Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A look inside a pro-life, free-market healthcare system
A look inside a pro-life, free-market healthcare system
Dec 30, 2025 10:17 AM

Proponents of massive government programs like Medicare for All often present their schemes as though there were no alternative to state intervention. Thankfully, a life-affirming, healthcare practice shows that the free market has a superior answer about how to care for vulnerable women and their babies.

Chris Gast of Right to Life of Michigan drew my attention to the story of Mark Blocher, a Christian bioethicist who believes medical practices should reflect their faith, something often difficult even in our present hybrid, public-private system.

Blocher worked with desperate, impoverished women who considered having an abortion for economic reasons and believed only a faithful witness could properly treat their needs.

He also wanted to give pro-life advocates a strong, Christ-centered medical alternative.

“Too often,” when a pregnant woman is making her decision, “we send her off to a Medicaidprovider or someone else who doesn’t share a life-affirming view,” Blocher told Gast.

So, Blocher created Christian Healthcare Centers, a healthcare provider based on the direct primary care model. Gast explains:

Direct primary care is an alternative model for offering basic medical services at a doctor’s office. Instead of going to your doctor’s office and billing the services to an pany, patients pay a small monthly fee to receive unlimited primary care services. Because most health insurance plans have high deductibles, most insured patients wind up paying for basic medical care out-of-pocket anyway. The direct primary care “subscription” is designed to reduce the overhead for the clinic, freeing doctors and nurses from insurance paperwork to devote more time to seeing patients, and ultimately reduce the overall cost to the patient.

One major advantage is institutional: They do not accept outside insurance, so they do not have to hire staff to navigate a labyrinth of rules and regulations, private or public. This allows them to charge less than other facilities – both because of lower overhead and because they eliminate one of the key drivers of healthcare inflation: health panies.

Health insurance was intended to insure against unforeseeable accidents, disabilities, or diseases. As panies gradually expanded their mandate beyond catastrophic coverage to include routine check-ups and physicals, medical costs ballooned. Hospitals charged the maximum reimbursement allowed by pany. Patients, who did not understand the opaque nature of insurance billing, knew only that their premiums increased every year.

Direct primary care cuts out the middle man and returns to the ideal of having a personal relationship with your doctor. It introduces price transparency, which also reduces “surprise” medical costs. For instance, CHC charges a flat subscription rate, beginning as low as $80 a month in exchange for a defined series of services.

Although direct primary care offices have flourished in recent years, caregivers have often had to fight for their existence from state legislators eager to regulate them.

CHC – which is a for-profit institution – states that, by “operating independently from the constraints associated with traditional insurance reimbursement, CHC is free to focus exclusively on patients and their wellness – physically, spiritually, emotionally and relationally.” This includes operating according to an explicitly Christian ethos that offers only ethical treatment and prays for patients.

National healthcare systems do not reflect these values, because their top-down, one-size-fits-all model does not allow it. As the tragedies of Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans show, cost-cutting and healthcare rationing lie at the heart of any single-payer healthcare system.

“Every time we object to a thing being done by government,” wrote Frédéric Bastiat, “the socialists conclude that we object to its being done at all.” Read Gast’s account of how a Christian ethicist founded a life-affirming, free-market alternative to Planned Parenthood. Then, if you wish to be pro-life, go and do likewise.

Related:

Medicare for All is not pro-life

The moral quandary of national healthcare

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The limits of fiscal policy
Note: This is post #126 in a weekly video series on basic economics. The best case for fiscal policy happens during a recession caused by an aggregate demand shock, says economist Alex Tabarrok. Even so, it’s hard to get it right because the U.S. economy is massive plex. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Tabarrok highlights the three factors for an ideal stimulus—Timely, Targeted, and Temporary—and notes that all of these characteristics present some problems for enacting fiscal policy....
National healthcare is driving Christian doctors out of medicine
Proponents of a national health care system often describe the program as “all-inclusive.” However, a Canadian court ruling and a new U.S. congressional report show that single-payer health care could permanently exclude faithful Christians. Health care workers in Canada’s national health service must participate in abortion and physician-assisted suicide because they receive government funding, a Canadian provincial court ruled. Wesley J. Smith highlighted the Canadian case at National Review. Physicians argued in court that their constitutional right to conscience is...
6 Quotes: Supreme Court justices on the ‘Peace Cross’ case
Earlier today the Supreme Court issued its ruling in American Legion v. American Humanist Association—also known as the Bladensburg Cross case. The Court ruled that the 40-foot-tall stone and concrete “Peace Cross” memorial displayed on government-owned property in Bladensburg, Maryland outside Washington, DC does not violate the Establishment Clause. The Court said retaining established, religiously expressive monuments, symbols, and practices is quite different from erecting or adopting new ones. Here are six quotes from the ruling you should know about....
From folkways to institutions: Why culture matters for the economy
In our efforts to reduce poverty and spur economic growth, we can be overly consumed in debates about top-down policy tactics and the proper allocation of physical resources. Yet, as many economists are beginning to recognize, the distinguishing features of free and flourishing societies are more readily found at the levels of culture—attitudes, beliefs, and imagination. According to economist David Rose, for example, “it is indeed culture—not genes, geography, institutions, policies, or leadership—that ultimately determines the differential success of societies.”...
Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization is . . . . AVAILABLE!
After a long gestation, I’m happy to report that my book, Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization, published by Regnery Gateway, has just been released and is available for purchase at Amazon. Over the past two weeks, it’s been listed as #1 New Release on Amazon in 5 categories – History of Civilization and Culture; Science and Religion; Ancient Early Civilization History; Church and State; and History of Christianity. The book has already been reviewed in The Stream...
Communism with a Catholic vocabulary?
In the preamble to its constitution, the Industrial Workers of the World proclaimed that it would bring about socialism (which it dubbed “industrial democracy”) by “forming the structure of the new society within the shell of the old.” But can Christian rhetoric be hollowed out to make room for secular leftist principles? According to one observer in Poland, precisely such a program is taking place in Europe. And the leader of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS), Jaroslaw Kaczynski,...
NHS forces mentally challenged Catholic woman to have an abortion
If it were possible to localize all the pathologies undermining the West into a single incident, a court ruling handed down on Friday might serve as the one. A British judge has ordered a young Catholic woman with “moderately severe” learning disabilities to have a second-trimester abortion against her will, in a case filed by the publicly funded National Health Service. The circumstances are horrific. The mother, who cannot be named, is in her twenties with a mental parable to...
7 Figures: How Americans spend their time
Every year the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the American Time Use Survey (ATUS), which measures the amount of time people spend doing various activities, such as paid work, childcare, volunteering, and socializing. Here are seven figures you should know from the latest report: 1. In 2018, 89 percent of full-time employed persons worked on an average pared with 31 percent on an average weekend day, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Full-time employed persons averaged 8.5 hours...
Russell Moore on socialism: How should Christians think about it?
A plurality of American Christians now believes that capitalism is at odds with “Christian values,” a trend that’s been panied by a range of political leaders and Religious-Left thinkers who promote the patibility of Christianity with expansive state control. Paired with our culture’s growing interest in “democratic socialism,” such arguments are especially worthy of reflection. In a new video, Russell Moore examines this debate, mon plaints against capitalism and asking, “Is socialism consistent with a Christian view of reality?” While...
3 Ways to explain religious freedom to an American
This week is “Religious Freedom Week,” a time set aside by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to “pray, reflect, and take action on religious liberty, both here in this country and abroad.” In honor of the Religious Freedom Week, here are three explanations about what religious freedom means in America. 1. Basic Explanation Religious freedom is a right, given by God and guaranteed by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, that allows individual people or groups to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved