I have worked as a medical technologist in a hospital lab for over 30 years.
The biggest problem with the ACA is that it did nothing to reduce the high costs of health care in the U.S.
I can think of a few reasons why health care is so expensive:
- ** Lack of preventative health care, mainly regular doctor and dentist appointments**.
So many people avoid going to the doctor or dentist for decades, and go in only when they have a health crisis, e.g, a heart attack. Then it ends up costing hundreds of thousands of dollars for their acute care, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in continued care, especially the meds.
We must not leave dental care out of this. So many health problems can be prevented by good dental care. There is nothing more heartbreaking than a person who dies of endocarditis caused by oral bacteria that break through diseased gums and end up destroying the person’s heart.
Instead of passing a 2000-page bill, President Obama and his cronies should have started small and rammed through some kind of legislation that would cover the cost of yearly medical and dental check-ups for every American.
- **The unhealthy life-style practiced by a huge percentage of the American population, leading to debilitating diseases like diabetes, strokes, and heart disease. **
We are a mess! And it’s not just the “fat” people who are guilty of living unhealthy lives. Many thin people live in a state of constant stress, which can hasten the onset of high cholesterol and other chronic conditions.
President Obama and his family are walking advertisements for healthy lifestyles (although apparently the President still smokes). They should have urged the STATES and LOCAL GOVERNMENTS to enact policies that make healthy eating and fitness easier and cheaper for their people. E.g., many school gymnasiums are closed when school is not in session–why not keep them open for the community to work out? (Answer–because lawyers would have a field day suing the school and local government whenever a child gets injured playing basketball in that gym. Grrr!)
And that brings me to my biggest gripe about health care in the U.S.–
- Lawyers who make a living on medical lawsuits, making it necessary for doctors to order unnecessary tests and procedures to keep from getting sued.
I have such a low opinion of these lawyers that I don’t dare say more on these boards. In my opinion, they haven’t changed much since Jesus fired off the “7 Woes” against them. IMO, every lawyer should have a copy of those “7 Woes” up on his/her wall, or better yet, tattooed onto their forearms where they could see them all the time.
But I will say this–the fact that President Obama and his ACA did nothing to address the medical lawsuits issue proves to me that the Act cares mainly for lawyers, not patients and certainly not the taxpayers who are continuing to pay for the extra tests and procedures that doctors are forced to order and all the regulations that everyone in the country has to adhere to out of fear of being sued.
- ** Waste in hospitals!** This is a biggie. There is so much waste, especially in clerical settings. We constantly have to cancel tests that are ordered in duplicate (if we don’t cancel them, they get done and the patient gets a double charge).
I think a lot of the problems with waste have to do with the inadequate information systems (computer software) in our hospitals. One of the few good things that President Obama mentioned when he was campaigning is that he would like to see hospitals and clinics all using the same universal computer system. Yes! This would be a huge help, as long as it was well-designed and maintained.
Our Information Systems department is so understaffed, and many of the staff that they have are people from other hospital departments who had a little computer savvy, and were hired to be on the IS Staff. There are also a large number of people on that staff who have only an Associates Degree and know little to nothing about computer systems.
One of these “tekkies” told me once that they had 360 tickets waiting to be dealt with, and she deals with about one ticket a day. That means that if I call for a “fix,” I may have to wait almost a year for the tekkie to get to it. Arrgh!
In addition, computer equipment is something that hospitals try not to purchase except when it is destroyed by a fork lift running over it (and since fork lifts never come into our department, this doesn’t happen to us). In our lab, we still have the same old computer equipment that we had ten years ago!
How many of you replace your computer more often than every ten years?! We certainly do, because it’s out of date!
We have many large instruments in the hospital lab, and many of our instruments can’t be interfaced with our hospital computer system because our hospital software is so out-of-date. That means all the results have to be entered by hand, which leads to more tech time wasted and of course, more “clerical errors.”
Anyway, ACA did nothing to address the problem of outdated computer technology in hospitals.
I think you will be hard-pressed to find many hospital professionals who are enamored of the ACA.