kellyb
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Messages
- 12,632
Hey, xjx...
You think FP's under the NHS have it rough?
Look at what the insurance companies (that designed and supported Obamacare) think of PCP's:
http://covertrationingblog.com/heal...-need-to-know-about-our-new-healthcare-system
In the free market, insurance companies see no need to pay MDs who might not like rationing care at the bedside with another red cent when they can write up their own "health care that doesn't actually cost money, ie, denial of care" guidelines and have NPs obey like robots.
You think FP's under the NHS have it rough?
Look at what the insurance companies (that designed and supported Obamacare) think of PCP's:
http://covertrationingblog.com/heal...-need-to-know-about-our-new-healthcare-system
Second, the new law proposes to fund new training opportunities for PCPs. This also sounds nice. But DrRich wonders what effect these new training programs will have, when the training programs that already exist cannot come close to filling their slots.
DrRich contends that these two stated “fixes” for manufacturing more PCPs cannot possibly provide an actual solution to the PCP shortage, and further, that the authors of the Senate bill cannot possibly believe they will. And so, DrRich decided to look a little deeper.
The answer to the PCP shortage – at least, the answer our political leaders are actually relying upon – is revealed deep in the Senate bill, in Section 5501, where the definition of “Primary Care Practitioner” is actually provided. Note, first of all, that once this bill becomes the law of the land, “PCP” will no longer mean “primary care physician,” but rather, will mean “primary care practitioner.”
And here’s how the new law defines Primary Care Practioners:
The term ‘primary care practitioner’ means an individual who —
(I) is a physician (as described in section 1861(r)(1)) who has a primary specialty designation of family medicine, internal medicine, geriatric medicine, or pediatric medicine; or
(II) is a nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, or physician assistant (as those terms are defined in 9 section 1861(aa)(5))
And so, to his readers who are primary care physicians, DrRich must report that the real “fix” your political leaders have envisioned for the PCP shortage has been to declare you and nurse practitioners to be functionally (and legally) equivalent.
In the free market, insurance companies see no need to pay MDs who might not like rationing care at the bedside with another red cent when they can write up their own "health care that doesn't actually cost money, ie, denial of care" guidelines and have NPs obey like robots.
Last edited:
:ed-up