1997-08-25 - Glut of Doctors? (Oh Horror, Oh Horror!) / Re: index.html

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From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: bd5757809594ff223defd3597ed3c9c724f91113e66d446e9b13fe92924fa844
Message ID: <199708250158.DAA05186@basement.replay.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-08-25 02:21:00 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 25 Aug 1997 10:21:00 +0800

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From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
Date: Mon, 25 Aug 1997 10:21:00 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Glut of Doctors? (Oh Horror, Oh Horror!) / Re: index.html
Message-ID: <199708250158.DAA05186@basement.replay.com>
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Jim Choate wrote:
>    CNN
>               REPORT: U.S. TO PAY HOSPITALS NOT TO TRAIN DOCTORS
>       Doctor graphic August 24, 1997

>      WASHINGTON (CNN) -- In an effort to reduce a glut of physicians in
>      the United States, the federal government will pay training
>      hospitals hundreds of millions of dollars not to train doctors, The
>      Washington Post reported Sunday.

  Thus protecting the citizens from the horrible spectre of reasonably
priced health care. Sick people around the nation must be applauding 
this government effort.
 
>      Medicare underwrites residency training programs heavily. Taxpayers
>      spend $7 billion a year on the training, with each resident
>      translating into an average subsidy of $100,000 a year.

  I don't suppose that simply "dropping" the subsidy would have the
same result of reducing the number of doctors, would it?
  (Hello! Is anybody home...?)

>      The payments are the government's first effort to constrict the
>      pipeline of people entering the medical profession, and one of the
>      few times the federal government has used subsidies as leverage to
>      shrink a particular work force.

  At the same time that the baby boom is turning into a geriatric boom
which will increase the need for physicians.
  Sounds like the makings a future "HEALTH CARE CRISIS!!!!" which the
government will have to address with new laws and a dramatic increase
in government funding for subsidized residency training.

  Thank God that the government has had the foresight to increasingly
arm a variety of government agencies so that they can step in to halt
the old, sick sheeple from rushing the medical centers.

>      But the agreement drew fire from teaching hospitals in other areas
>      of the country who were cutting their residency rolls voluntarily
>      and absorbing the cost of the lost subsidies without federal
>      assistance.

  Oh, you mean like is regularly done in the "real" world? Is it "legal"
to do that without government assistance?
 
>      Others wondered whether it was necessary. The number of doctors
>      training to become specialists in some fields has declined
>      dramatically despite the subsidy program, the Post article said, due
>      to well-publicized warnings that jobs for specialists were only
>      available in less populated areas.

  Oh Horror, Oh Horror!
  Reasonably priced health care, and physicians forced to endure the
indignity of providing medical services to people in areas free of
big-city smog.
  Better to heavily arm the big-city government agents to thwart the
threat of all of those country bumpkins getting past the road-block
identity checks and attempting to access the dwindling number of
big-city physicians.

  Jim, did you make this post up? Are you a forger/spoofer? This post
is so typical of government insanity that it seems like a National
Lampoon parody.

TruthMonger






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