above quote inside her comment in yesterday’s Journal. Dr. King’s statement is a painfully apt commentary on American healthcare today. Why would the world’s most famous democracy tolerate the terrible inequality of our medical system?
   King would be stunned to know that 50 million Americans live without health insurance coverage. In so many ways, we need the power of his voice and his presence to lift America out of her complacency on this issue. One answer is clear, even if it is complicated to implement. It is universal healthcare…

   Yes, it would be difficult to dismantle the massive industry that has become America’s HMOs. But the executives certainly won’t feel any financial pain. And the first line staff will like find opportunities in the new system.
   Can you imagine a world where you could enter a hospital with no fear of the financial consequences of your treatment? No billing clerks would be needed. No collection agencies would ever need to be employed. Care would be given the way it should be given – without regard to  affordability.
   This sounds like a Utopian vision. Perhaps it is. There’s always the risk in any large entity of American20flag
bureaucratic behavior. But what a joy it would be to be able to eliminate the money factor from the caregiving encounter.
   Ultimately, these issues about our healthcare system are questions of Love. How can we insure that Love is the center of care regardless of the constraints of the system? This is the question each loving caregiver asks everyday. And on Independence Day, these questions have special relevance. It’s time that American’s were freed of worries about the cost of the medical care they need.

-Erie Chapman

*The above essay represents the views of the writer and not necessarily those of the Baptist Healing Trust.

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3 responses to “Freedom From Worry – About Personal Healthcare Bills”

  1. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    It’s painful to think how long it will be before the government finally approves what you are recommending. Even if the next President supports change, which means electing a Democrat, it will probably be at least three years. I hate to think of all those who will suffer with unpaid hospital bills in the meantime.

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  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Thank you for continuing this important national dialogue on the dire need for health care reform. I believe that with universal healthcare hard choices and tradeoffs will need to be made based on “priority with a clear purpose.” (as described on http://www.ourhealthcarefuture.org website.) For example, I wonder if we will we choose to spend our healthcare dollars to ensure that all children receive immunizations and perhaps, choose to forego some costly experimental treatments that may benefit only one versus the many? I would like to share this vision of healthcare with you…
    SJHS Vision of Healthcare
    Because healthcare provides a foundation for human dignity to flourish everyone has a right to basic healthcare.
    As part of the common good healthcare must take its limited place among other basic goods that promote/protect dignity-education, stable economy, environment, jobs, etc.
    Because of healthcares importance, size, and complexity, it needs a systems approach integrated and coordinated across our national community.
    Individuals have a duty to promote and protect their health; society has a duty to provide a sustainable healthcare system that:
    -Is transparent and accountable in its inevitable rationing decisions,
    -Allocates its resources across a balanced continuum of care-prevention, acute, emergency, end of life, mental, long term, etc.,
    -Is health promoting and preventative,
    -Dedicates health resources to actual care minimizing spending on administration,
    -Is evidence-based,
    -Keeps inflation at a level that is sustainable.
    We commit ourselves with our communities to make this vision a reality.
    ~Jack Glaser Founder, Center for Healthcare Reform

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  3. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    In my work and my personal life, I have come across far too many medical professionals who think a world of haves and have nots is acceptable with regard to health care. Liz, thank you for providing well-thought choices in regards to healthcare reform. Erie and Liz, thank you both for grounding these issues of health care reform in questions of love. if we base health care reform on anything other than love, we may get some “fixes” but it will still be broken. And when we attempt to fix it without serious consideration of love, we have disaster. Quite frankly, we experienced that in Tennessee recently with the cuts to our medicaid program.

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