Guest guest Posted July 23, 2009 Report Share Posted July 23, 2009 well....re: "What we are really talking about is rationing of health care." haven't we ALWAYS had that? In that 1) some kind of provider has to be available; Variations [patient-->provider cash] or [patient-->3rd party-->provider]; 2) the proposed model: [authorized enrolled patient] + [properly documented Dx'd condition (eg Oregon Health Plan)] + [preauthorized service] + [authorized providers] doing [authorized procedures] + [typical paperwork billing nighmare] +[software links] + [new SECURE programs] + [electronic system versatility/availability/relevancy to practice] + ["underfunded program" excuses] + [inefficiency of new guideline installation] + [extra electronic-file- shufflers at each stage] + [inevitable glitches] + [hacking/fraud/mistakes]--> eventual partial payment How do we consider all the exclusions, deductions, 'not medically necessary', out-of-network, pre-existing conditions etc/etc/etc anything BUT 'rationed availability of care' already in place? How is such limited availability of any commodity any different from food or housing programs? How is limiting legal services so only those licensed to do such can provide such not 'rationing'? Lacking a successful functioning model for comparison that doesn't rely on yearly repetitive infusions of tax payer funding, what would a 'not for profit' non-rationed model actually look like? Further, how can any system of limited resources pretend to endlessly expand to include logarithmically expanding 'need'? J. Pedersen DC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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