Re: Relative Value? Why should that drive cost?
by
entdoc
09/03/2009, 4:42 PM #
I'm not sure that you perceive the world as it actually is.
1. There are many nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Their practices are limited and supervised but that is the nature of their occupations. They are trained less and so they can function equally in a lower capacity. Their roles are limited and that is why they provide more cost effective care in limited situations. But they aren't cheaper to the government. They use the same coding that the physicians do. They may take care of routine care, but they don't take out appendixes, do heart surgery, or direct cancer care. And it still takes a long time to train and get them enough experience to function usefully. And increasing their numbers does little to improve supply and demand because these are the very people who refer to specialists in great numbers. Oh, and by the way, they get paid pretty well.
2. Midwives may improve the costs of routine deliveries, but the tradeoff is that there will have to be an acceptable number of emergency admissions to the hospital for obstetric services. And if midwife services expanded greatly they would face the same malpractice issues that obstetricians face today. And they would start practicing defensive medicine and their costs would rise.
3. A medical degree is available to anyone willing to work hard enough and pay for medical school. And that is as it should be. Very few people who really, really want to go to medical school get shut out. A lot of people who casually decide to apply may not make it, and a lot of people wash out of medical school and subsequent residency. But if you really want it and work for it you can go. Medical school curriculum is regulated and controlled, to some degree, in an effort to maintain high levels of quality and prevent quackery. You really can't be arguing against that, can you?