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The motivating
thrust behind the former debate has been the lack of relation between increased health
care costs and better health, while the latter debate was concerned with the interaction
between a declining national domestic product and increasing morbidity and mortality
rates. The more general question of viewing health, like education, to be guaranteed by
government policy principally as a right, distinguishes the two issues at a more
fundamental level. The American federal government has articulated a minimal philosophical
commitment to individual health as an end in itself after the Medicare and Medicaid
legislation (among the poor and elderly), while the FSU institutionalized a concern with
health principally as a means (among industrial workers) for ensuring the goal of economic
productivity. |