How would it be like if there were no costs in health care? In lieu of the usual private offices scattered across the city, they can go to one community health centers or medical supermarket that can handle all their health woes as all the physicians work in that same area. It would be nice if doctors, like nurses are paid salaries by the government. When it comes to running these hospitals, they have a minority voice since they belong to a very small part of the community. It will be the patients and health workers who will have final say on health policies.

The small group of activists known as the health policy advisory center which aspire for long term medical system revamping, shares that such is the portrait of a great and achievable medical world. They have earned the titles think tank and propaganda ministry of the health movement. The aptness of these descriptions does not matter to these radicals for what they long for is for their voices to continuously be heard through the medical showground.

Talking about free health care and hospitals to be controlled by consumers might seem too idealistic. But it isn't more money that's going to improve health care in this country, only a total restructuring of the system is going to do that. The radical movement is comprised of three city planners, and one anthropologist, social worker, labor relations master and a molecular biologist who all hold office in a cramped fourth floor loft in downtown Manhattan. When deciding on critical matters, all of them have equal say and it is good to note that they also make the same amount of income per week.

They are all striving to drive health workers to rally around medical concerns along with many consumer organizations. The nonprofit, autonomous group runs educational activities like workshops and seminars on important matters like patients' rights and issues on health financing. But then their prime outlet is a monthly, hard hitting magazine composed of 12 to 16 pages that reveal hard news on the reality of issues done by various establishments..

The new activist groups believe that the chaotic nonsystem delivery of health services is what paved the way for various health quandaries in the country. Because the system aims to serve itself by focusing on research, expansion and profit and belittles health care, so many predicaments arise. The policy advisory center has seen the three components of the medical system or what they call the American Health empire.

On top of the list are the med schools, health centers and the hospitals. It is sad that instead of providing solutions to the people's problems, they are organized only to suit the doctors' wants. The second priority is health care and it follows the first, which is education and research. It should be the other way around for us.

The second, more challenging part of the health care system is the financial planning. An important role is played by most health insurance firms since they shoulder half of all the hospital income. The truth is that hospitals and insurance groups conspire with each other contrary to the belief that insurance providers ride herd on hospital expenditures. An example is that a regional director of the insurance providing firms happens to be a hospital administrator. According to the group, they have this hospital dominated company's mismanagement of costs and poor implementation of quality control to thank for as they realize how much the hospital costs have soared.

A complex for the medical industry must be solidified as it is the third facet in the medical system. The complex, is the alliance that exists between providers like doctors, medical schools, hospitals and firms, that make money from people's sickness, drug firms, hospital supply companies, insurance firms, nursing homes and labs. Their primary aim is profit and the link between the providers and these profit oriented groups is evident. Those who make up hospital board of directors are also drug company executives. Trust that many hospitals and hospital supply companies are owned partly by many doctors. Hospital and medical school professionals moonlight as consultants to hospital supply companies.

But many ask that if there is truly some truth to their claims that their present system is efficient and widespread, then why do they lack resources for health care? Shedding light in this issue is the center, who states that health care is not the prime goal of the current medical system, but instead it is there serving its own ends such as education and research, real property expansion deals, financial holdings, and the bottom line, which is profits. Medical care seems to be the only means to such ends. However, in itself, this is not the sole end.

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