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Posted on November 30, 2004

A National Health Insurance Program for the U.S.

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A National Health Insurance Program for the United States - The country must abandon its fragmented system
By Don R. McCanne
PLoS Medicine - November 2004

The continuing deterioration of affordability, coverage, and quality in health care makes it imperative that United States policymakers broaden their reform efforts beyond the ineffectual tinkering of incrementalism. A universal, single-payer, publicly funded and publicly administered program of social insurance would ensure access to affordable, comprehensive, high-quality health care for all. It should be the standard by which any other proposals are judged. If a better proposal can be crafted, now is the time to do it. People are dying while we delay.

http://medicine.plosjournals.org/archive/1549-1676/1/2/pdf/10.1371_journal.pmed.0010039-S.pdf

Comment: This article discusses the characteristics of the U.S. health care system that result in mediocrity in spite of our very high spending. And then it discusses options for reform.

As an open access journal, readers are encouraged to download articles and use them for their own purposes. Some may find this article to be useful in educating the public on the rationale of national health insurance.

This is the second issue of PLoS Medicine, a peer reviewed, open access, international, multidisciplinary journal of medicine from the Public Library of Science, founded by Nobel Laureate Harold Varmus and his colleagues. Their goal is to have PLoS Medicine become recognized as a premier journal of medicine, but with an important difference. All published material will be immediately available online without cost to anyone. This ensures that the very latest information and research in medicine is always available, without financial barriers, even to poor third world countries.

For more information, including free online subscribing:
http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=index-html