reply to post by endisnighe
Well right now, this is a hypothetical question, so we can debate it as such, but there is nothing pressing a resolution. In the abstract, I believe
life is precious and I won't advocate denying tretment, but I know it goes on in indirect ways already for the elderly.
If a health care reform bill is passed, it can no longer be a hypothetical question. When you add 30-45 million more people to the system, you
immediately worsen the current "shortage" of doctors and medical professionals. Add to this caps on billings, such as what currently exists in
Medicaid and Medicare, and you add a severe disincentive for persons to stay in the medical profession or choose to go into the medical professsion.
So considering nothing else but the certain issue of doctor and professional shortages, rationing will occur. This is simple logic. Expect rationing
to be all over the board: age, behavorial history, political power?...essentially "cost-benefit" ratios determined by govt. As Pres Obama told a
woman at a town hall meeting who asked about her 90+ grandmother's successful operation: maybe just taking a pain pill would be better in that case.
He said emotional issues can't be considered. Death panels...why not call them this? That's what they will be to the families involved.
So this brings me to something ironic: folks want the govt to fix the problem with insurance companies denying coverage for pre-existing conditions.
But, the point lost is that by pure logic, we can predict that the govt will by necessity deny certain costly procedures for those with prior medical
conditions according to a logical cost-benefit calculation.