http://www.newsweek.com/id/234218/page/1
While the cost of medical education is mentioned in this article, it is more of a passing reference than an actual point.
In our local paper recently was an article about a local family practice doc. who was leaving his practice to go work for Kaiser. He explained that with all of the insurance red-tape and the low reimbursement rate, his practice is not financially viable. He chose to go work for Kaiser so he can just practice medicine and leave the paperwork to someone else. The article's focus was on the severe shortage of GPs in our area and why we are losing the GPs and failing to recruit new ones.
In response to this article, a woman writes a letter to the editor complaining about the "greedy doctors". She said she has called "all of the family practice doctors in the area" to see if anyone will take her as a new patient. She explained that she has medicare insurance and none of the doctors are willing to take new medicare patients. Her reasoning seemed to be that if only the "greedy doctors" would agree to see more medicare patients health care problems would be solved.
Whatever. I paid the guy from Sears about triple the reimbursement rate for a medicare visit to a GP last week just to show up at my house to fix the washing machine.
I think the cost of medical education has to be addressed in health care reform. Until something is done about that, we will continue to have a shortage of GPs. Whatever "health care reform" might be pushed through Congress will be useless until this very issue is addressed. Coverage can be expanded, but it is meaningless until you get more GPs to see patients who would be newly covered as part of the reform. Sadly, this just doesn't seem to be on lawmakers' agenda. They want a quick fix, when this issue requires a much more complex fix than is being proposed.
While the cost of medical education is mentioned in this article, it is more of a passing reference than an actual point.
In our local paper recently was an article about a local family practice doc. who was leaving his practice to go work for Kaiser. He explained that with all of the insurance red-tape and the low reimbursement rate, his practice is not financially viable. He chose to go work for Kaiser so he can just practice medicine and leave the paperwork to someone else. The article's focus was on the severe shortage of GPs in our area and why we are losing the GPs and failing to recruit new ones.
In response to this article, a woman writes a letter to the editor complaining about the "greedy doctors". She said she has called "all of the family practice doctors in the area" to see if anyone will take her as a new patient. She explained that she has medicare insurance and none of the doctors are willing to take new medicare patients. Her reasoning seemed to be that if only the "greedy doctors" would agree to see more medicare patients health care problems would be solved.
Whatever. I paid the guy from Sears about triple the reimbursement rate for a medicare visit to a GP last week just to show up at my house to fix the washing machine.
I think the cost of medical education has to be addressed in health care reform. Until something is done about that, we will continue to have a shortage of GPs. Whatever "health care reform" might be pushed through Congress will be useless until this very issue is addressed. Coverage can be expanded, but it is meaningless until you get more GPs to see patients who would be newly covered as part of the reform. Sadly, this just doesn't seem to be on lawmakers' agenda. They want a quick fix, when this issue requires a much more complex fix than is being proposed.
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