zephyrprime
Diamond Member
- Feb 18, 2001
- 7,512
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Originally posted by: shadow9d9Government doesn't need to prove anything. With insurances constantly denying pre-existing conditions, denying coverage, and outright dropping unfavorable clients, while increasing profits 10 fold in 5 years, they need to be eliminated.
Yup. Unless suing your doctor is completely banned under tort reform (good luck with that).Originally posted by: WhipperSnapper
If we do have tort reform, where does the expense of caring for people who were injured from medical malpractice or mere mistakes go? Do those costs just magically vaporize? If doctors stop fearing malpractice and lawsuits, will they make more mistakes, increasing the amount of medical malpractice and the costs of malpractice and mistakes?Originally posted by: her209
I think the impact of tort reform is being overestimated. Doctors are still going to get sued and will still want to carry malpractice insurance and will still practice defensive medicine because of it.Originally posted by: Ozoned
They already spent stimulus money to address the one I bolded. Tort reform will take care of a lot of the reduntant paperwork, and a lot of the others you listed.
What you people don't realize is that the torts system also compensates injured people for their injuries and reduces the amount of malpractice. How exactly it should work under a socialized national health care system, I don't know, but injured people do need to be compensated for their injuries or at least cared for and we do need and want to have deterrents against negligence and recklessness.
Originally posted by: WhipperSnapper
Originally posted by: her209
I think the impact of tort reform is being overestimated. Doctors are still going to get sued and will still want to carry malpractice insurance and will still practice defensive medicine because of it.Originally posted by: Ozoned
They already spent stimulus money to address the one I bolded. Tort reform will take care of a lot of the reduntant paperwork, and a lot of the others you listed.
If we do have tort reform, where does the expense of caring for people who were injured from medical malpractice or mere mistakes go? Do those costs just magically vaporize? If doctors stop fearing malpractice and lawsuits, will they make more mistakes, increasing the amount of medical malpractice and the costs of malpractice and mistakes?
What you people don't realize is that the torts system also compensates injured people for their injuries and reduces the amount of malpractice. How exactly it should work under a socialized national health care system, I don't know, but injured people do need to be compensated for their injuries or at least cared for and we do need and want to have deterrents against negligence and recklessness.
Originally posted by: her209
Yup. Unless suing your doctor is completely banned under tort reform (good luck with that).Originally posted by: WhipperSnapper
If we do have tort reform, where does the expense of caring for people who were injured from medical malpractice or mere mistakes go? Do those costs just magically vaporize? If doctors stop fearing malpractice and lawsuits, will they make more mistakes, increasing the amount of medical malpractice and the costs of malpractice and mistakes?Originally posted by: her209
I think the impact of tort reform is being overestimated. Doctors are still going to get sued and will still want to carry malpractice insurance and will still practice defensive medicine because of it.Originally posted by: Ozoned
They already spent stimulus money to address the one I bolded. Tort reform will take care of a lot of the reduntant paperwork, and a lot of the others you listed.
What you people don't realize is that the torts system also compensates injured people for their injuries and reduces the amount of malpractice. How exactly it should work under a socialized national health care system, I don't know, but injured people do need to be compensated for their injuries or at least cared for and we do need and want to have deterrents against negligence and recklessness.
Originally posted by: zephyrprime
Man, I can't believe that unecessary test and drugs are the #1 waste category.
Originally posted by: shadow9d9
Originally posted by: Patranus
Look. If government wants to prove that it can do something right, clean up the fraud and waste and once that is done, come back with the government option.
The fact that they claim that they are going to fund the majority of it with these cuts without being able to show that they will actually be able to make the cuts is disturbing. Even if you are pro government option, this should worry you.
I am opposed to the government option right now but would feel a s*little* bit better about it if the government could show that these saving actually exist and the government can take advantage of the savings.
Government doesn't need to prove anything. With insurances constantly denying pre-existing conditions, denying coverage, and outright dropping unfavorable clients, while increasing profits 10 fold in 5 years, they need to be eliminated.
Originally posted by: QuantumPionYou think the government, which is in a multi-trillion dollar deficit, can take over 1/6 of the economy and not deny a huge number of claims?
Guess which health care provider is the number one denier of claims...it's medicare.
Government doesn't need to prove anything. With insurances constantly denying pre-existing conditions, denying coverage, and outright dropping unfavorable clients, while increasing profits 10 fold in 5 years, they need to be eliminated.
Originally posted by: WhipperSnapper
Originally posted by: QuantumPionYou think the government, which is in a multi-trillion dollar deficit, can take over 1/6 of the economy and not deny a huge number of claims?
Guess which health care provider is the number one denier of claims...it's medicare.
It's not as though insurance companies aren't already denying people's claims and subjecting them to death panels. The 17% of GDP that is currently spent on health care could be used to fund a more efficient government system.
Oh, by the way, in nations with evil, evil socialized medicine and national health care, nobody, nobody other than perhaps the wealthy or capitalist freaks supports scrapping their nation's system in favor of the American system. They think that our system is retarded.