Yes, the patients are blameless right?
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Statements like the one you made above to me just encouraging our sue everyone society that we live in...
Of course its not an excuse to try and manipulate the system- but when you have 300 Million people being served by a broken system, there will be lots of people lining up to abuse it. I don't expect everyone out there to be bound by some moral code to not abuse the system. I might try to hold myself, family and friends to some sort of moral standard- but beyond that I don't expect others to share similar values about what is fair.
I do think the system can be improved- and there will be changes if only because the current system is not financially sustainable. Unfortunately every "fix" has serious trade offs, not the least of which the need for society to temper is expectations of what medicine and the legal system can accomplish. There will have to be some reasonable rationing of care.
For example, under medicaid currently 90% of the recipients are children- but they only receive 15% of the $'s spent. Tough decisions will have to made on how much can reasonably spent for expensive treatments that modestly extend life. That money often would be better invested in improving the quality of the end of life with investment in hospice, home care and family leave reimbursement. Nobody wants to be the one that denies their grandparent that last $100,00 round of palliative Chemo, but as a society we need to be ready to make tough choices.
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Don't get me started on baby boomers and the fact that we keep people alive way too long...
Of course, after we solve the simple issue of medicine in the US, let's move on to education shall we? Should be able to tie that up in a weekend
If people would stop electing politicians dumber than they are, it would be an immense help in my opinion, people seem intimidated when a political candidate is smarter than they are .
Course, this would be all solved by my 'sterilize the stupid' platform