This talk will attempt to summarize problems identified during the conference and offer thoughts toward defining or classifying those problems in terms of how we might try to “solve” them. The talk will ask “Have we diagnosed our ills properly? What remedies should we prescribe?” More specifically, “To what extent are the frequently identified healthcare woes of our day ‘solvable’ by a more just or efficient distribution of resources (as, for example, by means of ‘universal coverage’ or ‘universal access’)? To what extent are these problems signs of deeper problems, calling out for deeper or less conventional remedies?” These are the kinds of problems likely to be touched on in this conference and in this talk:• The fragmentation of the delivery system• The changing roles of caregivers• Various health epidemics, both real and imagined • Ethical quandaries arising from changing science and technology Which, if any, of these problems can be solved with traditional public policy tools? Which call out for more fundamental changes at the level of individual, family, church, state, or society? Among the “stronger remedies” that might be indicated:• Religious and cultural renewal• Social solidarity and subsidiarity • Reforms of public manners and morals