- Sep 21, 2001
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No firsthand knowledge here, so correct away if I misspeak.
Getting into med school is pretty difficult, I understand. Paying for medical school requires hundreds of thousands in loans. Post-medical school involves residencies where you work tons of lousy hours for mediocre pay. After that you start your own practice and charge a lot to (a) make up for your school bills and (b) make the whole ordeal worth your while. People complain because you charge a lot and because all the other trappings of the medical profession (meds, equipment, facilities) are expensive and there are some oddball ways of weighing charges for different people.
Fairly accurate?
So how much would this, in your opinion, be alleviated, if med school costs were paid by the taxypayers? Are we already sourcing out nearly out all of the competent and motivated students, so that paying for med school really wouldn't add any new doctors to the pool? Or do we have a lot of competent and motivated students who would go to med school but can't get loans or pay for it?
I'm about as anti-socialized health care as anybody can get. However, if the government was going to step in anywhere to affect costs, it seems like subsidizing doctor (and other medical, like nurse, techs, etc.) education might be a fairly non-invasive way to start. You might wind up with a few more of the legendary "goodwill" doctors that the left hypothesizes about; people that want to be in medicine for the change the can make in the world and not just the money they can make.
I dunno, good or terrible idea?
[edit] My conclusions so far based on input from others in the thread: comping medical school wouldn't help much because we already turn away qualified and willing applicants (who can and will take on the loans) due to our limited med school space.
Getting into med school is pretty difficult, I understand. Paying for medical school requires hundreds of thousands in loans. Post-medical school involves residencies where you work tons of lousy hours for mediocre pay. After that you start your own practice and charge a lot to (a) make up for your school bills and (b) make the whole ordeal worth your while. People complain because you charge a lot and because all the other trappings of the medical profession (meds, equipment, facilities) are expensive and there are some oddball ways of weighing charges for different people.
Fairly accurate?
So how much would this, in your opinion, be alleviated, if med school costs were paid by the taxypayers? Are we already sourcing out nearly out all of the competent and motivated students, so that paying for med school really wouldn't add any new doctors to the pool? Or do we have a lot of competent and motivated students who would go to med school but can't get loans or pay for it?
I'm about as anti-socialized health care as anybody can get. However, if the government was going to step in anywhere to affect costs, it seems like subsidizing doctor (and other medical, like nurse, techs, etc.) education might be a fairly non-invasive way to start. You might wind up with a few more of the legendary "goodwill" doctors that the left hypothesizes about; people that want to be in medicine for the change the can make in the world and not just the money they can make.
I dunno, good or terrible idea?
[edit] My conclusions so far based on input from others in the thread: comping medical school wouldn't help much because we already turn away qualified and willing applicants (who can and will take on the loans) due to our limited med school space.