Manila Bulletin

Pope to lawmakers: Protect all people with health care laws

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VATICAN CITY (AP) – Pope Francis on Thursday urged lawmakers to ensure that health care laws protect the “common good,” decrying the fact that in many places only the privileged can afford sophistica­ted medical treatments.

The comments came as U.S. lawmakers in Washington, D.C., have been debating how to overhaul the nation’s health insurance laws.

In a message to a medical associatio­n meeting at the Vatican, Francis expressed dismay at what he called a tendency toward growing inequality in health care. He said in wealthier countries, health care access risks being more dependent on people’s money than on their need for treatment.

“Increasing­ly, sophistica­ted and costly treatment are available to ever more limited and privileged segments of the population, and this raises questions about the sustainabi­lity of health care delivery and about what might be called a systemic tendency toward growing inequality in health care,” the pope said.

“This tendency is clearly visible at the global level, particular­ly when different countries are compared,” Francis said. “But it is also present within the more wealthy countries, where access to health care risks being more dependent on individual­s’ economic resources than on their actual need for treatment.”

Without citing any countries, Francis said health care laws must take a “broad and comprehens­ive view of what most effectivel­y promotes the common good” in each situation, including looking out for society’s most vulnerable people.

The Vatican meeting explored endof-life issues and Francis repeated decades-old church teaching forbidding euthanasia.

He also reiterated Vatican teaching that says “not adopting, or else suspending, disproport­ionate measures, means avoiding overzealou­s treatment. From an ethical standpoint, it is completely different from euthanasia, which is always wrong.”

In addressing end-of-life issues, the pope said, countries must “defend the fundamenta­l equality whereby everyone is recognized under law as a human being.”

 ??  ?? Pope Francis greets an unidentifi­ed man during a surprise visit to a small facility near St. Peter’s Square where doctors on a volunteer basis give poor people medical exams, at the Vatican, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2017. (L’Osservator­e Romano/ Pool Photo via AP)
Pope Francis greets an unidentifi­ed man during a surprise visit to a small facility near St. Peter’s Square where doctors on a volunteer basis give poor people medical exams, at the Vatican, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2017. (L’Osservator­e Romano/ Pool Photo via AP)

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