I guess with the number of docs like myself and the others on the forum this wasn't the best topic for a wood forum but what the heck it is in the "anything allowed section"
I to agree that premiums are WAY to high
My brother is one of the top anesthesiologists in the USA his group pays over 5 MILLION a year. My last year in surgery which was in the 90's was over $100K an I was PART TIME this is NONSENSE
Who pays? EVERYONE. Sure a few might collect some nice sums but do you ALL want to pay for that suit agreement?
I hear DAILY about the outrageous costs of health care but then I see guys looking to take docs to the cleaners for a bad outcome. Bad outcomes happen and there should be some compensation for them but not millions and millions
As for the instance cited that is absolutely the rare extreme case and we had better NOT be making precedent based on the impaired doc doing bad work. FAR more "bad outcomes" occur by GREAT docs who get a tough case then bad outcomes from bad docs. Interesting enough unless the Patient is in a locked in HMO or the like the bad docs get weeded out in most areas of the US. One thing about the free enterprise system is people talk and bad talk kills bad docs so they move (another topic)
Higher premiums do NOT filter down to the patient AT ALL. Higher premiums are absorbed by the docs to the point that they simply say ENOUGH I WON'T PLAY. MOST patients have insurance and most docs "participate with them" so they can ASK for more money but we never get it we simply write off the difference in what we WANT and what they pay. MP premiums go up our fees go up and the write offs get bigger each eyar. Eventually the write off is more then the collected amount.
In the meantime they limit the services that they COULD render simply by saying it is to risky to do so I will play safe
Had the cardiac catheterization worked perfectly you would have praised the doc to the world as saving your life. I find it INTERESTING that your neurologist was able to point a finger 6, yes SIX; OH YEAH SIX years later that it was the fault of the cath that you stroked out. Hum so lets see had they not gone in and opened the other side up you would have lasted 8 MINUTES now you are upset for them buying you 6 YEARS.
Here in Orlando we lost ALL of the trauma surgeons for 3 years. YES we had NOT ONE in the Central Florida area for 3 YEARS the closest was Jacksonville (3 hour drive or helocopter away). Why? EASY they wanted to make a living and since most trauma cases are not compensated for (anyone who ocmes to an ER must be treated regardless of whether or not he or she can pay)and since the liability for trauma surgeries are the highest of all the surgeries they were paying more to the MP carrier then to themselves
So as a society do we want good healthcare or limited healthcare the answer is directly related to caps.
We have cap limits in Florida and now we have trauma docs at LOCAL hospitals
I wouldn't go back into surgery again for a million dollars a year in my pocket after taxes. Simple enough I treat patients NOT insurance company rules and thanks to the layers and their ease in winning big suits for nonsense issues (coffee spilled at McD's etc...) I can't help you when you are REALLY in need of my help the most
Dr D
I to agree that premiums are WAY to high
My brother is one of the top anesthesiologists in the USA his group pays over 5 MILLION a year. My last year in surgery which was in the 90's was over $100K an I was PART TIME this is NONSENSE
Who pays? EVERYONE. Sure a few might collect some nice sums but do you ALL want to pay for that suit agreement?
I hear DAILY about the outrageous costs of health care but then I see guys looking to take docs to the cleaners for a bad outcome. Bad outcomes happen and there should be some compensation for them but not millions and millions
As for the instance cited that is absolutely the rare extreme case and we had better NOT be making precedent based on the impaired doc doing bad work. FAR more "bad outcomes" occur by GREAT docs who get a tough case then bad outcomes from bad docs. Interesting enough unless the Patient is in a locked in HMO or the like the bad docs get weeded out in most areas of the US. One thing about the free enterprise system is people talk and bad talk kills bad docs so they move (another topic)
Higher premiums do NOT filter down to the patient AT ALL. Higher premiums are absorbed by the docs to the point that they simply say ENOUGH I WON'T PLAY. MOST patients have insurance and most docs "participate with them" so they can ASK for more money but we never get it we simply write off the difference in what we WANT and what they pay. MP premiums go up our fees go up and the write offs get bigger each eyar. Eventually the write off is more then the collected amount.
In the meantime they limit the services that they COULD render simply by saying it is to risky to do so I will play safe
Had the cardiac catheterization worked perfectly you would have praised the doc to the world as saving your life. I find it INTERESTING that your neurologist was able to point a finger 6, yes SIX; OH YEAH SIX years later that it was the fault of the cath that you stroked out. Hum so lets see had they not gone in and opened the other side up you would have lasted 8 MINUTES now you are upset for them buying you 6 YEARS.
Here in Orlando we lost ALL of the trauma surgeons for 3 years. YES we had NOT ONE in the Central Florida area for 3 YEARS the closest was Jacksonville (3 hour drive or helocopter away). Why? EASY they wanted to make a living and since most trauma cases are not compensated for (anyone who ocmes to an ER must be treated regardless of whether or not he or she can pay)and since the liability for trauma surgeries are the highest of all the surgeries they were paying more to the MP carrier then to themselves
So as a society do we want good healthcare or limited healthcare the answer is directly related to caps.
We have cap limits in Florida and now we have trauma docs at LOCAL hospitals
I wouldn't go back into surgery again for a million dollars a year in my pocket after taxes. Simple enough I treat patients NOT insurance company rules and thanks to the layers and their ease in winning big suits for nonsense issues (coffee spilled at McD's etc...) I can't help you when you are REALLY in need of my help the most
Dr D



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