Healthcare crisis can be alleviated with church help
Posted: 4/13/06
Healthcare crisis can be
alleviated with church help
By Marv Knox
Editor
SAN ANTONIO—Christ calls his followers to make a difference in the health of people, healthcare expert Camille Miller stressed during the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission’s annual conference.
“Health care as a crisis is absolutely overwhelming,” said Miller, president of the Texas Institute for Health Policy Research in Austin, noting many health problems in the United States are preventable.
For example, obesity is rampant across the country and throughout the state, she said.
“If we don’t control obesity, we won’t control health care,” Miller predicted, lamenting the fact several of America’s “fattest cities” are in Texas.
Since obesity is linked to many diseases, most notably diabetes, the status of health care could be improved by helping Americans to slim down, she said, adding, “We can do something about this.”
Churches should make a difference in the health of their members, she insisted. Churches can form exercise clubs that would encourage individuals to work out and take care of their bodies. They also can advocate for sidewalks and lighted areas in their communities, where people can walk and run and exercise safely. And churches can urge members to eat nutritious meals.
Churches also ought to do something about the “social detriments” that can lead to obesity, Miller said.
These negative health factors include poverty, poor housing, unemployment, inadequate food and nutrition, lack of health education, and environmental health hazards, she noted.
Miller called on churches to engage in the struggle to improve the health of citizens by involving themselves in preparation for the coming avian flu crisis, decreasing the number of uninsured people and advocating for long-term health care.
R.A.I.S.E
If churches would catch the vision to 'raise' health care, in Texas, they could make a difference, Miller said, using an acrostic of the world 'raise' to list the steps they should take:
—Regional approach—the needs often are greater than one community can handle, but they can be addressed regionally. —Access to health care other than through hospital emergency rooms should be readily available. This means broadening the base of insurance and advocating programs that provide medical care to children, infants and the elderly. —Incentives for personal responsibility should be readily available, so that people take steps to improve their own health such as dieting, getting plenty of exercise and not smoking. —Sound use of resources is vital. —Educate people regarding the consequences of engaging in harmful health behaviors and refusing to take helpful steps. |
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