How To Understand the Universal Health Care Plan

Posted Aug 25, 2009 by rweigel12 / comments 0 comments / Print / Font Size Decrease font size Increase font size

This is an article on how to understand Obama's proposed Universal Health Care Plan. It is presented factually from an unbiased perspective.

Obama's proposed universal health care plan and health care management overhaul is a contentious debate right now between Republicans and Democrats in Congress, and all Americans alike. This is a factual article on what Obama contends are the attributes of the group health care initiative--it is up to you to decide in favor or against the health care coverage.

Step 1) Obama contends that the universal group health care plan and management overhaul will save the typical working family up to $2,500 per year in medical insurance.

Step 2) Modernizing the U.S. medical health care database will increase efficiency among private hospitals, public hospital, and private clinics. The competition between vying health care insurance providers, Obama protests, is making a universal health care insurance database impossible at this juncture.

Step 3) There will be an influx of nurses, medical coders, doctors, health care lawyers, and related professionals entering health care management becuase of the proposed group health care plan.

Step 4) There will be an influx in funding for cancer research as a result of the proposed medical health care management plan.

Step 5) Underrepresented Minority groups like American indians will receive better heath care coverage as a result of the large group health care insurance plan.

Step 6) Medicare for senior citizens will increase in size and speed because of the proposed universal health care management plan.

Step 7) Obama's biggest contention--all Americans will have affordable and excellent medical health care coverage as a result of the overhaul in U.S. health care.


There are more contentions from Obama on the proposed universal health care management plan; nontheless, these are among the most cited. Again, it is up to you--after a thorough analysis of the strength of these contentions--to either support or oppose the health care initiative.

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