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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!amdahl!kennel!John.Hamilton
- From: John.Hamilton@kennel.fidonet.org
- Newsgroups: rec.motorcycles
- Subject: Re; Nat'l Health Plan (Was: Re: Lance Hols
- X-Sender: newtout 0.07 Jan 3 1993
- Message-ID: <442211383@kennel.fidonet.org>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 09:52:14
- Lines: 67
-
- Thursday January 21 1993 16:38, Ron Mayer wrote to All:
-
- RM> IMHO the solution is that the insurance shouldn't pay for whatever one
- RM> doctor/patient combination they choose. Instead, they should consider
- RM> the patient's condition, and if they don't like the doctor's
- RM> "estimate", they'd send out some their own insurance-adjustor doctor
- RM> to make his own estimate. They then give the patient however much the
- RM> estimate says the problem would cost. If the patient wants the more
- RM> expensive doctor, he pays the difference. If the doctor can't fix it
- RM> for about the price of his estimate, he keeps working on for free
- RM> until he gets it right. If a doctor screws up, he pays for the
- RM> damages he causes.
-
- Yes, but who compensates the patient for the time it takes for the adjustor
- to arrive, especially if a day or two makes a difference in the patient's
- health? Of course, for surgery that is not time critical, most doctors will
- suggest a second opinion if the patient is hesitant.
-
- I have a Kaiser card. Despite the bad press accorded Kaiser from time to time,
- I've received good care from them, and always see the same doctor when I need
- one. I believe THIS is the form of a real health care solution. Group medicine
- is growing in leaps and bounds, with HMO groups appearing everywhere. In
- practice, everyone pays a little and most don't "use up what they paid". Sort
- of like term life insurance, fire insurance, the like. Now, if the newly
- elected Executive can find a way to get business, the wealthy, and government
- to subsidize health care group membership for the financially disadvantaged,
- everyone can have good health care at minimum cost.
-
- When I wiped out last June, I dragged myself into Kaiser. It was a Sunday
- morning and the emergency room was not very busy. I've seen it on Saturday
- mornings just after midnight and its a war zone. Anyway, this being a "slow"
- time, they could have done any number of needless or marginal procedures. But,
- since they would only receive a total of $157 from all sources for my care
- that month, they did only what was required: the bone guy tried to make me
- wince by twisting my leg and shoulder, the nurse asked me too many questions
- but at least she was sure I was coherent, the MD looked in my eyes with his
- little light, and another nurse cleaned (with relish) and bandaged my leg.
- At each step, they gave me hell about riding motorcycles, I can't imagine
- why. Almost as good as having Mom there. :-)
-
- I'm sure my motorcycle accident cost Kaiser more than $157 that month. But
- tens of thousands of other people didn't come in that month, so they made out
- just fine. They didn't do more than was necessary for me, but they didn't
- do less, either.
-
- I believe this is the form, or very close to it, of the future of medicine
- (from a financial and organizational view) in the US. Its fair, it spreads
- the burden of cost mostly onto the wealthy (big business), it could easily
- be extended to those not able to afford care and not employed by a business
- which provided coverage within the present financial framework of medicare/
- medicaid/etc. with little additional funding. Of course, a whole gaggle of
- doctors with private and professional group practices oppose ideas like this.
- You alluded to the reason. The problem is not in doing it, but in getting by
- people who have been raised to believe that as doctors, they have the right
- to have 6 digit yearly incomes, and in tearing down a bureaucracy which has
- been built up in both the public and private sector to support those beliefs.
-
- I hope not to need medical assistance because of motorcycling in the future.
- But if I do, and I end up in some emergency room far from home, the Kaiser
- card in my wallet will eliminate any delay in receiving treatment. Though I
- was raised with a "family doctor" who had ministered to 3 generations of
- my family, I still find my present arrangement more than satisfactory.
-
- John
-
- --- GoldED 2.41.B0108+
- --- DB 1.51/001026
-