G. Clarke Chapman’s book, Universal Health Care as a Human Right: 

The Argument of Dietrich Bonhoeffer (2014), uses the theology of Dietrich Bonhoeffer to argue that universal health care is a human right. Chapman draws on Bonhoeffer’s concepts of a theocentric basis for ethics, human sociality, and the moral duty to care for others, particularly the vulnerable. He frames health care as a communal responsibility and a divine mandate, critiquing individualistic views of rights

While advocating for its moral necessity, Chapman leaves the specifics of implementation to policymakers, grounding his argument in Bonhoeffer’s Christ-centered theology and the Gospel’s call to justice.