Author Topic: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare  (Read 2397 times)

Soul Crusher

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Doctors hate ObamaCare even more than you do

by John Hayward

Posted 03/15/2012 ET


http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes&id=50221






Heath care is an expensive product, with high demand chasing limited supply.  There are only so many doctors, and training new ones requires a long education at great personal expense.  Meanwhile, advances in medicine are steadily prolonging life and improving its quality.



It follows that if we want to decrease the cost of health care (or, to use the currently popular political vernacular, “improve access”) we need more doctors.  Conversely, reducing the supply of doctors would make medical care more expensive, and reduce its quality.  If government controls are then applied to skyrocketing costs, shortages and rationing would be the inevitable result.



What will ObamaCare do to the supply of doctors?  For the answer, we turn to a Heritage Foundation report on a new survey of the medical profession, which confirms the results of a previous survey from 2010.  Doctors hate ObamaCare even more than the general public does, with 60 percent of respondents saying it will “have a negative impact on overall patient care,” but that’s not the worst of it:



The Doctors Company, which is the largest insurer of physician and surgeon medical liability in the nation, received more than 5,000 surveys, including all specialties and every region in the country. The results weren’t good for the President’s signature piece of legislation.



Not only do doctors believe that Obamacare will not improve the health care system, they also anticipate that it will worsen the current condition. According to the survey, nine out of 10 physicians are unwilling to recommend health care as a profession to a family member, and one primary care physician even commented, “I would not recommend becoming an M.D. to anyone.”


Obamacare doesn’t just discourage entrance into the medical profession; it encourages those who are already practicing to leave it. The survey states that “health care reform is motivating doctors to change their retirement timeline.” In fact, 43 percent of respondents said they are considering retiring within the next five years as a result of the law. A surgeon from Michigan wrote that under Obamacare, “We will be moving further away from humanity-based health care and more towards the patient as a commodity. This was not the way my father practiced—nor will I. Winding down to retire early.”



(Emphases mine.)  This comes as the United States teeters “on the brink of a severe physician shortage,” with the American Association of Medical Colleges estimating that we’ll need 91,500 more doctors by 2020 to meet demand.



This is the sort of disastrous “side effect” that probably wasn’t included in the Congressional Budget Office’s already horrific estimate of ObamaCare’s exploding costs.  It’s also damage that would not be easy to reverse.  If ObamaCare is not repealed soon, the loss of doctors will ripple forward for years… and the necessity of tight “death panel” rationing of precious doctor time will be used as a club by Democrats to not only keep ObamaCare, but actually make it worse.  Wait until the doctors of 2014 get a load of the tidal wave pouring into their offices to collect their mandated benefits… and look behind them to see an increasingly large army of stern bureaucrats dictating the fast-food practices necessary to keep the human cattle moving through those exam rooms.



Let’s hear Health and Human Cattle Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius tell us some more about that private-sector “death spiral” ObamaCare was supposed to fix!





John Hayward is a staff writer for HUMAN EVENTS, and author of the recently published Doctor Zero: Year One. He is a regular guest on the Rusty Humphries radio show. Follow him on Twitter: Doc_0. Contact him by email at jhayward@eaglepub.com.

OzmO

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #1 on: March 16, 2012, 08:15:20 AM »
I agree OB care is a scam, but this article looks like complete spinning crap.

LurkerNoMore

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #2 on: March 16, 2012, 08:17:27 AM »
No, these docs are really leaving.  They have to be unemployed before they can start torching cities over the Globe's revelation of Obamas fake BC.

Proof positive.

OzmO

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #3 on: March 16, 2012, 08:18:09 AM »
They are probably Kenyan born

Soul Crusher

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #4 on: March 16, 2012, 08:29:11 AM »
Nine Out of 10 Physicians Unwilling to Recommend Health Care As a Profession, Exacerbating Anticipated Physician Shortage


http://www.thedoctors.com/TDC/PressRoom/PressContent/CON_ID_004671



Physician Survey Respondents Indicate They Are Actively Discouraging Individuals from Entering the Medical Profession, While Also Contemplating Early Retirement

Napa, California—March 1, 2012—The Doctors Company, the nation’s largest insurer of physician and surgeon medical liability, today announced results from the largest physician survey conducted to date on the future of health care in America. More than 5,000 physician members within The Doctors Company organization responded to the independent survey, and the overwhelming indication is that concerns surrounding a shortage of health care professionals may be exacerbated by current physician sentiment regarding the profession. Specifically, nine out of 10 physician respondents indicate an unwillingness to recommend health care as a profession. In addition, 43 percent of respondents indicate that they are contemplating retiring within the next five years as a result of transformative changes occurring within America’s health care system. A copy of the Future of Health Care Survey is available on The Doctors Company Knowledge Center.

“The physician sentiments expressed in the Future of Health Care Survey are deeply concerning and disheartening,” said Donald J. Palmisano, MD, JD, FACS, former president of the American Medical Association and member of The Doctors Company Board of Governors. “For years, the medical profession has been predicting a shortage of health care professionals. Today, we are perilously close to a true crisis as newly insured Americans enter the health care system and our population continues to age. Unfortunately, we may be facing a shift from a ‘calling,’ which has been the hallmark for generations among physicians, that could threaten the next generation of health care professionals.”

Nearly 32 million newly insured individuals will be entering America’s health care system by 2016,i increasing demands on America’s health care professionals. The result is an anticipated shortage of primary care physicians and nurses needed to care for the millions of newly insured individuals entering the health care system.ii This will necessarily increase the number of patients treated per physician, making it nearly impossible to maintain or improve the quality of patient outcomes. Sixty-five percent of respondents believe the current legislative initiatives designed to reduce health care expenses are insufficient to effectively address the underlying causes of costly defensive medicine. Furthermore, the physicians surveyed expressed concern that the increase in patient volume will reduce the attention they are able to give to each patient, with 60 percent of respondents indicating that the pressures to increase patient volume will negatively impact the level of care they can provide. Fifty-one percent of respondents feel their ability to grow and maintain patient relationships will be adversely affected. These concerns have led an overwhelming nine out of 10 physicians to actively discourage friends and family members from pursuing careers in medicine. Finally, 43 percent of respondents indicate that they are contemplating retiring in the next five years as a result of the immense change that the health care system is undergoing.

“As an organization founded by physicians for physicians, The Doctors Company takes pride and great care in providing our physician members with assistance and health care insights wherever possible, and the findings from this survey are no exception,” said Richard E. Anderson, MD, FACP, chairman and chief executive officer of The Doctors Company. “The response from our membership on the future of health care was stunning. Although we recognized that changes in health care delivery were impacting all facets of our members’ practice, the vehement, negative reactions are of real concern. When reviewing the complete survey results, the overarching sentiment is that current legislation will likely have a negative impact on the practice of medicine and will not address the scourge of defensive medicine in America.”

“We believe that physicians, and other health care professionals, need to be involved in the discussions, and we support our members who choose to become involved and voice their concerns and opinions on the future of America’s health care,” Dr. Anderson continued.

About the Future of Health Care Survey

The Doctors Company surveyed its members on the future of health care, receiving over 5,000 responses from physicians and surgeons across the nation. The survey signifies an unparalleled representation of the nation’s physicians’ attitudes, perceptions, and intent related to the major factors contributing to the transformative changes in America’s health care system, including health care reform. The survey was designed with accuracy and honesty as first priorities. Therefore, a large pool of respondents was surveyed without incentives of any kind.

The Doctors Company conducted this survey to decipher emerging industry challenges and provide support to its membership. Additional information and full survey results can be found online at www.thedoctors.com/future.

About The Doctors Company

Founded by doctors for doctors in 1976, The Doctors Company is relentlessly committed to advancing, protecting, and rewarding the practice of good medicine. The Doctors Company is the nation’s largest insurer of physician and surgeon medical liability with 71,000 members, $4 billion in assets, and an A rating from both A.M. Best Company and Fitch Ratings.




________________________ ________________________ ___


time for you two clowns, along w 240, straw, blackass andre et al - to STFU and admit i was right. 

mik1111

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #5 on: March 16, 2012, 08:33:12 AM »
more employment in 5 years

Soul Crusher

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #6 on: March 16, 2012, 08:48:08 AM »
more employment in 5 years

In what? 

Soul Crusher

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #7 on: October 31, 2013, 11:09:27 AM »
No, these docs are really leaving.  They have to be unemployed before they can start torching cities over the Globe's revelation of Obamas fake BC.

Proof positive.

http://nypost.com/2013/10/29/docs-resisting-obamacare


Read it and weep Obama slave

LurkerNoMore

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Re: 43% of doctors consider retiring in next 5 years due to ObamaCare
« Reply #8 on: October 31, 2013, 11:16:53 AM »
Resisting = Retiring?

Skell FAIL again.