Your Concern Over Healthcare Reform
Most Reverend R. Walker Nickless
Bishop of Sioux City, Iowa
Published on the Diocesan website
August 19, 2009
The current national debate about health care reform should concern all of us.
There is much at stake in this political struggle, and also much confusion and
inaccurate information being thrown around. My brother bishops have described
some clear “goal-posts” to mark out what is acceptable reform, and what must be
rejected. First and most important, the Church will not accept any legislation
that mandates coverage, public or private, for abortion, euthanasia, or
embryonic stem-cell research. We refuse to be made complicit in these evils,
which frankly contradict what “health care” should mean. We refuse to allow our
own parish, school, and diocesan health insurance plans to be forced to include
these evils. As a corollary of this, we insist equally on adequate protection of
individual rights of conscience for patients and health care providers not to be
made complicit in these evils. A so-called reform that imposes these evils on us
would be far worse than keeping the health care system we now have.
Second, the Catholic Church does not teach that “health care” as such, without
distinction, is a natural right. The “natural right” of health care is the
divine bounty of food, water, and air without which all of us quickly die. This
bounty comes from God directly. None of us own it, and none of us can morally
withhold it from others. The remainder of health care is a political, not a
natural, right, because it comes from our human efforts, creativity, and
compassion. As a political right, health care should be apportioned according to
need, not ability to pay or to benefit from the care. We reject the rationing of
care. Those who are sickest should get the most care, regardless of age, status,
or wealth. But how to do this is not self-evident. The decisions that we must
collectively make about how to administer health care therefore fall under
“prudential judgment.”
Third, in that category of prudential judgment, the Catholic Church does not
teach that government should directly provide health care. Unlike a prudential
concern like national defense, for which government monopolization is
objectively good – it both limits violence overall and prevents the obvious
abuses to which private armies are susceptible – health care should not be
subject to federal monopolization. Preserving patient choice (through a
flourishing private sector) is the only way to prevent a health care monopoly
from denying care arbitrarily, as we learned from HMOs in the recent past. While
a government monopoly would not be motivated by profit, it would be motivated by
such bureaucratic standards as quotas and defined “best procedures,” which are
equally beyond the influence of most citizens. The proper role of the government
is to regulate the private sector, in order to foster healthy competition and to
curtail abuses. Therefore any legislation that undermines the viability of the
private sector is suspect. Private, religious hospitals and nursing homes, in
particular, should be protected, because these are the ones most vigorously
offering actual health care to the poorest of the poor.
The best way in practice to approach this balance of public and private roles is
to spread the risks and costs of health care over the largest number of people.
This is the principle underlying Medicaid and Medicare taxes, for example. But
this principle assumes that the pool of taxable workers is sufficiently large,
compared to those who draw the benefits, to be reasonably inexpensive and just.
This assumption is at root a pro-life assumption! Indeed, we were a culture of
life when such programs began. Only if we again foster a culture of life can we
perpetuate the economic justice of taxing workers to pay health care for the
poor. Without a growing population of youth, our growing population of retirees
is outstripping our distribution systems. In a culture of death such as we have
now, taxation to redistribute costs of medical care becomes both unjust and
unsustainable.
Fourth, preventative care is a moral obligation of the individual to God and to
his or her family and loved ones, not a right to be demanded from society. The
gift of life comes only from God; to spurn that gift by seriously mistreating
our own health is morally wrong. The most effective preventative care for most
people is essentially free – good diet, moderate exercise, and sufficient sleep.
But pre-natal and neo-natal care are examples of preventative care requiring
medical expertise, and therefore cost; and this sort of care should be made
available to all as far as possible.
Within these limits, the Church has been advocating for decades that health care
be made more accessible to all, especially to the poor. Will the current health
care reform proposals achieve these goals?
The current House reform bill, HR 3200, does not meet the first or the fourth
standard. As Cardinal Justin Rigali has written for the USCCB Secretariat of
Pro-life Activities, this bill circumvents the Hyde amendment (which prohibits
federal funds from being used to pay for abortions) by drawing funding from new
sources not covered by the Hyde amendment, and by creatively manipulating how
federal funds covered by the Hyde amendment are accounted. It also provides a
“public insurance option” without adequate limits, so that smaller employers
especially will have a financial incentive to push all their employees into this
public insurance. This will effectively prevent those employees from choosing
any private insurance plans. This will saddle the working classes with
additional taxes for inefficient and immoral entitlements. The Senate bill,
HELP, is better than the House bill, as I understand it. It subsidizes care for
the poor, rather than tending to monopolize care. But, it designates the limit
of four times federal poverty level for the public insurance option, which still
includes more than half of all workers. This would impinge on the vitality of
the private sector. It also does not meet the first standard of explicitly
excluding mandatory abortion coverage.
I encourage all of you to make you voice heard to our representatives in
Congress. Tell them what they need to hear from us: no health care reform is
better than the wrong sort of health care reform. Insist that they not permit
themselves to be railroaded into the current too-costly and pro-abortion health
care proposals. Insist on their support for proposals that respect the life and
dignity of every human person, especially the unborn. And above all, pray for
them, and for our country. (Please see the website for the Iowa Catholic
Conference at www.iowacatholicconference.org and www.usccb.org/healthcare for
more information)
Your brother in Christ,
Most Reverend R. Walker Nickless
Bishop of Sioux City
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