N
neuro_nurse
Guest
I think we all agree that Medicare fraud occurs, but this is from the Medicare website:
The vast majority of physicians, providers, and suppliers who serve people with Medicare are committed to providing high quality care to their patients and to billing the program only for the payments they have earned.
However, there are *a few *individuals who are intent on abusing or defrauding Medicare, cheating the program (and in some cases the people with Medicare who are liable for co-payments) out of millions of dollars annually. (emphasis mine)
That’s millions – not billions.
I think we all agree that there are people who abuse the ‘safety net’ provided by our society – in whatever form that takes.
I have yet to see anyone produce empirical evidence that the people who abuse the system are anything other than a minority of the population that utilizes the healthcare systems in the U.S.
I hope we all agree that there is a substantial proportion of the population of the U.S. who are in need of healthcare but can’t afford it. I have yet to see anyone produce any empirical evidence that the people who need healthcare and cannot afford it are anything but the majority of those who utilize the safety net provided by our society.
Let me distill this down to two points:
Can we justify denying healthcare to people who can’t afford it based on the abuses perpetrated by a minority of the population who use the system – especially when there seems to be a lack of empirical evidence that the abusers are anything other than a minority of the population who use the healthcare system?
The vast majority of physicians, providers, and suppliers who serve people with Medicare are committed to providing high quality care to their patients and to billing the program only for the payments they have earned.
However, there are *a few *individuals who are intent on abusing or defrauding Medicare, cheating the program (and in some cases the people with Medicare who are liable for co-payments) out of millions of dollars annually. (emphasis mine)
That’s millions – not billions.
I think we all agree that there are people who abuse the ‘safety net’ provided by our society – in whatever form that takes.
I have yet to see anyone produce empirical evidence that the people who abuse the system are anything other than a minority of the population that utilizes the healthcare systems in the U.S.
I hope we all agree that there is a substantial proportion of the population of the U.S. who are in need of healthcare but can’t afford it. I have yet to see anyone produce any empirical evidence that the people who need healthcare and cannot afford it are anything but the majority of those who utilize the safety net provided by our society.
Let me distill this down to two points:
- Abuse occurs, but abusers are a minority of people who use the system.
- There are people who need healthcare but can’t afford it and they are the majority of the people who use the system appropriately.
Can we justify denying healthcare to people who can’t afford it based on the abuses perpetrated by a minority of the population who use the system – especially when there seems to be a lack of empirical evidence that the abusers are anything other than a minority of the population who use the healthcare system?