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Thomas Sowell
Thomas Sowell
14 Feb 2012
The 'Progressive' Legacy

Although Barack Obama is the first black President of the United States, he is by no means unique, except for … Read More.

14 Feb 2012
The Progressive Legacy: Part II

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The Progressive Legacy: Part III

The same presumptions of superior wisdom and virtue behind the interventionism of Progressive Presidents … Read More.

Alice in Medical Care: Part IV

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Some years ago, one of my favorite doctors retired. On my last visit to his office, he took some time to explain to me why he was retiring early and in good health.

Being a doctor was becoming more of a hassle as the years went by, he said, and also less fulfilling. It was becoming more of a hassle because of the increasing paperwork, and it was less fulfilling because of the way patients came to him.

He was currently being asked to Xerox lots of records from his files, in order to be reimbursed for another patient he was treating. He said it just wasn't worth it. Whoever was paying— it might have been an insurance company or the government— would either pay him or not, he said, but he wasn't going to jump through all those hoops.

My doctor said that doctor-patient relationships were not the same as they had been when he entered the profession. Back then, people came to him because someone had recommended him to them, but now increasing numbers of people were sent to him because they had some group insurance plan that included his group.

He said that the mutual confidence that was part of the doctor-patient relationship was not the same with people who came to his office only because his name was on some list of eligible physicians.

The loss of one doctor— even a very good doctor— may not seem very important in the grand scheme of heady medical care "reform" and glittering phrases about "universal health care." But making the medical profession more of a hassle for doctors risks losing more doctors, while increasing the demand for treatment.

A study published in the November 2009 issue of the Journal of Law & Economics showed that a rise in the cost of medical liability insurance led to more reductions of hours of medical service supplied by older doctors than among younger doctors.

Younger doctors, more recently out of medical school and often with huge debts to pay off for the cost of that expensive training, may have no choice but to continue working as hard as possible to try to recoup that huge investment of money and time.

Younger doctors will probably continue working, even if bureaucrats load them down with increasing amounts of paperwork and the government continues to lower reimbursements for Medicare, Medicaid and— heaven help us— the new proposed "universal health care" legislation that is supposed to "bring down the cost of medical care."

The confusion between lowering costs and refusing to pay the costs can have a real impact on the supply of doctors.

The real costs of medical care include both the financial conditions and the working conditions that will insure a continuing supply of both the quantity and the quality of doctors required to maintain medical care standards for a growing number of patients.

Although younger doctors may be trapped in a profession that some of them might not have entered if they had known in advance what all its pluses and minuses would turn out to be, there are two other important groups who are in a position to decide whether or not it is worth it.

Those who are old enough to have paid off their medical school debts long ago, and successful enough that they can afford to retire early, or to take jobs as medical consultants, can opt out of the whole elaborate third-party payment system and its problems. What the rising costs of medical liability insurance has already done for some, other hassles that bureaucracies and politicians create can have the same effect for others.

There is another group that doesn't have to put up with these hassles. These are young people who have reached the stage in their lives when they are choosing which profession to enter, and weighing the pluses and minuses before making their decisions.

Some of these young people might prefer becoming a doctor, other things being equal. But the heady schemes of government-controlled medicine, and the ever more bloated bureaucracies that these heady schemes will require, can make it very unlikely that other things will be equal in the medical profession.

Paying doctors less and hassling them more may be some people's idea of "lowering the cost of medical care," but it is instead refusing to pay the costs— and taking the consequences.

To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
You Sir are a national treasure and I can't begin to say how much I enjoy finding and reading your articles in our local paper, The World Herald. Your article on the true containment of health care costs was spectacular in that you broach all of the different facets of health care application and the costs plus how government intercedes in the name of fairness in the business sector and aggravates a condition. Your article lays bare the abject failure of the free lunch program democrats have been selling us all of our lives. There is no free lunch

What made your story stand out was the placement of E. J. Dionne Jr's article just below yours which was as far removed from reality as Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland versus Barak Obama in Washington, wait, bad example. Never mind. The point is, E. J. like most liberals is a cheerleader and all of his arguments are either based on emotion or on the merit of an idea that has never been proven to work anywhere. E. J's latest histrionics are all about reconciliation on a bill we had nothing to do with crafting, had no say on it's components and now he's miffed that we won't play along and sign on so that Emperor will look good. The crowning piece of E. J's article is this glittering jewel of ignorance and twaddle (It was Kennedy, you'll recall, who insisted that health care was "a fundamental right and not a privilege." That's why it's not just legitimate to complete the work on health reform. It would be immoral to do otherwise...") This dunderhead leaves me speechless, it's bad enough that he quotes Kennedy but to claim that health care is a right proves this gibbering child needs to have his keyboard confiscated. I combed over my pocket Declaration of the United States and the Constitution and I can't find that right in there no matter how many times I read it. I and many like me have had enough of people of such substandard intellect prattling to us as to what we should and shouldn't be doing and November can't get here fast enough.

Thank you for all you do.
John Wolford
Omaha, Nebraska
Comment: #1
Posted by: johh Wolfore
Sat Mar 6, 2010 8:18 AM
I use to have a personal relationship with a doctor years ago which ultimately saved my son the evils of prescription drugs. Unfortunately, with the intervention of the government, the legal community and the total lack of honesty between people that is no longer is possible.
Comment: #2
Posted by: John C. Davidson
Sat Mar 6, 2010 11:47 AM
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