Your Body, Your Health Care

AVAILABLE APRIL 8TH. Pre-order at retailers now.

• Published By Cato Institute

At a time when individuals feel increasingly disenfranchised by their health care choices, Dr. Jeffrey A. Singer’s groundbreaking new book, Your Body, Your Health Care, offers a compelling vision for a future in which patients regain control over their health decisions and care. The book underscores the importance of personal autonomy, highlighting how the patient-practitioner relationship has been overshadowed in recent decades by paternalistic and overbearing government intervention.

As government regulations continue to encroach upon personal health care choices, patients find themselves at the mercy of policymakers dictating their treatment options, from which health professionals they can consult to what substances they can ingest. In this timely work, Dr. Singer, a seasoned surgeon and policy expert, delves into the philosophical underpinnings of a health care system that respects individual sovereignty and moral agency.

“In the following pages, I want to inform you about how lawmakers and policymakers at all levels of government have failed to heed the pronouncement that ‘every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body,’” Dr. Singer emphasizes. “I hope to expose the harmful unintended consequences of this paternalism. Finally, I want to point out roads leading to a future where the government respects the autonomy and rights of all adults.”

Your Body, Your Health Care not only validates the grievances of patients but also presents a philosophical framework for the relationship between individuals, the health care system, and the state. Through thoughtful analysis of issues such as prescription requirements, the right to self-medicate, access to harm-reduction techniques, and licensing laws, Dr. Singer proposes a road map for reforming health care policy that prioritizes individual rights and provides essential reading for anyone concerned about the future of health care in America. It serves as a clarion call for change, urging readers to recognize their rights and the preservation of personal sovereignty in America.

Praise for the book

“Dr. Singer’s writing is engaging and always informed by his clinical experience, sharp insight into the unintended consequences of policy, and ethical commitments. Your Body, Your Health Care is a book worth reading, arguing over, and thinking about. Ultimately, Dr. Singer’s book provides a stark reminder that patient autonomy is still a vital ethical principle worth keeping.”
—Jay Bhattacharya, MD, PhD, professor of health policy, Stanford University

“Dr. Singer’s book is well written, well researched, and very provocative. Whether or not the reader agrees with everything that Dr. Singer writes about the regulatory state, they will be challenged to think differently and/​or to defend to themselves why they disagree. If the reader is a policymaker, they may be taking notes as to legislation to propose.”
—Sen. Bill Cassidy, MD (R‑LA)

“In an era when government officials and health experts are way too quick not only to tell you what’s best for you but also to mandate it with the force of law, Dr. Jeffrey A. Singer’s Your Body, Your Health Care is a righteous vaccine for the body politic.… His maximalist case for patient autonomy, informed consent, and the right to self-medication is exactly what we need in a world that is busting open with nearly infinite new treatments and cures for everything that ails us.”
—Nick Gillespie, editor at large, Reason

“Singer delves into some of the most pressing and contentious health care issues in the United States today. His criticism of the FDA is both thought-provoking and disturbing, as are many other sections in the book. Everyone concerned about government intrusion on patient autonomy should read this.”
—Josh Bloom, PhD, director of chemical and pharmaceutical research, American Council on Science and Health

About the author

Jeffrey A. Singer is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and works in the Department of Health Policy Studies. He is president emeritus and founder of Valley Surgical Clinics Ltd., the largest and oldest group private surgical practice in Arizona, and has been in private practice as a general surgeon for more than 35 years.

One Response

  1. This looks like a large amount of common sense in one convenient package.

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