Huckleman2000
It was something I ate.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2004
- Posts
- 4,400
How'd that tort reform work in Texas, Zeb?Is the healthcare third rate or is the cost out of control? I still content that the healthcare here is better than anywhere else in the world. It's the access and the cost of that healthcare that is the causative factor. The doctor's and hospitals I have known and been to were excellent. They knew what they were doing and did it professionally and quickly. I never had to wait to see a doctor or a specialist nor did I have to wait for a procedure to be performed for more than a few days.
Costs are driven in part by law suits people bring against doctors, hospital and manufacturers of health care equipment and devices. Tort reform would lower the cost of healthcare drastically. Thus lowering costs of health insurance.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Medical malpractice liability caps instituted in Texas in 2003 have failed to improve the state’s health care system, a Public Citizen report released today reveals.
These findings are crucial because the Texas experiment has been held up as a model by proponents of proposals now pending in Congress to limit patients’ rights. In spite of rhetoric to the contrary, the data show that the health care system in Texas has grown worse since 2003 by nearly every measure. For example:
• The percentage of uninsured people in Texas has increased, remaining the highest in the country with a quarter of Texans now uninsured;
• The cost of health insurance in the state has more than doubled;
• The cost of health care in Texas (measured by per patient Medicare reimbursements) has increased at nearly double the national average; and
• Spending increases for diagnostic testing (measured by per patient Medicare reimbursements) have far exceeded the national average.
“Members of Congress have conjured the supposed benefits of the Texas law out of thin air,” said David Arkush, director of Public Citizen’s Congress Watch division. “The only winners have been the insurance companies and, to a lesser extent, doctors.”