Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Obamacare and the Threat to Human Dignity
Obamacare and the Threat to Human Dignity
Dec 19, 2025 1:05 PM

From the Jan. 5 Acton News & Commentary. This is an edited excerpt of “Health-Care Counter-Reform,” a longer piece Dr. Condit wrote for the November 2010 issue of the Linacre Quarterly, published by the Catholic Medical Association. For more on this important issue, see the Acton special report on Christians and Health Care. Dr. Condit is also the author of the 2009 Acton monograph, A Prescription for Health Care Reform, available in the Book Shoppe.

Obamacare and the Threat to Human Dignity

By Dr. Donald P. Condit

Since President Obama signed the Patient Protection Act into law in March 2010, the acrimonious debate on this far-reaching legislation has persisted. For many, the concerns over the Obama administration’s health care reform effort are based on both moral and fiscal grounds. Now, with House Republicans scheduling a vote to repeal “Obamacare” in the days ahead, the debate is once again ratcheting up.

Perceived threats to the sanctity of life have been at the heart of moral objections to the new law. Despite a March 2010 executive order elaborating the Patient Protection Act’s “Consistency with Longstanding Restrictions on the Use of Federal Funds for Abortion,” many pro-life advocates fear a judicial order could reverse long-standing Hyde amendment restrictions on the use of federal tax dollars for abortion. Impending Medicare insolvency and the Patient Protection Act’s establishment of an “independent payment advisory board” to address treatment effectiveness and cost suggest bureaucratic restrictions on the horizon for medical care of the elderly and disabled.

The objections made on fiscal grounds are serious. Prior to the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama voiced concern for 47 million Americans without health insurance. More recently, supporters of this legislation focused on 32 million Americans, with 15 million immigrants and others left out of the equation, yet still requiring care in United States emergency rooms. The Patient Protection Act increases eligibility for Medicaid recipients, yet state budgets are severely strained with their current underfunded medical obligations. Moreover, doctors struggle to provide health-care access to Medicaid patients when reimbursed below the overhead costs of delivering care.

Who Should Pay?

The perception among consumers of third-party responsibility for health, including payment for health-care resource consumption, is the major factor for unsustainable escalation of medical spending in the United States. Yet the Patient Protection Act augments third-party authority and threatens doctor-patient relationship autonomy, by increasing responsibility of government and employers for health care. Patients and physicians will face increasing involvement of third parties in decision making in exam rooms and at the bedside.

Let’s be clear about one thing: Health-care reform is absolutely necessary in the United States. The demographic tsunami of aging baby boomers, ever increasingly expensive advances in medical technology, anticipated Medicare trust fund insolvency, and millions of persons in the United States with limited medical access provide witness to this necessity. However, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, of 2010, threaten human dignity and do not adequately address these problems. The Patient Protection Act neither sufficiently protects patients nor sustains long-term affordability.

Catholic social teaching can be very helpful in assessing health care reform and applying universal principles for all those of good will concerned about mon good. Respecting the following Catholic social teaching principles can help this country achieve sorely needed consensus on critically necessary health-care reform.

Human Dignity: The first principle of social teaching — respect for the dignity of the human person — is absolutely fundamental for health-care reform. Otherwise, health-care reform is meaningless; why bother? This principle must apply on both ends of the stethoscope in respect for both provider and patient. Health-care providers must have freedom to follow their conscience in prescribing and providing treatment. Furthermore, the dignity of the munity must be respected; premium payers and taxpayers must not plicit in procedures or treatments which violate human dignity.

Common Good: The Catechism of the Catholic Church defines mon good as “the sum total of social conditions which allow people, either as groups or as individuals, to reach their fulfillment more fully and more easily.” This principle prompts consideration of how scarce health care resources ought to be allocated in society. On this teaching, moral theologian Fr. Thomas Williams makes a helpful observation in his book Who Is My Neighbor? He distinguishes between moral and civil rights. These differ with respect to their demands upon the government. We might agree upon a moral duty to make health care accessible to all citizens and work toward that goal, while challenging the presumption that our government should assume greater responsibility for health care (a civil duty). The appropriate balance between market-oriented and government-controlled medical resource allocation belongs in the realm of prudential discussion. According to the Church’s social doctrine, “A petitive market is an effective instrument for attaining important objectives of justice.” On the other hand, as Pope John Paul II wrote in his 1991 encyclical letter Centesimus annus, “Regulating the economy solely by centralized planning perverts the basis of social bonds; regulating it solely by the law of the marketplace fails social justice, for ‘there are many human needs which cannot be satisfied by the market.’”

Subsidiarity: Another core principle of Catholic social teaching – subsidiarity — emphasizes that those with “closeness to those in need” provide care for them. This principle argues for health-care reform solutions which fortify individual and family responsibility for health-related decisions. The doctor-patient relationship should be strengthened and protected rather than threatened by distant bureaucratic panels. Local, munity level, initiatives should receive priority over increasing the role of more distant employers and the government.

Solidarity: A key principle often cited in the health care debate, solidarity, obliges us to maintain a “preferential option for the poor and vulnerable” in confronting socio-economic problems. Solidarity motivates us to fulfill our duty to the poor and vulnerable, in the spirit of loving our neighbor, feeding the poor, and caring for the sick. Health-care reform must address the needs of immigrants within our borders, the chronically ill, the disabled, the economically marginalized, and human beings who are particularly vulnerable at the chronological extremes of life.

Push the Reset Button

Let’s keep the following objectives in mind as we enter a new round of policy proposals in health care debate.

Human dignity must be defended at the most vulnerable stages, from conception to natural death. Medical providers’ freedom of conscience must be protected. Health care ought to be considered as a scarce resource and allocated petitive market-oriented reforms rather than further increasing third-party responsibility for medical care. The principle of subsidiarity leads to increasing responsibility for health care at the patient, family, doctor-patient, and local levels of society rather than at distant bureaucratic plateaus. Finally, the principle of solidarity requires us to confirm that our policy initiatives have benefited the most poor and vulnerable.

We share a duty in the United States to care for all those within our borders, and improve health-care affordability and quality. Yet “Obamacare” does not fulfill criteria required by fundamental moral principles; millions remain uninsured, and millions more are precariously insured. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, neither sufficiently protects patient’s dignity nor sustains long-term affordability. Catholic social teaching guides us to a universal — that is, for all those of good will – conclusion that our work is not done on health-care reform.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Dashed hopes in crisis? Be like Charles Borromeo
When the Israelites wondered aimlessly in the desert, often they got lost, were scared and worshiped false idols to abate their worries. They abandoned Yahweh, but the Lord did not reciprocate. Rather, he stood steadfastly by his chosen people, and demanded they walk straight, heads up and remain focused, trusting pletely, for soon would reach the coveted Promised Land. The Old Testament Covenant provided God’s chosen people with the gift of theological hope which the Israelite nation collectively relied on...
Acton Line podcast redux: Samuel Gregg on the life and impact of Michael Novak
It’s now been three years since Michael Novak passed away. Novak was a Roman Catholic theologian, philosopher, and author, and was a powerful defender of human liberty. In this episode, Acton’s Samuel Gregg shares Novak’s history, starting with his time on the Left in the 1960s and ’70s and recounting his gradual shift toward conservative thought that culminated in the publication of his 1982 masterwork, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism. In this book, Novak grounded a defense of a free...
The Midwest’s growing ‘faith-and-tech movement’
We have long heard about the incessant flow of America’s best-and-brightest workers to the country’s largest urban centers, leading many to fear the consolidated power of “coastal elites” and the continuous disruption of the American heartland. Yet this movement seems to be slowing, as more workers and businesses shift to mid-sized metropolitan areas across the Midwest. Many venture capital firms are following suit, eyeing various eback cities” as frontiers for new growth. Given the many demographic and cultural differences between...
End the BBC’s monopoly status
The UK’s exit from the European Union opened a new era of liberty by empowering the British people to control their own destiny. However, state monopolies undermine their newfound autonomy by removing them from key decisions that affect their lives. One of the foremost UK monopolies that has eroded consumer sovereignty is the BBC, argues Rev. Richard Turnbull in a new essay for the Acton Institute’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite. Rev. Turnbull – who is both ordained in the Church of...
Why culture matters for the economy
This article first appeared on February 24, 2020, in Law & Liberty, a project of Liberty Fund, Inc., and was republished with permission. In many peoples’ minds, economics and economists remain locked in a world of homo economicus—the ultimate pleasure-calculator who seeks only to maximize personal satisfaction from the consumption of goods and services and whose occasional displays of seemingly altruistic behavior really only function as a means of self-satisfaction. This conception of economics is far removed from how modern...
Cleveland church must stop helping the poor or stop being a church: City govt
After being thrown out of a Cleveland church that doubles as a homeless shelter, a vagrant used a pistol to force his way back inside. Unfortunately, the gun-wielding intruder wasn’t the biggest threat to the facility’s survival: Its own government was. The Denison Avenue United Church of Christ began sheltering the homeless last fall, after joining forces with the Metanoia Project, a local nonprofit. When St. Malachi Catholic Church had to reduce the number of people it housed, Denison UCC...
The post-liberal Right: The good, the bad, and the perplexing
This article first appeared on March 2, 2020, in Public Discourse, the journal of the Witherspoon Institute, and was republished with permission. Since 2016, much of the American Right has been preoccupied with the liberalism wars. Whether they question aspects of the American Founding, express strong doubts about free markets or press for more assertive roles for the state, post-liberals believe that the ideas variously called “classical liberalism,” “modern conservatism,” or simply “liberalism” have exercised too strong a hold on...
Thousands gather in Venezuela to protest Nicolás Maduro’s government
With coronavirus understandably being the focus of most people’s thoughts these days, it’s not surprising that other important events might escape our attention. Consider, for example, the fact that tens of thousands of Venezuelans took to the streets on March 10 this week in their nation’s capital, Caracas, as well as other cities to demand an end to the Chavista dictatorship of President Nicolás Maduro which has driven the country into an economic black hole from which it shows no...
William Barr on how to resist ‘soft despotism’
Throughout the recent battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, the party’s drift from liberalism to progressivism has e abundantly clear, aptly representing our growing cultural divide between ordered liberty and what Alexis de Tocqueville famously called “soft despotism.” For example, in Senator Bernie Sanders’ routine defenses of the Cuban Revolution and munism, he insists that he is only praising the supposed “goods” of socialism while rejecting its more “authoritarian” features. “I happen to believe in democracy,” he says, “not authoritarianism.”...
Christian anthropology begins with you! Three texts for meditation
While seeing is believing, being is best. Being who you are is a lifetime’s work. This has been in the forefront of my mind this past month, as each week I’ve been turning out reading lists on natural law, how to think like an economist, and how to think and talk about politics. I’ve been thinking about seeing, believing, and being, because this week I want to suggest some readings on Christian anthropology. On other topics, I’ve tried to suggest...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved