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Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1988. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
"Chronic Health-Policy Ills"
Washington Post (12/21/88), P. A17
Rich, Spencer
The national health policy problems George Bush will inherit are tough, costly, and intractable, says the Washington Post's Spencer Rich. Treatment of AIDS is on the list of problems to be solved in a society that can barely afford the medical services it is getting and has many unfilled needs. Neither Bush nor Congress has yet to unveil a comprehensive solution to the problems. A cap on total healthcare outlays would leave out the 37 million Americans without health insurance, future victims of AIDS, and low-income pregnant women and small children. Many fear "the system is out of control" and will require a form of "global budgeting" to hold down health care costs in the whole economy. Department of Health and Human Services Chief of Staff Thomas R. Burke says there are only two policy options: direct government regulation and competition. Strategies to reach the uninsured include requiring all employers to provide some form of health insurance and allowing more people to "buy in" to Medicaid. Many experts feel the problem Bush will inherit is too large to solve.
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