Obesity-related medical costs for 2003 totaled $75
billion, according to research conducted by the nonprofit
group RTI International and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. And, their report concludes,
taxpayers are footing more than half the bill for these
ailments.
Hows this? Because, reports the Washington
Times (January 22), Medicare and Medicaid
government health-care programs cover
sicknesses caused by obesity including type 2 diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, several types of cancer and
gallbladder disease.
In other words, the government subsidizes peoples
poor lifestyle choices.
Predictably, government officials are clueless.
Obesity has become a crucial health problem for our
nation, and these findings show that the medical costs
alone reflect the significance of the challenge.
Thats how Tommy Thompson, secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services, sees it.
Never mind that a nation cannot have a health
problem. Only individuals can have health problems.
Nations have problems when their governments try to fix
individuals problems. The state creates programs
such as Medicare and Medicaid, which force one segment of
the tax-paying population to pay for the health care of
another segment, creating the incentive to avoid taking
personal responsibility for ones own life and to
make others suffer the consequences. Eat at
McDonalds; drive everywhere; avoid exercise; smoke
cigarettes; drink to excess; use drugs or ignore health
warnings, if you like your neighbor gets your
doctor bill. Well, half of it, anyway.
Then, when increased demand for services the
unavoidable result when people dont have to pay the full
price for what they use raises health-care costs,
blame it on greedy doctors or the pharmaceutical industry
and expand the government programs to cover even more
people, even more sicknesses.
Then act surprised when the significance of the
challenge one hesitates to say
immensity of the problem in time
requires even more government involvement.
It is unfortunate that people get sick. Sometimes
its not their fault. But neither is it the fault of
everyone else. A free society ought to leave such matters
to individual choice. A free person ought to be able to
choose to live an unhealthy life. Likewise, a
free person ought to be able to choose to not be
responsible for his neighbors bad decisions.
Of course, people should be free to give to charity
and they do, upwards of $200 billion per year
to provide assistance for those in need.
However, there is another argument that should be
considered: a healthy society requires that people suffer
negative consequences when they do the wrong thing. How
else are we to differentiate between good and bad
decisions? And what better incentive could exist for
people to do the right thing?
Encouraging individuals to avoid taking responsibility
for their own lives is not going to fix our
national health-care problem. It only feeds a
hungry beast.
Scott McPherson is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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