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The Catholic Democrat view
On Family & Health

To speak of mission is to speak of vocation: the response to a transcendent call which takes shape in the suffering and appealing countenance of the patient in his care. To care lovingly for a sick person is to fulfill a divine mission, which alone can motivate and sustain the most disinterested, available and faithful commitment, and gives it a priestly value. When he presents the heart of his redemptive mission, Jesus says: 'I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly' (John 10:10)
—Charter for Health Care Workers, Pontifical Council for Pastoral Assistance, 2/11/94

You are aware of the close relationship, the analogy, the interaction between the mission of the priest on the one hand and that of the health care worker on the other: all are devoted, in different ways, to the salvation of the person, and care for his health, to free him from illness, suffering and death, to promote in him life well-being and happiness.
—Pope John Paul II, address to Catholic doctors, 12/28/78

Facts regarding Bush policy on family and health:
  1. Half of the U.S. appropriation to date for development in Iraq could pay to treat every HIV-infected person in Africa for a year—1/20th of the entire cost so far.
  2. The Bush Administration launched an initiative to provide $15 billion over five years to deal with HIV disease in the developing world (PEPFAR initiative). PEPFAR had initially refused to pay for generic medications that are not FDA-approved, which meant severely limited therapeutic choices for African AIDS patients and initially no approved regimens for children. The 2007 announcement of expanded funding (to $30 billion over the next five years) may represent a significant increase in coverage for both children and adults with HIV, the infection rate for which continues to increase across Sub-Saharan Africa.
  3. A new Medicare drug benefit: Aside from the deceit over the projected total cost of the program (initially estimated at $400 billion over ten years, and then revealed to be closer to $530 billion after its passage), the legislation puts significant new pressure on retirees to enroll in HMO care. The complexity of new drug discount cards that went into effect in May 2004 has left many people without the benefit by virtue of difficulty involved in using it.
  4. The Medicare drug benefit forbids government contracting with pharmaceutical companies to negotiate volume discounts for senior citizens, dramatically increasing the cost of the legislation to the benefit of these companies.
  5. The number of Americans without health insurance climbed nearly 10% under Mr. Bush, partly as a result of job losses.
  6. Healthcare costs dramatically outpaced inflation despite pressures to enroll more people in supposedly cost-cutting capitated plans.
  7. The Bush Administration's proposed biomedical research budget for 2006 for the first time in more than a decade failed to keep up with the rate of inflation, paling in comparison to the growth in discretionary military spending and leading scientists once again to talk about leaving academia in large numbers as they did in the 1980s.

Moral scorecard:
  1. The Bush Administration has begun to address the AIDS cataclysm in Africa, and has now proposed an additional $30 billion over five years to expand anti-retroviral treatment in developing countries. This is still a tiny fraction of the US investment in the Iraq War effort, but certainly the most laudable humanitarian initiative under this Administration. “Do not lay up for yourselves an earthly treasure. Moths and rust corrode; thieves break in and steal. Make it your practice instead to store up heavenly treasure, which neither moths or nor rust corrode nor thieves break in and steal. Remember where your treasure is, there is your heart also.” Matthew 6:19-22.
  2. The continued loss of health insurance to vast swaths of American citizens, including children, strikes right at the heart of the Christian mission to care for others. As the only Western nation without universal health care, despite spending far more per capita than any other country, we have a moral obligation to alleviate this pervasive suffering as Jesus relieved suffering. “I was ill and in prison and you did not come to comfort me.’ Then they in turn will ask, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or away from home or naked or ill or in prison and not attend you in your needs?’ He will answer them: ‘I assure you, as often as you neglected to do it to one of these least ones, you neglected to do it to me.’” Matthew 25:43-46