The rights of the medically uninsured: an analysis of social justice and disparate health outcomes

Journal of Health & Social Policy
Michelle Chandler

Abstract

As technological advances in the United States continue to improve the effectiveness of medical interventions, expectations among Americans of both improved health and extended life expectancy have also increased. At the same time, many of the population continue to lack the insurance necessary to access even the most basic healthcare services (Institute of Medicine, 2004; Tunzi, 2004; Saha & Bindman, 2001). With approximately 18,000 avoidable deaths attributed annually to inadequate medical coverage and 43.6 million individuals currently without insurance benefits, the need to address the disparity in access to treatment and a means of social justice in the distribution of health care is all too clear (Crispen & Whalen, 2004). As a nation relying on market mechanisms to regulate the costs and quality of available health resources (Baldor, 2003; Saha&Bindman, 2001), the welfare of society as a whole may soon be threatened by the provision of marginal services to a select minority as increasing numbers of the uninsured continue to experience less favorable clinical outcomes and higher mortality rates (Tunzi, 2004; Litaker & Cebul, 2003; Jackson, 2001; Sox, Burstin, Edwards, O'Neil et al., 1998). The author will first examine the...Continue Reading

Citations

Sep 8, 2010·Social Work in Public Health·Paul Alexander Clark, Sabina B Gesell
Mar 21, 2007·Academic Radiology·Ania Zofia KielarRuth C Carlos
May 31, 2008·New Solutions : a Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy : NS·M TajikG Grant
Oct 13, 2009·Social Work in Public Health·Pauline Vaillancourt RosenauJay H Glasser

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