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Catholic Identity and Charity Care in the Era of Health Reform

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Abstract

Catholic healthcare institutions live amidst tension between three intersecting primary values, namely, a commitment of service to the poor and vulnerable, promoting the common good for all, and financially sustainability. Within this tension, the question sometimes arises as to whether it is ever justifiable, i.e., consistent with Catholic identity, to place limits on charity care. In this article we will argue that the health reform measures of the Affordable Care Act do not eliminate this tension but actually increase the urgency of addressing it. Moreover, we will conclude that the question of limiting charity care in a manner that is consistent with the obligations of Catholic identity around serving the poor and vulnerable, promoting the common good, and remaining financially sustainable is not a question of if, but of how such limits are established. Such limits, however, cannot be established in light of one overriding moral consideration or principle, but must be established in light of a multitude of principles guiding us to a holistic understanding of the interrelatedness of the moral dimensions of Catholic identity.

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Notes

  1. Regarding the interplay of the individual, organization and social realms of ethics, see Glaser (1994).

  2. We recognize that we have not addressed the question of consent on behalf of those returning to their country of origin for the purpose of accessing care. On this question, see Kuczewski (2012a, b) and Parsi and Hossa (2012).

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Correspondence to John Paul Slosar.

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Slosar, J.P., Repenshek, M.F. & Bedford, E. Catholic Identity and Charity Care in the Era of Health Reform. HEC Forum 25, 111–126 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10730-013-9212-6

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