The “right” to healthcare, particularly in America (USA), is hotly debated and poorly understood because distinct arguments

The “right” to healthcare, particularly in America (USA), is hotly debated and poorly understood because distinct arguments

Ethical Issue Debate Power point

MY TOPIC : Should healthcare be a right? For ( SUPPORT )

You may not be personally in support or opposed to the topic, however it is your job to convince your peers of your position. Include evidence that supports the viewpoint. ( Citations on slides)

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  • Include an introduction!!!!!!!!!!
  • The Issue: Assigned Topic : Should healthcare be a right? FOR
  • Your stance, ( For or Against) the rationale for the stance, ( Data) Include Problem statement
  • Ethical principals involved, ( Review the ANA Code of Ethics) theories ( Review your Nursing Theorists) and evidence supporting your position, and your proposed resolution. Review the rubric in this forum for complete grading criteria.
  • Your video must include visual components such as graphics or charts. Your PowerPoint, should have visual aids, or anything that supports and convinces your peers of your stance.

Please make a power point with this info about my topic. It needs to be enough information to fulfill a 5 minute video about the topic. Please make sure to include graphics. Make sure to SUPPORT the topic

INFORMATION AND PROBLEM STATEMENT BELOW

Debate Assignment: Should Healthcare be a right? For

Literature review:

The “right” to healthcare, particularly in America (USA), is hotly debated and poorly understood because distinct arguments against are often seen as mutually exclusive of healthcare rights. Those arguments against are most often driven by economic concerns (and profit margins). Therein, the “right to healthcare” idea remains in a sort of political and economic limbo due to positions established outside of the philosophical and practical history of the human condition. In fact, in one point of view, it is the human condition of birth, life, sickness, and death that forms the requirement for healthcare and the power of a profitable healthcare delivery industry. Separate from this societal fact, the human condition is the characteristics, experiences, actions, and results from the fact of being alive, from simply being human. The argument against healthcare as a right because of economic proliferation is not altogether cruel or shallow but instead is not aligned with ethical distinctions that have long served humanity. Therefore, it is the intent of this treatment to provide an understanding of the depth of human ethics and what it is to be human in the light of Martha Rogers’s theory of the “Unitary and Irreducible Human” presenting a formidable albeit complex but well-defined settlement that healthcare is a right.

Additional insight:

“The right to health care has long been recognized internationally. Ironically, the origins of this right are here in the United States. Health care was listed in the Second Bill of Rights drafted by Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR). Sadly, FDR’s death kept this Second Bill of Rights from being implemented. Eleanor Roosevelt, however, took his work to the United Nations (UN), where it was expanded and clarified. She became the drafting chairperson for the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). That committee codified our human rights, including, at Article 25 (Links to an external site.)

Links to an external site.

, the essential right to health. The United States, together with all other nations of the UN, adopted these international standards. “

“Article 12 goes on to require that “states must protect this right by ensuring that everyone within their jurisdiction has access to the underlying determinants of health, such as clean water, sanitation, food, nutrition, and housing, and through a comprehensive system of health care, which is available to everyone without discrimination, and economically accessible to all.”

The Who: Humans

The What: Should have the Right to Healthcare

When: from birth

Where: In the United States

Why: According to Article 25 in the second bill of rights, all Americans have a right to health and states are required to provide a comprehensive system of health.

Suggested Problem Statement:

Human beings should have the right to healthcare when born in the United States because according to Article 25 in the second bill of rights, all Americans have a right to health and states are required to provide a comprehensive system of health.

Requirements: 5 minutes long

Health & Medical

Answer preview for the paper on ‘The “right” to healthcare, particularly in America (USA), is hotly debated and poorly understood because distinct arguments’

The “right” to healthcare

12 slides

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