Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
One Post wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
pittmike wrote:
Aren’t many of the drugs you want to import actually manufactured here?
Anyway, what saves more money? Billionaires starting this up, Rick killing off all the old sick people or importing drugs? I’m still going to go with malpractice reform.
I would certainly say tort reform needs to occur.
If you want to lower health care costs, here is a basic roadmap
1: open pharma to foreign competition and imports, also generics for expired patent drugs should not require FDA hurdles when they are chemically the same product.
2: tort reform
3: lower the barrier to entry for new docs. There is a choke-hold on the number of new doctors each year based upon the limited number of residencies offered.
This is a text book example of a post that is inherently inconsistent within itself.
Ogie's solution for cheaper and better health care is to:
- allow for shittier doctors to practice medicine (point #3); and
- prevent patients who are injured by these new and shittier doctors from seeking restitution (point #2).
Also I find it funny that the guy on the board who won't shut the fuck up about being a libertarian is openly advocating for government intervention into how the free market operates to make customers whole when their service provider causes them to suffer a loss due to service provider negligence.
Ogie's one of those libertarians when it's convenient for him to be one, or when it's cool to peacock around as if you are better than non-libertarians.
I guess reading comprehension isn't a strong suit here. Point 3 is nothing about allowing shittier doctors to practice, but simply about allowing more spots to be available. We have created a pipeline with artificially created choke points which result in us producing fewer doctors than are needed to serve the population of this country. That is a simple fact and I challenge you to find anything that contradicts this. The solution is to remove these choke points to allow more doctors to practice. Tell me, how will you treat 350 million Americans in any health system if there is a significant doctor shortage?
https://news.aamc.org/medical-education ... cian-shor/As for 2, nowhere do I say that malpractice suits should be eliminated, but there certainly needs to be tort reform to prevent frivolous lawsuits. Simple measures such as plantiffs who lose the case having to pay the doctor's legal fees would go a long way as a simple solution which does not allow those who are actually harmed from seeking damages.
Regardless of any of the points above, the fact is we need more doctors so yes you need to open up the field to more practitioners as neither overall health care nor the costs of health care will improve if the doctor shortage is allowed to both persist and then worsen.
What is your solution, to continue limiting the number of new docs so that our system collapses as NHS is right now?
Here is a nice look at how our regulations have created the shortage. Requiring licensed doctors from overseas (even those licensed in 1st world countries like the UK) to undergo a residency is particularly egregious.
https://mises.org/library/how-governmen ... r-shortageArtificial choke points = standards, processes, and safeguards to ensure that our medical doctors are supremely qualified. I mean would you let a "doctor" licensed in North Korea perform an open heart surgery on you? Doubtful.
What is my solution? Now listen close, and this might be hard for you to understand, but I don't have a "One Post Solution", largely because I'm not educated enough on the issue from a medical perspective, economic perspective, demographic perspective, etc.
I know that's hard for you to understand because you are an expert on every subject under the sun, and several more subjects that haven't been conceived as of yet. Well,either you're an expert, or you just play a know it all on message boards, one of those.
Do we need more doctors? Yes. Do we need cheaper access to medical care? Yes.
Do we need to lower standards for physicians to accomplish this? I hope not, and I would like to exhaust a lot of other means before we go with the ole "open the floodgates to anyone" approach to developing physicians in this country.
Also, not for nothing , but you realize there are very few frivolous lawsuits when it comes to med mal? You realize this right? Probably not.
Bringing a med mal case is an extremely expensive proposition, you've got to pay experts in many fields, medical, actuarial, quality of life, etc. It's laborious. There are depositions, reports, more depositions, etc. All of this costs money for the plaintiff, or more likely the plaintiff's attorney who up fronts all of this money and doesn't get paid unless the case is a winner. You don't have a whole lot of lawyers looking to roll the dice with a year or more of their professional time and at least 100K+ of potential expenses depending on the complexity of the claim for something that is frivolous.
Also, not for nothing , but you realize pretty much every jurisdiction has civil rules in place to address frivolous claims be they med mal, or any other civil case?