fotobass wrote:
I personally believe our healthcare's infrastructure is far worse than it could be as far as having the end result be patient care..
You say that based on what?
I'm not saying the system is perfect, but after 12 years on the "front lines" I know just a little about the system.
More people come to the US for care than go else where. The training in our medical schools and residencies is the best in the world.
I've treated 1000's without insurance, and overall I collect about 30% of what I bill. The feds basically mandate what you can bill based on local information. I am not raking it in in Hollywood making faces younger or breasts larger. I am the face you see with chest pain. Any of you out there run a business collecting 30 cents for every dollar? Anyone know a business that will survive in that environment?
I am not perfect, but I give you my best each and every time I treat you.
Remember Mr Moore takes the exception, and tries to make it the rule. That's why I will not watch his movie. Do bad outcomes occur, or patients fall through the cracks, yes; however, they are the exception not the rule, and you can bet we are doing everything we can do to minimize that.
I was in a car accident where a snow plow went through a red light and hit me. The next week, my mailbox was full of info from personal injury lawyers. None of it requested by my or my family. I got my car fixed, and a couple of hundred dollars to make up for the time I lost at work, and getting the car fixed. A few months ago, I had my tires rotated. The tech did not get the lug nuts tight, and the wheel departed the car at 35 mph, shredding the front end. All I asked was they fix my car. I did not sue them for 10's of thousands of dollar ( which I could have). They fixed their mistake, and we went on. No lawyers, and my car looks just like it did before the accident.