Download Health Care as a Social Good: Religious Values and American Democracy AudioBook Free
David M. Craig traveled across the USA to assess health care gain access to, delivery, and fund in this country. He interviewed religious medical center administrators and interfaith activists, learning the way they balance the prices of economical efficiency and community accountability. He learned that health care in america is not really a private good or a general population good. Ages of public insurance policy and philanthropic service have made health care a shared communal good. Health Good care as a Social Good: Religious Beliefs and American Democracy argues that as escalating health costs absorb more and more of family income and government budgets, we have to take stock of the full range of health care values to create a different and less expensive community-based health care system. Transformation of that system is a national priority but People in the usa have didn't discover a way to work together that bypasses our differences. Craig insists that community engagement around the normal religious conviction that treatment is a shared responsibility can help us accomplish that transformation - one that can not only help us realize a fresh and better system, but one that reflects the ideals of American democracy and the normal good. The publication is published by Georgetown School Press.