(A review is being submitted as a partial requirement of the course)
Submitted to: Dr. Amir Saeed Submitted by: Muhammad Ahmed Sheikh Roll No. 12
Institute of Administrative Sciences, University of the Punjab, Lahore
Review on Documentary Movie titled Sicko
Introduction The presenter of video documentary has made American HealthCare System (that includes Health Care, Health Insurance and Pharmaceutical Industry) as his focal theme which according to him need be reformed and restructured into a system which he romanticized as Socialized Medicine (i.e. Medical and Hospital Care for all at a nominal cost by means of Government Regulations of Health Care and subsidy derived from taxation). The author tries to show that the healthcare industry is a maze of blinding bureaucracy and callous indifference. The author filmed and contrasted for-profit, non- Universal and NPM based U.S health Care system with those in vogue in France, Great Britain, Canada and Cuba which are working on the very ethos of Non-Profitability, universality, need, well-being and morality.
Background The documentary is not about 50 Million US Citizens who do not get any Health Facility but about 250 Million Americans who have Health Insurance Umbrella but health facilities are still a long way from them. They get indiscreet treatment on the part of Insurance Companies which have profitability and money maximization their sole raison deter. The companies exploit every means possible to avoid actually paying for their customers demand. This callousness and skepticism on the part of Insurance companies degenerates into emergencies occasionally talking tolls of customers in form of their lives. The fortunate ones who live would stuck with substantial medical bills. They decline funding the lifesaving operations on g One woman was denied an operation to remove her brain tumor because the insurance company said it was non-life- threatening. Then she died rounds of would-be procedural lapses, technicalities and whimsical reasons. A scene was filmed where a woman was denied an operation to remove her brain tumor because the insurance company said it was non-life-threatening. Later on, she died. Enabling them are their hundreds of lobbyists, whom Moore says outnumber members of Congress 4-to-1. Billy Tauzin helped get the Medicare Prescription Drug Bill passed, which helps the pharmaceutical companies make more money. Then what did he do? He left Congress and took a job as the CEO of the drug industrys main lobbying organization. He knew the real money was to be had in pharmaceuticals, not Congress. Moore takes us to several foreign countries that have universal health care, where citizens (and even visitors) get everything for free or almost-free, paid for by the government. The hope is that we will see the merits of these systems and create something similar for ourselves. And they certainly do seem appealing. Moore informs us with eye-opening instances. In England, not only is your hospital stay free, but they will even reimburse you if you had to take a bus to get there! In France, doctors make house calls! In Cuba, prescriptions cost a nickel! In Canada, everyone has their own personal doctor assigned to live in their house, and the average citizen lives to be 150(which seems imaginary).
One subject Moore does address smartly is the reason a lot of Americans dont want universal health care: because another term for it is socialized medicine, and if we allow socialism to infiltrate any part of our society, then the next thing you know were marching through Red Square with hammer-and-sickle flags. Americans, as a rule, dont like anything that sounds like socialism, and Moore has the amusing clips from an old anti-socialism educational film (narrated by Ronald Reagan!) to prove it.
The problem with that argument, as Moore explains, is many elements of American society already ARE socialized. You get mail delivered to your house for free, you send your kids to school for free, you can call the fire department for free, you can borrow books from the library for free, you can call the cops to investigate a crime for free. Everyone has access to those things, and no one has to pay for it, except through their tax dollars. Socialized medicine works exactly the same way. If we trust the government to hire teachers to educate us, and firefighters and cops to protect us (and there are private alternatives we can pay for if we dont), why dont we trust them to hire doctors to cure us?
Yet theres that underlying kernel of legitimacy. As it happens, these sick Americans do get excellent treatment in Cuba. Some of them are given procedures and prescriptions that theyve needed for months, but that their insurance companies refused to pay for.