
Here's how.
A blog about the fucked-up state of healthcare, the cool shit some are doing to fix it, and other random thoughts. No bullshit. No posers. Just people who want action. Punk meets healthcare. Parental discretion advised.
"The candidates also have largely sidestepped the hard choices and tradeoffs that many economists contend will need to be part of any significant health care reform.
That includes the pending fiscal collapse of Medicare, projected to be insolvent by 2019."
In any case, I'm definitely glad that health care is taking center stage in this election. I'm also glad that the candidates are getting to a level of detail that can lead to good debate.
But just in case you were wondering, I think we're fucked for a little (?) while. Not enough pain yet to motivate action.
"...Lost in this debate is an appreciation of how the SGR approach has contributed to a large and widening gap in earnings between specialists and primary care physicians, an income gap that is a major contributor to the dwindling number of physicians entering careers in primary care, putting the foundation of the American health care system at risk...."
Yes. We've argued about whether or not this pay differential is real and whether it's justified. And primary care physicians (like me) continue to be pissed. Fuck everyone.
Well, I think this author does a great job of analysis, as well as recommending a logical and feasible solution.
I'd love to know what I'm missing here....would it put specialists at more risk? Fuck yeah. But the same would apply to PCP's.
Fair.
"...Leavitt suggested that the proposal would be in line with the administration's beliefs that health care should be a "private market where consumers choose, where insurance plans compete and where innovation drives the quality of health care up and may drive the cost down." He added that the competing vision of health care is a "Washington-run, government-owned plan, where government makes the choices, sets the prices and [then] taxes people to pay the bill." Leavitt said Bush likely would have the proposal to Congress before Feb. 21..."
From Health Beat, regarding a study on whether consumerism can actually lower health care costs:
"...Research by the RAND Corporation’s health insurance experiment shows that when you shift costs to the consumer, patients forego both wasteful and effective care. And this is particularly true of the patients who cost us most in the long run—those suffering from chronic diseases..."