I really enjoyed watching the short video about preventative medicine. I believe that so much illness in this country could be avoided with the awareness and practice of preventative medicine. I found it both comforting and shocking that as little as thirty minutes of exercise a day can potentially save a person from a variety of health ailments and add years to one’s life. It appears that only a little effort put forth can help preserve lives and improve the quality of them. If I had the power, I would like to propose a policy agenda where businesses, companies, and corporations would give their employees an income incentive if they walked to instead of driving to work. This program would not only improve the health of those who participated in it, but it would also help to lower air pollution.
I do believe in the benefits and positive effects that preventative medicine and healthy living can provide to a person’s life. I also believe that the government does have the responsibility to inform and educate the public about these benefits. I understand that the government cannot force anyone to make healthy lifestyle choices, people have to make their own choices. But I do think the government should do their best to provide information, advocate health to the public, and provide incentives for living healthy, which would make it easier decision for people to make healthier choices.
As for the Affordable Health Care 2010 Act, it seems as though the majority of concerns lie within the realm of economics. Our reading this week explained concerns in which the cost of failure for this act would be high and the status quo is probably unsustainable because of high insurance premiums and low income earners. High insurance premiums and the increasing number of uninsured Americans are the concerns which are getting the most attention within the implementation of this act.