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FireFromHeaven
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Does the Catholic Church support universal health care? If not what does catholic social teaching say on this matter?
agreeAll human beings should have access to decent health care. How this is best organized and financed is a matter of prudential judgment.
Christians must insist on respect for innocent human life and reject those who advocate abortion, euthanasia, and the like.
The Church supports universal access to health care; however, I see no indication that the Church supports universal provision of health care (like a government-run nationalized health system). The following bishops made statements in regards to this (in the context of the debate on a national health system for the US) that clearly outline this discrepancy:Does the Catholic Church support universal health care? If not what does catholic social teaching say on this matter?
As has been illustrated here and with a simple google search you can see that the Universal Church most definitely insist on universal health care access. The political debate comes in where we insist on universal health care insurance coverage, and/or whether the government should do this for us.Does the Catholic Church support universal health care? If not what does catholic social teaching say on this matter?
Health care access and health care insurance are in many cases tied together so that it is impossible to have one without the other. Unlike commodities like food, which have a fairly stable and known cost, the cost of health care is highly variable, depending on what health problems you have, most of which are totally random (although some are attributable to personal choice of lifestyle). Without insurance many cannot afford treatments for cancer or long-term care. Of course one could argue that the person with the medical need should have purchased health insurance before he got sick. But then what of children with congenital health problems? These children started out in life with a pre-existing condition that would make purchasing insurance for that condition out of reach for any market-based insurance coverage. What insurance company would willingly sell insurance against something that is already known to have occurred for anything less than the expected cost of treatment? We could force the insurance companies to accept pre-existing conditions without a penalty in the premium, but then that would no longer be a market-based insurance business. The known loss on that policy would have to be offset by higher than normal gains on other policies. In other words, the effect of a mandate to ignore pre-existing conditions would be to force all other policy holders to subsidize those with pre-existing conditions. Since it is mandated by government, it would be no different from a tax to support a single payer health insurance system, except that the insurance companies would be handling the tax instead of the government. But if the insurance companies are forced by law to handle that money in a certain way, they might as well be considered agents of the government.As has been illustrated here and with a simple google search you can see that the Universal Church most definitely insist on universal health care access. The political debate comes in where we insist on universal health care insurance coverage, and/or whether the government should do this for us.
Health care = a Natural Law right
health Care insurance coverage = not a Natural Law right
No one can be turned away from the care they need no matter what their status in society nor their ability to pay, this is the moral decision. Also throw in immigrants, whether they are “legal or illegal” must be given the same respect for their dignity. We must care for all, not just the ones we like. This is the teaching of Jesus; health care insurance coverage is not.
I agree, in terms that the terminology of “rights” is muddied, mostly by its usage in secular social and media discussion. “Basic human rights”, as defined by the CC, does not necessarily equal “Basic human rights”, as defined by secular society.I actually think the church is pursuing the correct moral reasoning, but is using the wrong language to convey it in recent years.
I’m unclear on how every human being has a “right” to housing, food and medical care. These things cannot exist apart from serious labor and skill that goes into providing them. To declare them to be “rights” asserts that they spring magically from the ether, which they demonstrably do not.
In my opinion, what the church should be doing is urging the faithful to recognize that society has an obligation of solidarity and charity to provide the basic necessities for all. This obligation arises from the innate dignity of the human person. I believe it is harmful to suggest that the recipient has the “right” to demand these things. On the contrary, it is when those in a position to provide it do so voluntarily that the threefold goods of charity occur:
Only item #1 above occurs in a worldview in which the poor demand that the government establish programs in order to give them their rights. And frankly, that’s the least important of the three.
- The physical needs of the poor are met.
- The giver encounters Christ in the poor.
- The poor encounter Christ in the giver.
What do you think is the best way to achieve all three of these goals?I actually think the church is pursuing the correct moral reasoning, but is using the wrong language to convey it in recent years.
I’m unclear on how every human being has a “right” to housing, food and medical care. These things cannot exist apart from serious labor and skill that goes into providing them. To declare them to be “rights” asserts that they spring magically from the ether, which they demonstrably do not.
In my opinion, what the church should be doing is urging the faithful to recognize that society has an obligation of solidarity and charity to provide the basic necessities for all. This obligation arises from the innate dignity of the human person. I believe it is harmful to suggest that the recipient has the “right” to demand these things. On the contrary, it is when those in a position to provide it do so voluntarily that the threefold goods of charity occur:
Only item #1 above occurs in a worldview in which the poor demand that the government establish programs in order to give them their rights. And frankly, that’s the least important of the three.
- The physical needs of the poor are met.
- The giver encounters Christ in the poor.
- The poor encounter Christ in the giver.
Precisely. We used not to speak in terms of rights but in terms of duties or obligations. It was not that someone had a right to life but that others had the duty to refrain from killing them.I agree, in terms that the terminology of “rights” is muddied, mostly by its usage in secular social and media discussion. “Basic human rights”, as defined by the CC, does not necessarily equal “Basic human rights”, as defined by secular society.
No, that’s different. Life really is a fundamental right that springs directly from our nature as human beings created by God. Same thing with freedom to worship, freedom to learn, express opinions (political, religious, etc) and choose associations.Precisely. We used not to speak in terms of rights but in terms of duties or obligations. It was not that someone had a right to life but that others had the duty to refrain from killing them.
Well, yes, if you are using rights language. What I’m saying is that In the past, Catholic teaching did not use rights language. They used obligations language. The obligations stem from the same place as our rights.No, that’s different. Life really is a fundamental right that springs directly from our nature as human beings created by God. Same thing with freedom to worship, freedom to learn, express opinions (political, religious, etc) and choose associations.
Exactly, this is one area in which things are muddied by rights language.Where I object to the language of rights is when the word is used without consideration of the dignity of those who produce the goods in question (like housing, food and medicine). If these things are rights, then all who work at growing food, building housing or providing health care are reduced to the slaves of everybody else. It sounds silly, but that’s the implication of the principle.
I’m not precisely sure what you mean here; would you say, killing is wrong because people have a right to life; but we are obligated to help people who are ill?Instead, use the language of duty, responsibility, charity and solidarity when referring to the provision of goods to those in need. Rights are attributes innate to the person.
You got it. The only innate rights we have are those things not dependent on the labor of others to provide. Liberty, life, learning, expression of opinion, art, music. If you take away my books, you violate my rights. If you forbid me to read poetry, you violate my rights. If you kill or rape, you violate rights. If you imprison those who irritate you, but have harmed no one else, you violate rights. If you steal the property of another, you violate his rights.I’m not precisely sure what you mean here; would you say, killing is wrong because people have a right to life; but we are obligated to help people who are ill?
Thanks for clarifying that, Manualman. I have not heard it put that way and now have something to ruminate onYou got it. The only innate rights we have are those things not dependent on the labor of others to provide. Liberty, life, learning, expression of opinion, art, music. If you take away my books, you violate my rights. If you forbid me to read poetry, you violate my rights. If you kill or rape, you violate rights. If you imprison those who irritate you, but have harmed no one else, you violate rights. If you steal the property of another, you violate his rights.
But if a man is hungry and has no food, it does not necessarily follow that the society he lives in has violated his rights. Rather, that society has neglected it’s duty to care for the poor. There is a real difference between recipient being entitled to something and a giver being obligated to give it. As an analogy, a rope is highly useful for pulling things. It’s nearly useless for pushing them.
Very well said. I think this is a valuable distinction to make, highlighting the difference between the rights of the poor on one hand with the obligations of society on the other. A right to food and housing (and healthcare) does not justify a demand that someone else provide it.But if a man is hungry and has no food, it does not necessarily follow that the society he lives in has violated his rights. Rather, that society has neglected it’s duty to care for the poor. There is a real difference between recipient being entitled to something and a giver being obligated to give it.