I think it's too early to start panicking too much- the bills are so divergent right now that what ends up in the final version will be very different than what's there now.
Things are definitely going to be different but like all change, it's the devil you know vs. the devil you don't.
I'm sure every single physician out there would like to see changes to the medical reimbursement system and I'll bet that every one of them wants something different. Add to that the hospitals, clinics, insurers, Pharma, medical equipment suppliers and manufacturers, the nurses, the staff and all of the medical administrative people and if you ask them THEY'LL all have different answers to what is the right way to get people covered and try to contain costs.
I don't think that this Bill is the END of medicine, but I do think it's the BEGINNING of a drastic and arguably drastically needed systems change. It's not going to be perfect, or even all that good at first. However, historically most of our important social change legislation has started at X and as things have worked or not worked, they've been tweaked over time. I was listening to a commentator on NPR the other day who was saying that when Social Security first passed it was a terrible bill that everyone hated.
It's not going to be an easy process but I'd argue that the current system is already on life support.
Jenn
Things are definitely going to be different but like all change, it's the devil you know vs. the devil you don't.
I'm sure every single physician out there would like to see changes to the medical reimbursement system and I'll bet that every one of them wants something different. Add to that the hospitals, clinics, insurers, Pharma, medical equipment suppliers and manufacturers, the nurses, the staff and all of the medical administrative people and if you ask them THEY'LL all have different answers to what is the right way to get people covered and try to contain costs.
I don't think that this Bill is the END of medicine, but I do think it's the BEGINNING of a drastic and arguably drastically needed systems change. It's not going to be perfect, or even all that good at first. However, historically most of our important social change legislation has started at X and as things have worked or not worked, they've been tweaked over time. I was listening to a commentator on NPR the other day who was saying that when Social Security first passed it was a terrible bill that everyone hated.
It's not going to be an easy process but I'd argue that the current system is already on life support.
Jenn
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