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Written by: Applepi101
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Healthcare is a basic need for all humans, which is why the government and health-care officials should make it a priority to guarantee that everyone has the right to free healthcare, regardless of various boundaries. Some examples of being denied this right are gender, income, and age which make it difficult to access for many around the world. It should be every nation's goal to make sure that people do not have to worry about those parameters and get the care they deserve.
From 1948, the NHS, or National health Service has provided healthcare to the British public. While it is not technically without any fee, because the money spent is taken from the public's taxes, it is free at the point of being delivered. Now, over half of the countries over the WORLD provide a sense of free, universal healthcare, but with one exception: The US. Healthcare in the USA has always been paid for directly by the patient, with the exception of insurance, which may cover a sliver of the cost. But they haven't changed the system, which leaves us with the biggest question of all: Does paying for healthcare provide a greater service or should all healthcare be free?
The irony is, that the origins of free healthcare is right in the US! Health care was listed in the Second Bill of Rights drafted by Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Sadly, FDR’s death kept this Second Bill of Rights from being implemented. But Eleanor Roosevelt, took his work to the United Nations), where it was expanded.
The US already provides free public education, public road maintenance, public law enforcement, and many other public services to its citizens to promote a just society that is fair to everyone. Norman Daniels, PhD, Professor of Ethics and Population Health at Harvard University says, “healthcare preserves for people the ability to participate in the political, social, and economic life of society. It sustains them as fully participating citizens.” In order to "provide" to the public, and be a "fully-participating citizen" free healthcare should be a right to all, and not simply leave families struggling to pay off the high cost of quality treatment.
In conclusion, healthcare is a basic human necessity, right, and the public should be able to access this without thinking of it as an "advantage".
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