S
seekerz
Guest
Prosecution is not the only way to hold someone accountable and government officials who break the law are not immune to prosecution as far as I know.How do you hold accountable a government that holds itself immune from prosecution?
But really, let’s talk numbers here; percentages, whatever…By what degree would you expect tort reform to lower malpractice premiums? Let’s look at states where there are caps and show me where premiums have actually decreased. Further, show how those decreased premiums (if any) have contributed to decrease in the cost of health care.The whole reason that malpractice insurance is so high is because of bogus million dollar lawsuits. That is one of the biggest reasons for tort reform. Then doctors and other medical professionals wouldn’t have to pay the phenomenal premiums. And they wouldn’t have to charge patients so much in order to cover those high premiums.
And the people are already paying phenomenal taxes for programs that will never work…because of beauracracy. Why keep feeding the system that is a failure, rather than taking it away from them…along with taking away the taxes they recieve from us…and the people will give. They already are. Why is it that your faith in humanity is so low? Most ordinary people will give when they see a need. Ordinary people realize that soon it could be them in need. But the fact of the matter is, with tort reform, the costs won’t be phenomenal any longer, so there will be less need for the help to begin with.
I haven’t been able to find any evidence to support the idea that tort reform leads to lower health care costs, but maybe I’m ill-informed.
Even if I accept the premise that tort reform will lower costs, it’s not realistic to expect that a $10, 000 procedure is going to decrease in cost by anything more than a few hundred, maybe (most optimistically) a thousand or two. Are we to expect other things that factor into cost of a procedure (such as medical equipment and medication costs) to decrease as well?
Charitable giving is seasonal for a large proportion of donors. Much of it is based on emotional appeals (which is why so many charitable organisations often have to rely on heart-wrenching pics of children living in squalor). What graphic details of the needy sick would have to be mailed out to induce donations?
True, people are generous, but have you considered the scope of regular charitable giving that would be necessary to make health care available to all the needy even leaving out such variables as overhead, wastage and donor fatigue?
What resources would be available to charities to identify the genuinely needy? What criteria would be used? Maybe I’m a skeptic, but seeing the knee jerk reactions and strong emotions expressed on this board almost every time a medical issue is posted for discussion, I can’t help thinking that the needy sick would face difficulty getting help with some pretty sticky issues.
What some see as allowable use of hormonal preparations (the pill), others see as vanity or lack of tolerance for pain. C/sections, home births, infant feeding, circumcisions, STD’s, vaccinations, ectopic pregnancies, end of life care, even mental illness and disabilities … the list goes on and on of the issues we sometimes disagree on - just on this forum alone. With such strong stances on hot button issues, would donors really be able to just give and allow the recipients to make their own medical decisions?
I just don’t see it working but maybe I’m too pessimistic…