SimHealth

{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2023}}

{{short description|1994 video game}}

{{more citations needed|date=September 2014}}

{{Infobox video game

|title = SimHealth: The National Health Care Simulation

|image = SimHealth cover.jpg

|developer = Thinking Tools

|publisher = Maxis

|director = John Hiles

|producer = Mike Perry

|designer = Greg Wolfson
John Hiles

|programmer = Richard Rosenbaum

|artist = Jenny Martin

|composer = Brian Conrad
Randy Jones
Don Walters

|series = Sim

|released = {{vgrelease|NA|1994}}

|genre = Management simulation

|modes = Single-player

|platforms = MS-DOS

}}

SimHealth: The National Health Care Simulation is a management simulation video game developed by Thinking Tools and published by Maxis in 1994 for MS-DOS with assistance from the Markle Foundation. It is a simulation of the United States healthcare system. The game was released during congressional debates on the Clinton health care plan.

Due to the complexity of the game, SimHealth was seen as being very difficult. Armed with none of the tongue-in-cheek humor that Maxis' prior games were known for, the only real link to the franchise was the SimCity 2000-inspired user interface. The game was seen as more serious than other Maxis games. Noel Fritzinger, who with Lyman Orton first conceptualized CommunityViz, says that his inspiration came from seeing SimHealth and wondering if the same concepts could be applied to real-world land-use planning.{{citation needed|date=August 2017}}

Reception

Computer Gaming World{{'}}s Keith Schlesinger in June 1994 said that "SimHealth is a trailblazer in the simulations genre, but as a game it has problems". Acknowledging that "it wasn't primarily designed as an entertainment product", he criticized the "not well developed" victory conditions, reporting that he got a high score in one game by "sacrific[ing] nearly all of the big and small business firms in the country to achieve the win! What kind of a victory is that?" Schlesinger found that adopting an extreme libertarian ideology including ending Medicare and many other government services resulted in almost hands-off victory although "the entire private insurance industry goes bankrupt in the first three months". He nonetheless concluded that "SimHealth offers much at a good price, and in a good cause", and recommended it to those "not too fussy about winning and losing", or wanting to be able to alter the model's 152 assumptions.{{Cite magazine

|last=Schlesinger

|first=Keith

|date=June 1994

|title=The High Price Of Medi-Carelessness

|url=http://www.cgwmuseum.org/galleries/index.php?year=1994&pub=2&id=119

|magazine=Computer Gaming World

|pages=116, 118

}} Entertainment Weekly gave the game a C−, writing, "For a vivid demonstration of just how complex — and boring — the health care crisis is, try spending a few hours with SimHealth, which lets you do what Hillary Clinton couldn't: design a successful national health care system."{{cite magazine |url=http://www.ew.com/article/1995/01/13/simearth |title=SimEarth |language=en |date=Jan 13, 1995 |first=Benjamin |last=Svetkey |access-date=26 June 2023 |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501024634/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0%2C%2C20184081%2C00.html |archive-date=2011-05-01}}

Paul Starr, a health care policy expert writing for The American Prospect, was critical of the game. He pointed out various factual errors and extensively criticized its community vs. efficiency and liberty vs. equality axes, arguing that these values were not necessarily opposed to each other. He ultimately concluded that game "has no value in assessing health care reform."{{cite magazine |last1=Starr |first1=Paul |title=Seductions of Sim: Policy as a Simulation Game |magazine=The American Prospect |date=Spring 1994 |issue=17 |pages=19–29 |url=https://www.princeton.edu/~starr/17star.html}}

References

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