Thread: ZERO CARE
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Old 08-20-2009, 08:21   #19
PR31C
Guerrilla
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Posts: 146
Where will all the new medical staff come from?

Others have touched on this problem and here a doctor reports on it directly. Along with what NMAP has pointed out, cost vs demand, when everyone has the right to free medical coverage, who is going to be their to provide it. City EMT workers already tell stories of those with free coverage using 911 to go the ER for a cold, ear ache, etc.

Quote:
Massachusetts is often held out as a model for national health reform, and the bills being considered in Washington emulate much of that state's 2006 landmark universal coverage law. As a physician in neighboring New Hampshire, I have had the opportunity to observe the effect of the Massachusetts reforms
Today, 97 percent of Massachusetts residents have health insurance, the highest in the country. But less publicized are the unintended consequences that the influx of half a million newly insured patients has had on an unprepared primary care system.

The Massachusetts Medical Society reported that the average wait time for a new patient looking for a primary care doctor ranged from 36 to 50 days, with almost half of internal medicine physicians closing their doors entirely to new patients. And when you consider that Massachusetts already has the highest concentration of doctors nationwide, wait times will likely be worse in other, less physician-abundant parts of the country, should universal coverage be enacted federally.

When patients are forced to wait weeks to obtain medical care, they inevitably find their way into the emergency department for treatment that ordinarily can be handled in a doctor's office. Indeed, since health reform was passed, according to state data provided to the Boston Globe, Massachusetts emergency rooms have reported a 7 percent increase in volume, which markedly inflates costs when you consider that emergency room treatment can be up to 10 times more expensive than an office visit for the same ailment.
Using the ER for Ordinary care means increase cost. Which means increase cost for those with private health insurance and increase to gov for the gov supplied health care. The tax payer will be forced to pay the bill and for those with private health insurance they will pay for it twice, premiums and taxes.
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