Health and Medicine University

A dark day for universal health coverage

On Dec. 14, 2018 universal health care programs in both the United States and Mexico were dealt significant blows to their future and impact.
People in a hospital waiting room

In an insightful commentary published in The Lancet by a trio of authors that includes University of Miami President Julio Frenk and Dr. Felicia Marie Knaul, director of the Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas at UM, the authors point out that two universal health care programs are under siege in their respective countries, one they describe as a “mature democracy” and the other—Mexico—which “is a fairly young democracy without the institutional checks and balances that prevent arbitrary decisions.”

The authors examine how the Affordable Care Act in the United States, popularly known as Obamacare, and Mexico’s largest public insurance program known as Seguro Popular (People’s Health Insurance), are being challenged by critics. In the U.S., they said, “the challenge to the ACA has been headed by the right wing of the U.S. Republican Party, whereas the attack to Seguro Popular comes mostly from the far left factions” of the Morena party of Mexico’s new president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Frenk, who was the former Minister of Health of Mexico from 2000 to 2006 and introduced Seguro Popular that expanded access to health care to more than 50 million previously uninsured Mexicans, co-authored the commentary with Knaul, UM professor of public health sciences, and Octavio Gomez-Dantes with the National Institute of Public Health in Mexico.

The authors conclude how important it is to protect programs and institutions that align with the public good.

Read the commentary in The Lancet, a prestigious, international medical journal founded in 1823 dedicated to examining urgent topics impacting society.