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Testimony by
the Staff
of the
Florida Catholic Conference
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House
Select Committee On
Affordable Health Care For Floridians
November 19, 2003
Tallahassee, Florida |
REMARKS OF MICHAEL SHEEDY
ASSOCIATE FOR HEALTH
REMARKS OF MICHAEL
SHEEDY
ASSOCIATE FOR HEALTH
Mr. Chairman & Honorable
Representatives:
I am Michael Sheedy, Associate for Health at the Florida Catholic
Conference. As many of you know well, in the Catholic community, our faith
informs us that every human being is made in God’s image and likeness.
Because this is so, every person possesses an inherent dignity that must be
preserved and enhanced from conception to natural death; and every person
has both the right and responsibility to realize the fullness of that
dignity. This happens best when all members of society protect and promote
those rights, with a special priority to addressing the health care needs of
the poor and underserved.
In contrast to those individualistic traditions that define rights in terms
of spheres of individual autonomy and maintain that the government – while
forbidden to interfere with these rights – must protect them, our tradition
describes human rights in terms of the interdependence of personal and
social life. It demands that social structures be arranged to promote and
protect the dignity and well being of all persons. Among the rights held in
our tradition is health care, without which human potential is seriously
impeded, if not denied.
Against this standard, our state’s health system, as has been documented
throughout your committee’s process, is critically failing in terms of
justice and is getting worse. The system does not meet the needs of all
residents of Florida.
We are committed to promoting a more just health system, one that makes
compassionate care accessible and affordable for every resident of the
state, and we are greatly encouraged by the work that you are undertaking.
Many of you are not familiar with our approach to this endeavor, so I
highlight for you “foundational values” that a workgroup of the
Health Affairs Advisory Forum – a group of professionals from Florida’s
Catholic health ministries – has developed. These values guide our approach
to making health insurance more accessible and they include:
1. HUMAN LIFE IS
SACRED AND EACH PERSON HAS INHERENT DIGNITY.
There is a human right to
basic and compassionate quality health care, regardless of age, income,
illness, or condition of life and a morally responsible society has an
obligation to provide it.
2. PERSONS ARE ESSENTIALLY SOCIAL AND
INTERDEPENDENT.
The health of individuals
and the health of society as a whole are inextricably linked. Persons have
a right and duty to participate in the health care system to meet their own
needs and to promote the common good.
3. SOCIETY HAS A
SPECIAL DUTY TO CARE FOR THE POOR AND VULNERABLE.
There is a social
responsibility to provide appropriate quality health care for the uninsured
and underinsured. Those with greater needs should receive the services that
address their needs.
4. RESPONSIBLE STEWARDSHIP REQUIRES CAREFUL
ALLOCATION OF HEALTH CARE RESOURCES.
A just health system must
acknowledge limits and seek to set appropriate priorities within the health
system.
5. HEALTH CARE IS AN
ESSENTIAL SOCIAL SERVICE.
Health care should never
be reduced to a mere commodity nor be allocated solely on the ability to
pay.
6. HEALTH CARE REFORM SHOULD RESPECT THE
RELIGIOUS & ETHICAL VALUES OF BOTH INDIVIDUALS & INSTITUTIONS.
The role and values of
religiously affiliated health care institutions and plans should be
protected.
The Health Affairs
Advisory Forum is asking the Catholic Health Executives Commission to
approve concrete recommendations to the Governor’s Task Force. I will be
pleased to forward those to you as soon as they are complete.
Thank you for your consideration this evening. Be assured of our sincere
appreciation of your efforts and our desire to work with the Legislature to
make health care more accessible.
FOUNDATIONAL VALUES
GUIDING THE FLORIDA CATHOLIC CONFERENCE’S &
CATHOLIC HEALTH MINISTRIES’
APPROACH TO HEALTH CARE ACCESSIBILITY
1. HUMAN LIFE IS
SACRED AND EACH PERSON HAS INHERENT DIGNITY.
There is a human right to
basic and compassionate quality health care, regardless of age, income,
illness, or condition of life and a morally responsible society has an
obligation to provide it.
2. PERSONS ARE ESSENTIALLY SOCIAL AND
INTERDEPENDENT.
The
health of individuals and the health of society as a whole are inextricably
linked.
Persons have a right and duty to participate in the health care system to
meet their own needs and to promote the common good.
3. SOCIETY HAS A
SPECIAL DUTY TO CARE FOR THE POOR AND VULNERABLE.
There
is a social responsibility to provide appropriate quality health care for
the uninsured and underinsured. Those with greater needs should receive the
services that address their needs.
4. RESPONSIBLE STEWARDSHIP REQUIRES CAREFUL ALLOCATION OF HEALTH
CARE RESOURCES.
A just
health system must acknowledge limits and seek to set appropriate priorities
within the health system.
5. HEALTH CARE IS
AN ESSENTIAL SOCIAL SERVICE.
Health
care should never be reduced to a mere commodity nor be allocated solely on
the ability to pay.
6. HEALTH CARE REFORM SHOULD RESPECT THE RELIGIOUS & ETHICAL VALUES OF BOTH
INDIVIDUALS & INSTITUTIONS.
The role and values of
religiously affiliated health care institutions and plans should be
protected.
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