Society is, by definition, a collaboration. Like all group environments, there is a give and take of rights, responsibilities, and choices. This is true whether we’re talking about a family, a town, a board, or a hospital. This is also true whether you live in a democracy, a theocracy, or a tyranny. In all systems, there are forces that "set the menu" from which individuals can then make a choice.
Despite the rhetoric to the contrary, limitations can be a good thing. The human brain can only tolerate so many options before getting overwhelmed. When overwhelmed, our ability to choose well goes down dramatically...a known fact that is sometimes used against us in aggressive and unscrupulous marketing strategies. At other times, however, a plethora of choices is valuable. For example, few people need every single brand of detergent to be offered at their local store. Even fewer wish to spend hours in the soap aisle carefully weighing the advantages and disadvantages of each product. On the other hand, people with severe skin allergies might be very interested in a wide selection of detergents; as they hope to find one that won’t give them a rash!
In general, a collaborative society seeks to meet the needs of the community and the individual by setting a menu of options that is not too narrow and not too broad. Most of us, consciously or unconsciously, believe that the best way to ensure "enough choice" would be to have someone like ourselves be in the "menu selecting" position of power. However, when the menu is set by people whose values differ significantly from our own, we tend to express considerable outrage! This leads to a great deal of amusing and ironic hypocrisy from all points on the political compass.
When speaking about public health, there are a variety of forces that overlap, conflict, combine, and collaborate to create the menu of health care choices available to individuals. In this article and the next, we’ll look at five of the most powerful group forces at play, and our access as citizens to these arenas of power.
1. Law & Government
Our society decided long ago that legal oversight of choice is desirable. However, where to draw the line is often a contentious question, leading to spirited debates. This is further complicated by the fact that our government was designed to spread "menu control" around, with the federal, state, county, and local layers of governance each having limited, intersecting, and sometimes conflicting powers. For example, the civil rights movement, marijuana legalization, and the recognition of gay marriage are all interesting areas of tension between state governance and federal governance.
When it comes to our access as citizens, some laws are passed with great fanfare, others are passed very quietly. But, all laws in this culture are documented and there are established methods for individuals to work toward altering them. However, just because a choice is legal does not mean it is available. There are many other forces that limit availability like....
2. Official recommendations
Various governmental and professional groups make official recommendations. These groups are obligated to follow the law and their recommendations are documented. However, there is often no clear path to challenge recommendations, even though they may limit medical choice just as effectively as law.
Consider the 2008 recommendation by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) on the subject of vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC). The 2008 recommendation stated that a VBAC should only be attempted if a surgical team was "immediately available." This recommendation led to many resource-limited small or rural hospitals refusing to permit VBAC due to lack of an "immediately available" surgical team. Thousands of women were forced into expensive and potentially dangerous surgeries they did not need and did not want.
Now, consider the education of your family doctor. The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) is a private professional organization responsible for the accreditation of 9,000+ residency programs. Residency programs currently include training in all forms of legal birth control. However, accreditation requirements are reviewed every seven years, and that review is happening now! Will the requirement for training in birth control be weakened or eliminated entirely? The Catholic Ethical and Religious Directives expressly forbid contraceptives, leaving 30-50% of US hospitals unable to offer a "full education" residency program due to restrictions from...
3. Religion
The separation of church and state both protects our secular society from becoming a theocracy and allows religious groups to follow their faith with autonomy from popular opinion. This autonomy even allows religious groups to defy certain laws with relative impunity. A church can refuse interracial marriage, so long as it is willing to forego the tax benefits of being in compliance with federal civil rights law. The "sanctuary movement" of the 1980’s consisted of churches openly defying immigration laws to provide sanctuary for Central American refugees fleeing civil war. Religious exemptions from vaccination laws are respected in nearly all states.
This independence gives religion unique power when setting the public health "menu." Historically, a variety of religious groups have sought to expand, restrict, or modify the health care menu. One strategy is religiously-based political action. Another strategy is social pressure, which we’ll discuss later. Yet another strategy is the ownership of medical facilities, which are then obligated to follow the religious values of the sponsoring religious organization.
Religiously controlled health care mostly becomes problematic when a single religious group controls such a large percentage of medical facilities that it begins to function as a monopoly. Monopolies of all kinds interfere with individual choice, thus the various legal restrictions upon them. A religious monopoly upon a vital service like health care has some very serious implications. The carefully crafted checks and balances of our political system do not apply to religious organizations, leaving the individual very few medical or religious rights that can be defended. Thus a religious monopoly can endanger both our health care and our religious freedom.
So why would anyone accept a religious monopoly on health care? In general, it’s all about....
4. Money
Which is what we’ll start talking about next article. See you then!