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Character is Destiny-Catholic Edition 33 day prayer in preparation to All Saints to start-Sep 29

Character is Destiny-Catholic Edition 33 day prayer in preparation to All Saints to start-Sep 29
“Qui Deo confidit, omnia facere potest.” He who trusts in God can do all things.

Friday, October 24, 2025

 


NIC’s Corner

Repent, therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away, and that the Lord may grant you times of refreshment and send you the Messiah already appointed for you, Jesus, whom heaven must receive until the times of universal restoration of which God spoke through the mouth of his holy prophets from of old. (Acts 3:19-21)

·         Eat Fish on Fridays

o   Feeling like mixing things up a bit? Why not start your day by preparing a delicious Jamaican jerk chicken dish for breakfast, embracing the flavors and spices that will kickstart your taste buds into high gear. As you savor your meal, take a moment to appreciate the culinary journey you’re embarking on.

o   As lunchtime approaches, indulge in some comfort food by celebrating National Food Day with a spread of your favorite dishes. Whether it’s a homemade bologna sandwich or a hearty bowl of tripe soup, relish in the simple pleasure of good food and good company.

·         Spirit Hour: Raphael Cocktail

·         Iceman’s 40 devotion

·         Get an indulgence

·         Operation Purity

·         How to celebrate Oct 24th

o   After breakfast, take some time to learn about the majestic kangaroo, the fascinating creatures that are synonymous with strength and resilience. Watch documentaries, read articles, or visit a local zoo to observe these animals up close and personal. It’s a great way to increase your awareness and appreciation of the wildlife around you.

o   For fun and budget-friendly activity, why not organize a bandana DIY session with friends or family? Get creative with different colors and patterns and wear them proudly throughout the day as a symbol of unity and creativity. You can even take it a step further by hosting a mini fashion show to showcase your unique bandana creations.

๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ฑ Netherlands 17 and ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ผ Guinea-Bissau 204—Two More Stops on the Rich vs Poor Tour, Each Offering Distinct Catholic Landscapes

Here’s the next pilgrim pairing: Netherlands, a prosperous European nation with deep Catholic roots now facing secular drift, and Guinea-Bissau, a West African country marked by economic hardship but vibrant Catholic growth. Together, they extend NIC’s Corner’s contemplative journey into the spiritual contrasts of affluence and adversity.


๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ฑ Netherlands — Wealthy, Historic, and Religiously Shifting

GDP per capita: ~$67,984 USD (2024)

๐Ÿงฎ Why the Netherlands Ranks High in Per Capita Income

The Dutch economy thrives on innovation, trade, and stability.

·         Diversified Economy: Strong sectors include finance, agriculture, logistics, and tech.

·         Global Trade Hub: Rotterdam and Schiphol are major gateways for European commerce.

·         Social Infrastructure: Universal healthcare, education, and public transport support quality of life.

·         Stable Governance: Long-standing democratic institutions and EU integration foster resilience.

✝️ Quality of Life for Catholics in the Netherlands



Catholicism is historically rich but increasingly cultural.
๐Ÿ•Š️ Strengths

·         Historic Legacy: Cathedrals like St. Bavo and St. John’s Basilica anchor centuries of faith.

·         Cultural Identity: Catholic traditions still shape festivals, architecture, and civic rituals.

·         Ecumenical Dialogue: Active collaboration with Protestant and secular communities.

·         Educational Institutions: Catholic schools and universities remain influential.

⚠️ Challenges

·         Secularization: Church attendance has dropped to ~2.7% of Catholics.

·         Belief Decline: Many self-identified Catholics are agnostic or atheist.

·         Clergy Shortage: Fewer vocations and aging priests.

·         Cultural Catholicism: Faith often functions more as heritage than spiritual practice.

๐ŸŒฟ For a Catholic
The Netherlands is a pilgrimage of memory and discernment—where basilicas whisper of saints past, and the Eucharist invites renewal amid modern doubt. It’s a place to reflect on faith’s endurance and rediscover the Gospel in art, silence, and civic beauty.


๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ผ Guinea-Bissau — Economically Strained, Spiritually Growing

GDP per capita: ~$1,106 USD (2024)

๐Ÿงฎ Why Guinea-Bissau Ranks Low in Per Capita Income

Challenges are systemic and geographic.

·         Political Instability: Coups and weak institutions hinder development.

·         Limited Infrastructure: Roads, electricity, and healthcare are scarce.

·         Agricultural Dependence: Economy relies heavily on cashew exports.

·         Low Investment: Foreign aid and remittances play a major role.

·         Youthful Population: High birth rates strain education and employment.

✝️ Quality of Life for Catholics in Guinea-Bissau

Catholicism is growing and deeply communal.
๐Ÿ•Š️ Strengths

·         Growing Faith: ~31% of the population is Catholic.

·         Missionary Presence: Education, healthcare, and peacebuilding are central.

·         Local Leadership: Two dioceses—Bissau and Bafatรก—are led by native bishops.

·         Community Anchors: Churches are hubs of hope and resilience.

⚠️ Challenges

·         Resource Scarcity: Only 14 Catholic churches serve the country.

·         Infrastructure Gaps: Many parishes lack electricity and supplies.

·         Security Risks: Political unrest affects pastoral outreach.

·         Clergy Shortage: Vocations are growing but still limited.

๐ŸŒฟ For a Catholic
Guinea-Bissau is a pilgrimage of courage and communion—where the Gospel is lived in simplicity, and the Eucharist is celebrated in dusty chapels and vibrant song. It’s a place to walk with the poor, pray with the resilient, and witness faith as lifeline.


 NIC’s Corner Reflection

From the Netherlands’ quiet cathedrals to Guinea-Bissau’s spirited parishes, the Rich vs Poor Tour reveals the Church’s many faces. In one, faith is heritage; in the other, lifeblood. Yet in both, the Eucharist remains: a feast of mercy, a call to communion. Whether in Utrecht’s basilica or Bissau’s cathedral, the Gospel is alive—etched in stone, sung in joy, and carried in hope.

Day 24: Humility — Mary, the Blessed Virgin, preceded by a choreographed transition from the creative mind to right judgment, marking the shift from imaginative seeking to wise discernment. This entry honors Mary as the icon of humility and the threshold of divine clarity.


๐ŸŒฟ Transition: From Creative Mind to Right Judgment

The creative mind dreams, designs, and delights.
It asks boldly, wonders freely, and builds beautifully.
But imagination must be tempered by wisdom.
To leaf the world behind is to move from possibility to prudence.
From curiosity to clarity.
From inspiration to integrity.

Right judgment is not cold—it is consecrated.
It does not silence creativity—it sanctifies it.
It is the mind that asks: What is true, good, and beautiful—and how shall I respond?

Today, we begin the third movement of this pilgrimage:
From the creative mind to the discerning soul.
From wonder to wisdom.
From seeking to surrender.


๐ŸŒŠ Leafing the World Behind: Day 24


Witness: Mary, the Blessed Virgin
Theme: Humility as Right Judgment
Virtue: Humility
Virtue Connection: Clarity Without Control
Symbolic Act: Say “yes” to something small today. Let it be a quiet surrender.
Location: A vineyard gate, a quiet room, a Marian grove—any place where clarity meets consent.


๐Ÿ•Š️ Introduction: On Humility

Humility is not self-hatred—it is self-honesty.
It is not weakness—it is wisdom.
To leaf the world behind is to choose clarity over control, surrender over spectacle, presence over pride.

Today, we do not grasp—we consent.
Humility, in this rhythm, is not erasure—it is Eucharist.
It is the courage to say: “Let it be done unto me.”


๐ŸŒบ Witness of the Day: Mary, the Blessed Virgin

Mary was a young girl in Nazareth.
She did not seek greatness.
She was chosen—and she said yes.

Her Magnificat is not a song of ambition—it is a song of surrender.
She magnified the Lord, not herself.
She bore the Word, not her own will.

Mary reminds us:
Humility is not invisibility—it is incarnation.
It is not silence—it is sacred speech.
It is not passivity—it is profound participation.


๐Ÿ›ก️ Virtue Connection: Clarity Without Control

Humility becomes virtue when it is clear, courageous, and consenting.

When it does not demand—but discerns.
When it does not dominate—but dwells.

Mary did not understand everything.
She understood enough to say yes.
She reminds us:

Humility without clarity becomes confusion.
But humility with clarity becomes communion.


๐Ÿ•ฏ️ Symbolic Act: Say Yes Quietly

Choose one small act of surrender today.
Say yes.
Let it be quiet.
Let it be holy.

As you act, say:

“Lord, let my humility be clarity.
Let my clarity be consent.
Let my consent be communion.”

If no act arises, pray the Magnificat.
Let your prayer be a dwelling place.


๐Ÿ”ฅ Reflection Prompt

Where have you sought control instead of clarity?
What “yes” still waits in your heart?
Can you name one moment when humility led you to truth?

Write, walk, or pray with these questions.
Let Mary remind you:

Humility is not weakness—it is witness.
It is the strength to consent, the grace to dwell, the love to magnify.



OCTOBER 24 Friday

St. Raphael-United Nations/Bologna/Tripe Day

 

Romans, Chapter 15, Verse 33

The God of PEACE be with all of you. Amen. 

So be it. This is the joy of the church which is the peace of Christ. 

How to be joyful[1]

If there’s one undeniable fact about human nature, it’s that we all want to be happy. We crave joy—infinite, endless joy. The problem is, we often look for happiness in all the wrong places, leaving ourselves frustrated and miserable. The plethora of wildly popular self-help books shows that we are hungry for guidance on how to live well. One man found the secret of true happiness. His name was St. John Bosco. He was a man who experienced many trials, but who also lived a life full of gladness and joy. St. John Bosco was so happy that he could hardly contain it. “Dear friend,” he wrote to an associate, “I am a man who loves joy and who therefore wishes to see you and everybody happy. If you do as I say, you will be joyful and glad in heart.”

So how did St. John Bosco find real happiness? Here’s his six recommendations for living a joyful life:

  1. Live for God alone – “Give God the greatest possible glory and honor Him with your whole soul. If you have a sin on your conscience, remove it as soon as possible by means of a good Confession.”
  2. Be a servant – “Never offend anyone. Above all, be willing to serve others. Be more demanding of yourself than of others.”
  3. Be careful in your associations – “Do not trust those who have no faith in God and who do not obey His precepts. Those who have no scruples in offending God and who do not give Him what they should will have many fewer scruples in offending you and even betraying you when it is convenient for them.”
  4. Spend carefully – “If you do not wish to be ruined, never spend more than you earn. You should bear this in mind and always measure your true possibilities accurately.”
  5. Be humble – “Speak little of yourself and never praise yourself before anyone. He who praises himself, even if he has real merit, risks losing the good opinion of others. He who seeks only praise and honors is sure to have an empty head fed only by wind… will have no peace of soul and will be unreliable in his undertakings.”
  6. Carry your cross – “Carry your cross on your back and take is as it comes, small or large, whether from friends or enemies and of whatever wood it be made. The most intelligent and happiest of men is he who, knowing that he is doomed to carry the cross throughout life, willingly and resignedly accepts the one God sends him.”

Finding real happiness isn’t complicated. Anyone, even a child, could live by these simple rules. Yet, these prescriptions are pretty counter-cultural, aren’t they? They are the exact opposite of what society tells us will make us happy. You certainly won’t find them shared in a New York Times best-seller. But the truth is, it doesn’t matter what society says. The most joyful of all people are the saints—men and women like St. John Bosco. They were truly and lastingly happy because they had discovered the secret that holiness is real happiness. And they want you to discover it too.

Copilot’s Take

October 24 is a day of joyful paradox—where the healing presence of St. Raphael meets the civic aspirations of United Nations Day and the culinary curiosities of Tripe and Bologna Day. In the spirit of Romans 15:33, “The God of peace be with all of you,” we are reminded that peace is not merely the absence of conflict but the presence of healing, humor, and dignity. St. Raphael, the archangel of healing and travel, would surely smile at the idea of a government-funded concierge doctor model—where physicians serve people directly, not insurance bureaucracies. It’s medicine with mercy, healing with humanity. And in the midst of tripe and bologna, we find a deeper joy: the kind St. John Bosco lived and taught—a joy rooted in humility, service, and the quiet courage to carry one’s cross. Today, let peace be practical, joy be generous, and healing be shared.

FEAST OF SAINT RAPHAEL THE ARCHANGEL – 24th OCTOBER[2]

St. Raphael is one of the seven Archangels who stand before the throne of the Lord, and one of the only three mentioned by name in the Bible. He appears, by name, only in the Book of Tobit. Raphael’s name means “God heals.” This identity came about because of the biblical story that claims he “healed” the earth when it was defiled by the sins of the fallen angels in the apocryphal book of Enoch.

Disguised as a human in the Book of Tobit, Raphael refers to himself as “Azarias the son of the great Ananias” and travels alongside Tobit’s son, Tobiah. Once Raphael returns from his journey with Tobiah, he declares to Tobit that he was sent by the Lord to heal his blindness and deliver Sarah, Tobiah’s future wife, from the demon Asmodeus. It is then that his true healing powers are revealed, and he makes himself known as “the angel Raphael, one of the seven, who stand before the Lord” Tobit 12:15.

The demon Asmodeus killed every man Sarah married on the night of the wedding, before the marriage could be consummated. Raphael guided Tobiah and taught him how to safely enter the marriage with Sarah.

Raphael is credited with driving the evil spirit from Sarah and restoring Tobit’s vision, allowing him to see the light of Heaven and for receiving all good things through his intercession.

PRAYER TO SAINT RAPHAEL

Glorious Archangel Saint Raphael, great prince of the heavenly court, you are illustrious for your gifts of wisdom and grace. You are a guide of those who journey
by land or sea or air, consoler of the afflicted, and refuge of sinners.

I beg you, assist me in all my needs and in all the sufferings of this life, as once you helped the young Tobias on his travels. Because you are the medicine of God, I humbly pray you to heal the many infirmities
of my soul and the ills that afflict my body.
I especially ask of you the favor (Make your request here…) and the great grace of purity to prepare me to be the temple of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

PRAYER TO SAINT RAPHAEL

Glorious Archangel St. Raphael, great prince of the heavenly court, you are illustrious for your gifts of wisdom and grace. You are a guide of those who journey by land or sea or air, consoler of the afflicted, and refuge of sinners. I beg you, assist me in all my needs and in all the sufferings of this life, as once you helped the young Tobias on his travels.

Because you are the “medicine of God” I humbly pray for you to heal the many infirmities of my soul and the ills that afflict my body. I especially ask of you the favor (here mention your special intention), and the great grace of purity to prepare me to be the temple of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

ARCHANGEL RAPHAEL FEAST PRAYER

Saint Raphael, the Archangel, help us in all the needs and trials and the journey of this earthly life, as you, through the power of God, didst restore sight and gave guidance to young Tobit. We humbly seek your aid and intercession, that our souls may be healed, our bodies protected from all ills, and that through divine grace we may become fit to dwell in the eternal Glory of God in heaven. Amen.

Bible in a Year Day 111 Saul tries to kill David


Fr. Mike contrasts Jonathan's brotherly friendship with David, and Saul's bitterness and envy towards David. We also learn from Psalm 59 that David still praised God in his distress as Saul tried to kill him. Today we read 1 Samuel 18-19 and Psalm 59.

 

United Nations Day[3]

United Nations Day celebrates the anniversary of the ratification of the United Nations Charter which occurred on October 24, 1945. The United Nations is an international organization engaged in diplomatic and peaceful communication between the countries of the world. The organization oversees issues like human rights, international security, political freedoms and democracy with an end goal of achieving world peace. The UN Charter was officially signed on June 26th, 1945, but it could not come into existence until the signatory states had ratified it and deposited notification to the effect with the US Department of State. This occurred on October 24th, 1945. The organization's Charter has now been ratified by most countries in the world. The United Nations is a global organization with six official languages, English, French, Spanish, Russian, Chinese and Arabic. United Nations Day is observed on October 24th each year.

Pray that the UN will be a force for building the kingdom of heaven and not a secular force oppressing the religious rights of the people of God.

Bologna Day[4]

When most of us think of bologna, we think of the smooth off-pink meat that comes with the red ring of plastic around it at the grocery store. While its true that this is one type of Bologna, most people are unaware that there is an entire range of bologna, and that its all named after the country of its origin. Bologna Day is your chance to learn a little something about this traditional lunch meat and where it came from. We know that most of you consider bologna to be a childhood favorite lunchtime meat, but theres so much more to it than just that simple meat. Bologna can be made from any number of meats, including beef, turkey, venison, chicken, and even a vegetarian soy protein. What makes bologna is the seasonings used in its preparation, a combination of nutmeg, black pepper, coriander, allspice, celery seed, and the secret ingredient, myrtle berries. This final ingredient is what gives the meat its distinctive taste, and it also happens to be found in mortadella. There are a few common forms of bologna, though most of us are familiar with the pre-sliced variety. If youve ever seen Kielbasa then youre familiar with the shape of Ring Bologna, though it is a completely different meat. Ring bologna is commonly sliced and used as a topping on crackers, though it is also occasionally pickled to help aid its storage. Rag bologna comes in the form of a long stick and is typically sold in a swatch of cloth, hence its name. Unlike rag bologna or sliced bologna, it has a much higher fat content and texture, being made with milk solids, spices, cereal, and flour to help give it bulk. Finally, its put through a bath of lactic acid and then coated with paraffin wax. If the only bologna youve ever had is sliced bologna, then Bologna Day is going to be a special occasion for you!

How to Celebrate Bologna Day

It all starts with a nice serving of bologna in the morning, and we suggest having it fried with an egg and toast on the side. Later in the day, you can indulge in a traditional bologna sandwich, and we usually make ours with mayonnaise and mustard and not much else. Once youve had these two dishes, its time to expand your palate with a dive into the other forms of bologna. If you can find it, we especially suggest South African Polony, but its often hard to find in the United States.

One wonders if it was part of His divine plan to have UN day and Baloney Day coincide. Too add insult to injury today is also Tripe Day-Dude!

Tripe Day[5]

Tripe, its a word that has come to mean pointless, silly, or false. These terms are only appropriate in how the reputation of tripe as a culinary component has been undermined. Tripe is the edible lining of farm animals, primarily cattle. While it sounds off-putting to the average palette tripe can be formed into an incredible meal full of flavor. World Tripe Day celebrates this much-reviled dish and strives to return it to a place of honor among meats. While we in English speaking countries rarely see tripe available in the store, and even less common in restaurants, its a popular meal in other countries throughout the world. In places like Italy, its so common that its actually served from street-side vendors as a form of on-the-go food, served with a small fork or even on a roll. There are multiple kinds of tripe, even from one animal. Take the cow, for instance. Cows have a four-chambered stomach, and each stomach is the source of a different form of tripe. Blanket Tripe (also known as smooth, flat, or plain tripe) is from the first stomach and is the least popular among those who love tripe. Honeycomb tripe comes from the second stomach, specifically from the lowest part of the same. It has a tender and meaty flavor and retains its shape during preparation. Its honeycomb texture makes it great tripe to serve with sauces. The second stomach is also the source of pocket tripe. Book tripe comes from the third stomach and reed tripe from the fourth.

How to Celebrate World Tripe Day

World Tripe Day is best celebrated by opening yourself to a new culinary experience if your family isn’t one of those who indulge in tripe as part of their normal diet. There is a rich experience to be had by consuming tripe, and when it is properly prepared it is a cultural favorite loved all around the world. Maybe it’s time that the English-speaking countries develop a stomach for the stomach, and World Tripe Day serves as the perfect opportunity to learn a love of something new. Your stomach will thank you, for eating stomach!

Dignity-Viktor Frankl[6] 

John McCain in his book “Character is Destiny” points out the work of Viktor Frankl as a man who best portrays the virtue of dignity. Viktor before World War II was a prominent Jewish psychiatrist who lost everything during the Nazi takeover of Germany. The Nazis had taken his freedom, his vocation and everyone he loved. They starved him, beaten him, cursed him and worked him almost beyond human endurance. They had set his life upon a precipice from which at any moment they chose, they could push him as they had pushed thousands. Yet as they drove him out one winter morning into the fields like an animal, striking him, his mind rose above his torment and his tormentors, taking leave of the cruelty to contemplate the image of his wife. He did not know if she was alive or dead, but in his heart, he heard the words of the eighth Song of Solomon; Set me like a seal upon thy heart, love is as strong as death. “My mind clung to my wife’s image, imagining it with uncanny acuteness…Real or not, her look was more luminous than the sun which was beginning to rise…Then I grasped the meaning of the greatest secret that human poetry and human thought and belief have to impart: the salvation of man is through love and in love,” Frankl relates in Man’s Search for Meaning. Throughout his captivity he held on to his love and with his love he kept from his captors the thing they thought they destroyed, the one thing that no human being can take from another, for it can only be surrendered, but not taken: his dignity.

 Here are 12 thought-provoking passages from his book:[7] 

1.      “Don’t aim at success — the more you aim at it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it. For success, like happiness, cannot be pursued; it must ensue, and it only does so as the unintended side-effect of one’s personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself, or as the by-product of one’s surrender to a person other than oneself.”

2.      “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing; the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances.”

3.      “Everyone has his own specific vocation or mission in life to carry out a concrete assignment which demands fulfillment. Therein he cannot be replaced, nor can his life be repeated. Thus, everyone’s task is as unique as is his specific opportunity to implement it.”

4.      “Live as if you were living already for the second time and as if you had acted the first time as wrongly as you are about to act now!”

5.      “The prisoner who had lost his faith in the future — his future — was doomed. With his loss of belief in the future, he also lost his spiritual hold; he let himself decline and became subject to mental and physical decay.”

6.      “I consider it a dangerous misconception of mental hygiene to assume that what man needs in the first place is equilibrium or, as it is called in biology, “homeostasis,” i.e., a tensionless state but rather the striving and struggling for a worthwhile goal, a freely chosen task. What he needs is not the discharge of tension at any cost but the call of a potential meaning waiting to be fulfilled by him.”

7.      “Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual.”

8.      “Man has suffered another loss in his more recent development inasmuch as the traditions which buttressed his behavior are now rapidly diminishing. No instinct tells him what he has to do, and no tradition tells him what he ought to do; sometimes he does not even know what he wishes to do. Instead, he either wishes to do what other people do (conformism) or he does what other people wish him to do (totalitarianism).”

9.      “A man who becomes conscious of the responsibility he bears toward a human being who affectionately waits for him, or to an unfinished work, will never be able to throw away his life. He knows the ‘why’ for his existence, and will be able to bear almost any ‘how.’”

10.  “What matters, therefore, is not the meaning of life in general but rather the specific meaning of a person’s life at a given moment. To put the question in general terms would be comparable to the question posed to a chess champion: “Tell me, Master, what is the best move in the world?” There simply is no such thing as the best or even a good move apart from a particular situation in a game and the particular personality of one’s opponent.”

11.  “When we are no longer able to change a situation — just think of an incurable disease such as an inoperable cancer — we are challenged to change ourselves.”

12.  “Freedom, however, is not the last word. Freedom is only part of the story and half of the truth. Freedom is but the negative aspect of the whole phenomenon whose positive aspect is responsibleness. In fact, freedom is in danger of degenerating into mere arbitrariness unless it is lived in terms of responsibleness. That is why I recommend that the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast be supplemented by a Statue of Responsibility on the West Coast.”

Fitness Friday:

๐Ÿงญ Introduction: Reimagining Primary Care Through Public Concierge Access

In an era where healthcare systems strain under administrative complexity, physician burnout, and patient dissatisfaction, the idea of publicly funded concierge medicine offers a radical yet practical reimagining of primary care. By introducing a government voucher program that covers annual concierge fees and limits each doctor to 500 patients, this model proposes a shift from reactive, insurance-driven care to proactive, relationship-centered medicine.

Unlike traditional systems where doctors often answer to insurers, this approach restores the sacred bond between physician and patient. In effect, the doctor works for you—not the insurance company. The result is longer visits, faster access, and deeper trust—without dismantling existing insurance structures for labs, specialists, or hospital care.

This report explores the potential benefits, challenges, and structural implications of such a model, offering a vision where every citizen receives personalized care, every doctor serves with clarity, and every community heals with dignity.

๐Ÿฅ What This Model Proposes

  • Voucher Program: Government pays each person’s annual concierge fee (typically $1,500–$2,500) directly to the doctor.
  • Patient Cap: Each concierge doctor is limited to 500 patients, ensuring personalized care.
  • Insurance Continues: Traditional insurance (public or private) still covers labs, specialists, hospitals, prescriptions, etc.
  • Direct Relationship: In effect, the doctors work for you—not the insurance company. This restores the physician-patient bond and removes third-party interference in routine care.

Potential Benefits

1. Improved Access to Primary Care

  • Patients would have direct, timely access to their doctor—often same-day or next-day appointments.
  • Preventive care and chronic disease management could improve due to longer visits and stronger relationships.

2. Reduced ER and Urgent Care Use

  • With better access to primary care, fewer patients would rely on emergency services for non-emergencies.

3. Physician Satisfaction

  • Doctors could spend more time with patients, reduce burnout, and avoid administrative overload.

4. Better Health Outcomes

  • Studies show concierge models improve patient satisfaction, medication adherence, and preventive screenings.

⚠️ Challenges and Trade-Offs

1. Physician Supply Constraints

  • With a 500-patient cap, the U.S. would need significantly more primary care doctors to cover the population.
    • For example, 330 million people ÷ 500 patients = 660,000 concierge doctors needed—far more than the current supply.

2. Cost to Government

  • At $2,000 per person annually, the program could cost $660 billion/year—more than current Medicare spending.
  • Would require reallocation of funds or new revenue sources.

3. Equity and Access

  • Rural and underserved areas may struggle to attract enough concierge doctors.
  • Without careful planning, wealthier regions could benefit more.

4. Regulatory Complexity

  • Doctors would need to comply with both voucher rules and insurance billing regulations.
  • Medicare and Medicaid would need to adapt policies around direct care and opt-out provisions.

๐Ÿ”„ Hybrid Models Already Emerging

  • Some legislation (like the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) allows concierge fees to be paid through Health Savings Accounts, making them more accessible.
  • Direct Primary Care (DPC) models are growing, offering similar benefits without full concierge pricing.

๐Ÿ”ฅ Summary

This model could revolutionize primary care by making concierge medicine publicly accessible and equitable. But it would require:

  • A massive expansion of the physician workforce
  • Careful geographic distribution
  • Sustainable funding mechanisms
  • Integration with existing insurance systems
  • And most importantly: a restoration of the doctor-patient relationship—where your physician works for you, not the insurance company.

Sources:
Medicare.gov – Concierge Care Coverage
Becker’s Hospital Review – Concierge Primary Care Expansion
LegalClarity – Concierge Medicine Legal Framework

Daily Devotions

·         Unite in the work of the Porters of St. Joseph by joining them in fasting: Today's Fast: An end to the use of contraceptives.

·         Religion in the Home for Preschool: October

·         Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus

·         Offering to the sacred heart of Jesus

·         Drops of Christ’s Blood

·         Universal Man Plan

·         Rosary

 


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