Healthcare Thoughts

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Description

A short clip of a 27 minute discussion on Healthcare in America, with proctoring from Mr. Basel Lemba, a native of Africa and Mr. R.A. Parker, a native of America

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

North American (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
systems development is the piece that we're talking about. The infrastructure of the U. S. Health care system, everyone. We want to be able to change their business of that, that's what that's what my goal is. Okay, so what do you propose? I have a four point plan that helps to bolster the current infrastructure U S. Health care system. I have studied eight different health care systems around the world, and I study would have done well and what they've done. Not so well. And so I've taken both approaches, and I've been able to put together four essential things that one would need in order to make sure that health care is really delivered to the to the community as a whole. Okay, I have a question for you that I knew last time we made you mentioned to me how health care was born. Different country, different circumstances. Can you go over that way had talked to before that universal health systems, based on a that I looked at, have come under a couple different concentrations in different situations. First would be under financial Roland, right, or under some type of chaos. So either an organization or society has gotten to a point where they can no longer take care of themselves and government is not providing for the people. And so services air, then rendered by the government through funding or private funding, brings it in and starts to build up the health care of a community and identify the needs that way from from zero all the way to built up to complete infrastructure. Also, it could come after as a result of chaos or war. 1948 The National Health Service came to the United Kingdom for that same reason. After World War Two, they were decimated, and so was it was a way to build up again from zero all the way back up to a complete system that took care of the people comprehensively. And so what's happening United States that we haven't had complete zero for either one of those situations. What we have is more of a middle ground, and we're looking to build up a complete infrastructure on a middle ground, and that's what makes it so, uh, new. That's what makes it so different. And we can take some lessons learned from some of those other systems. And what happens is that when we're putting on top of something that's halfway build, it looks like it's already done and were far from being finished with health care.