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So what are your perceived problems with Health Care in the United States. What are your ideas for fixing it?
Being in the industry I'm interested in your views and ideas.
Cat
So what are your perceived problems with Health Care in the United States. What are your ideas for fixing it?
Being in the industry I'm interested in your views and ideas.
Cat
Many, many years ago when we were at that stage of trying to figure out what we wanted to do when we grew up, one of my classmates said he wanted to be a physician. He said, "When people are sick, they don't ask 'How much?'"
After four years of Stanford, three years of medical school at Duke, a two year internship and a three year residency, he was finally able to go to work. Like the majority of physicians these days, he wasn't remotely interested in being a general practioner. Eighty percent of medical school graduates want to be specialists because they don't want the inconvenience of irregular hours. So, he became a radiologist and is today the head of radiology at a local hospital. I guess he makes $500,000 a year. The hospital administrators make $1,000,000. All the physicians I know hate the paperwork and they hate the bureaucracy that characterizes modern medicine. Above all, they despise the ambulance chasers who advertise 24/7 on television, billboards, radio and on the Internet promising "the money you deserve."
Insurance premiums for gynecologists in the state of Maryland are on the order of $200,000 per year and the threat of lawsuits are a constant anxiety. All it takes is the loss of one lawsuit to destroy them. The statute of limitations ( and, thus the necessity to carry insurance for up to twenty years after they stop delivering babies ) forces most of them out of the baby-delivering business by the time they're forty-five or so ( because they're going to have to buy insurance for the next twenty years to protect themselves from the legal parasites ). Gynecologists are fleeing the state or closing up shop. There are enormous costs that are incurred because physicians have been forced to engage in defensive medicine by the threat of lawsuits. The physicians have a perverse set of incentives to order every test and procedure known to man in order to defend themselves in the event of a legal shakedown.
An increasing number of physicians in private practice won't even participate in insurance reimbursement schemes at all because they find the mandated reimbursement rates abhorrent and intolerable ( not to mention the paperwork headaches ). The physicians despise the adversarial nature of insurers v. practictioners and the overweening interference in the physician-patient relationship.
The problem is that I don't have it and can't get it. I don't even ride my bicycle anymore because a broken bone could wipe me out financially.
If you have a lapse in coverage, and have any preexisting condition, good luck finding anyone to insure you. I let COBRA lapse after I was laid off two years ago (couldn't pay the nearly $500 a month for single-person coverage while also paying for the repairs necessary to put my house on the market). In recent months I've been turned down for coverage by three different companies because I'm on antidepression meds. I knew there would be a problem getting coverage for a pre-existing condition - but I was stunned to learn that medical history would be a reason to be denied coverage for ANY accident or illness.
I see a doctor just often enough to get my prescriptions renewed - about every six months; I eat smarter, and I look both ways before I cross the street. That's about all I can do.
The doctor who renewed my Celexa told me I'm overdue for a PAP smear (duh), a mammogram (I knew that) and that I should consider having a colonoscopy, bone density test, and other routine diagnostics for a woman my age. He also suggested that a thyroid imbalance might be aggravating my depression, and said I should get that checked too.
It's that, or pay the rent. I choose rent.
So what are your perceived problems with Health Care in the United States. What are your ideas for fixing it?
Being in the industry I'm interested in your views and ideas.
Cat
So what are your perceived problems with Health Care in the United States. What are your ideas for fixing it?
Being in the industry I'm interested in your views and ideas.
Cat
Uh, is that not the whole idea behind insurance to begin with?Do you expect to receive more in insurance company payments than you pay in premiums?
Crazy people used to be called "local color" - under the current regime of militant normality, driven equally by evangelical conformity and media driven corporate drone values, anybody that sticks out get's hammered - being in therapy is the only decent excuse for being yourself.XSSVE
Johnsons First Law of Social Intercourse sez that things will continue as they are until a crisis occurs.
Pretty damned soon America is gonna get the bill for Boomer Retirement Benefits, and this means an empty treasury in Washington when you toss in the national debt interest and other entitlements, plus the military. Ten percent of Americans already collect food stamps.
Youre correct. Insurance and Medicaid is a boon for hypocondriacs and mental health players. When I worked at the hospital you knew who the cops would bring in on Friday night, because the same people came in every Friday night, and left Monday morning. It was their social life and their therapists didnt work weekends.
Anyway, when the money runs out we'll get serious about solutions to the problem..but not before.
...SS and medicaid are not bankrupt...