A breast cancer survivor on health care reform

May 25, 2007

Hannah Krening writes in The Denver Post. Bravo:

As a Colorado taxpayer, breast cancer survivor and one whose first husband lost a long battle with cancer, I want to say that the state 208 Commission’s recent choices of proposals to evaluate all add up to one thing for me: I hope I never have a life-threatening condition again in Colorado if any of these proposals become reality. And I hope that nobody I love has to be subjected to the rationing, waiting and other debilitating results of what they evidently believe are the best of intentions.

Bringing more government involvement into health care “reform” is not a solution. It is a recipe for disaster. Of the proposals considered, only one reflected my views: the “FAIR” proposal, which has been cast aside. Only by reducing government involvement in health care will we get the kind of justice that will bring about the best care for all at the best possible price. We must remember that health care is not and cannot be free: the skills of doctors, researchers and technology companies must be fairly compensated. The alternative is slavery of the few taxpayers who will foot the huge (unworkable) bills and of the providers of health care who will ultimately leave the profession in order not to be enslaved by it.

This is not regulation on some dispensable part of our lives. This concerns everyone’s survival, to some degree; nobody will be untouched by the outcome of this process. We have a lot to lose.

(via NoodleFood)



Related posts:

  1. What does socialism have to do with the health care reform debate?
  2. When a health care professional gets diagnosed with breast cancer
  3. Why health reformers should be worried about the breast cancer screening backlash
  4. Rumble in the health reform jungle
  5. Does a breast MRI have any benefit for patients with breast cancer?
  6. Abortion and breast cancer
  7. Health care financing crisis


KevinMD.com on Facebook


  Follow on Twitter   Subscribe



{ 3 comments }

1 Elliott May 26, 2007 at 1:02 am

I thought to myself, this is too easy. I won’t even bother because I know that there is a hidden agenda and that it’s BS. I couldn’t resist. Hannah’s opinions were not formed by an encounter with breast cancer. She is an a lover of Ayn Rand and always has been. http://www.westandfirm.org/

2 KoKo May 26, 2007 at 3:01 am

Elliot, how do you know what opinions were formed by Hannah’s encounter with breast cancer?

Have you ever had breast cancer?

3 Anonymous May 26, 2007 at 10:54 am

Well, I guess that just discounts everything she has to say.

BTW, isn’t elliot the guy who thinks that he doesn’t pay taxes because he lives in New Hampshire?

Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post: Should you have to "opt out" of organ donation?

Next post: Cardiologists deliver a baby on flight

Site Meter