< Back to Positions
HealthCare
The Tennessee Catholic Public Policy Commission strongly supports
providing all Tennesseans with access to adequate healthcare, and
calls for reform of our healthcare system to provide services to
greatest number of people regardless of their ability to pay.
Our approach to healthcare is shaped by a simple, fundamental
principle: every person has the right to adequate healthcare. This
right flows from the sanctity of human life and the dignity that
belongs to all human persons who are made in the image and likeness
of God. Healthcare is more than a commodity; it is a basic human
right, and an essential safeguard of human life and dignity. Our
consistent teaching that each human life must be protected and that
human dignity be promoted leads us to insist that all people have
the right to health care.
Over the past decade TennCare has been the best option available to
meet this need; however we encourage the General Assembly to take
steps to strengthen the program so that it operates in a fiscally
responsible manner while ensuring that none of our citizens,
particularly children, are left without access to healthcare. To
provide healthcare to the greatest possible number of people, we
have to do everything that we can to not waste money.
The virtue of solidarity and our teaching on the preferential option
for the poor and the vulnerable require us to measure our health
system in terms of how it affects the weak and disadvantaged. In
seeking the fundamental changes that are necessary, we focus
especially on the impact of health policies on the poor and
vulnerable.
We believe government has an essential role to play in assuring that
the rights of all people to adequate healthcare are respected. This
will require concerted action by federal, state, and other levels of
government and by the diverse providers and consumers of
healthcare.
We believe reform of the healthcare system which is truly
fundamental and enduring must be rooted in values that reflect the
essential dignity of each person, ensure that basic human rights are
protected, and recognize the unique needs and claims of the poor.
We recommend to the leaders of Tennessee the following criteria for
reform:
- Respect for Life: Whether it preserves and enhances
sanctity and dignity of human life from conception to natural death.
- Priority Concern for the Poor: Whether it gives special
priority to meeting the most pressing healthcare needs of the poor
and under served, ensuring that they receive quality health
services.
- Comprehensive Benefits: Whether it provides
comprehensive benefits sufficient to maintain and promote good
health; to provide preventative care; to treat disease, injury, and
disability appropriately; and to care for persons who are
chronically ill or dying.
- Pluralism: Whether it allows and encourages the
involvement of the public and private sectors, including the
voluntary, religious, and nonprofit sectors, in the delivery of care
and services; and whether it ensures respect for religious and
ethical values in the delivery of healthcare for consumers and for
individual and institutional providers.
- Quality: Whether it promotes the development of
processes and standards that will help to achieve quality and equity
in health services, in the training of providers, and in the
informed participation of consumers in decision making on
healthcare.
- Cost Containment and Controls: Whether it creates
effective cost-containment measures that reduce waste, inefficiency,
and unnecessary care; measures that control rising costs of
competition, commercialism, and administration; and measures that
provide incentives to individuals and providers for effective and
economical use of limited resources.
- Equitable Financing: Whether it assures society's
obligation to finance universal access to comprehensive health care
in an equitable fashion, based on ability to pay; and whether
proposed cost-sharing arrangements are designed to avoid creating
barriers to effective care for the poor and vulnerable.
In our view, the best measure of any proposed healthcare initiative
is the extent to which it combines universal access to quality
health care with cost control, while ensuring care for the poor and
preserving human life and dignity.
|