Saturday, October 12, 2019
Mass Mediaââ¬â¢s Undermining of Societal Values During Health Care Reform E
Mass Mediaââ¬â¢s Undermining of Societal Values During Health Care Reform      There is little doubt that three years ago the American people wanted health care reform.  News media saw the controversy over health care reform as a strong issue to discuss in their  productions, and most fulfilled their responsibility as an information medium: to provide equal  opportunity for both sides of this debate to reveal the benefits of their plans and the drawbacks of  their opponentsââ¬â¢. However, when interest groups became involved in this dispute, advertising  their own beliefs against the Clinton Health Care Reform Plan, they manipulated the public by  using scare tactics. News media incorporated these ads in their coverage of the benefits and  drawbacks of the proposed changes and the present system. The American public persuaded  Congress to kill any effort by the Clinton Administration to universalize health care because of  the interest groupsââ¬â¢ advertisements and the news mediaââ¬â¢s emphasis on the accuracy of the  messages displayed in these ads. The lack of support for health care reform was because of the  fear and confusion the news media created. In this paper I will argue that mass mediaââ¬â¢s exposing  the American Public to interest groups advertisements and the news mediaââ¬â¢s analyzing these  advertisements in their health care reform reports reinforced the interest groups messages. This  reinforcement led media to acknowledge the interest groups basis for disagreement over and the  flaws of health care reform. The disagreement over and flaws of health care reform eventually  led to the downfall of this initiative and of societyââ¬â¢s valuing improvements in health care. News  media undermined societal values by ignoring how health care reform...              ... they rejected health care reform, and ignored mass mediaââ¬â¢s  attention to health care reform. Otherwise, society would have had what it wanted: universal  health care and an news medium respecting, not scaring its audience out of wise and beneficial  decisions.  Page 8    Works Cited Page    Beck, Melinda. ââ¬Å"Rationing Health Careâ⬠ Newsweek 27 June 1994: 30.    ââ¬Å"Bureaucatsâ⬠ Coalition For Health Insurance 24 June 1994.    ââ¬Å"Changes Alternate # 2â⬠ Health Insurance Association of America 24 June 1994.    ââ¬Å"Defuse Health Care Bill.â⬠ The Arizona Republic 18 July 1994: 2.    Greenwald, John. ââ¬Å"OUCH! Which Hurts More, The Shot Or The Bill?â⬠ Time 8 March 1993:  53-55.    Reich, Robert F. ââ¬Å"National Health Care Reform: Comparing Four Alternative Plans.â⬠ Illinois  Business Review 22 March 1994: 3.    Wright, Robert. ââ¬Å"The Technology Time Bomb.â⬠ The New Republic 29 March 1993: 25-30.                        
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