Medicine had been a “Rescue and Repair”
profession with a good track record in improved treatment outcomes from 1900 to
the 1960s. Antibiotics were finally
perfected in the 1940s and that was huge. Polio vaccine was offered in the
1950s adding more credibility. DNA was discovered by the biochemists in the
1960s, but law enforcement has been its major beneficiary so far.
During the 1960s, lots of special interests took
control of medicine and made costs skyrocket. The special interests include the
government, for-profit hospitals, malpractice settlements, pharmaceuticals,
unnecessary tests, innovations that don’t work, treatments that kill you, insurance
companies and “not it’s all free”.
The government subsidies, regulations and
laws have made it too expensive.
Unnecessary tests are ordered to satisfy malpractice defense
attorneys.
For-profit corporations took over most
not-for-profit hospitals beginning in the 1960s. Costs went through the roof.
Pharmaceutical companies don’t look for
cures, just more expensive treatments and snake oil. Pills have replaced snake oil that was sold
for “everything that ails you” including Viagra.
Before malpractice suits, doctors monitored
each other and the cost of patient harm due to medical errors was suspension
and loss of licenses. Malpractice suits have become a racket and need to be
limited. It’s another part of the pile-on driving healthcare costs to
unsustainable levels.
Unnecessary tests used for defensive medicine
would be able to be avoided if malpractice was limited.
Innovations that don’t work like most lab-grown
implants needed to be replaced by mesh. Breast implants were a disaster.
Cancer treatments will kill you before the
cancer does. Chemotherapy and radiation are toxic. Hospitals can’t control infections
from being passed from patient to patient. Home care is cheaper and better
The Insurance Industry is a single-cell
animal with no brain and three working parts. It charges premiums, pays claims
and increases premiums. They have had no stake in lobbying for the reductions
of unnecessary costs. The price/demand curve continues to have its effect on
non-participation.
The rule forcing hospitals to treat all
comers regardless of their ability to pay is nuts. In the old days, patients
who had high medical bills could pay them off with $50 per month payments until
they were paid. Doctors had charity practices and poor farmers would pay them
with bushels of food.
Never has so much money been spent on
something so unreliable and inconsistent.
This is not like rebuilding a transmission. All patients are different, symptoms can be
the same for a variety of illnesses,
Prevention is an individual responsibility. The
list of what is bad for you changes all the time. Patients must question any
treatment plan that requires hospitalization and should find cheaper
alternatives, even if they have health insurance. The best strategy is to use
medical care sparingly.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment