Posted by
reasonmclucus on Thursday, October 15, 2009 3:53:15 PM
The most important rule in health care is "first do no harm".
Unfortunately Congressional Democrats seem totally oblivious to this
rule.
Many Democrats are so egotistical that they
think anything they do will be an improvement. They seem
incapable of understanding that changes can make a situation
worse instead of better just like giving a patient the wrong medical
treatment can worsen the patient's condition. The wrong medical
treatment can kill. Making the wrong changes in the health
care system can reduce access to health care and reduce the
quality of health care.
In one of my favorite episodes of M*A*S*H* Captain Hawkeye
Pierce is appointed the unit's chief surgeon. Major Frank
Burns complains to a general when Hawkeye decides not to immediately
operate on a badly wounded soldier who comes in. When
the
general arrives Hawkeye has been playing cards while the man was
receiving a
blood transfusion, etc. to stabilize his condition. Hawkeye
tells the general he can now safely operate because the patient has
been stabilized. Operating too soon would have jeopardized the
patient's chances of survival.
Congressional Democrats continue to push a health care plan
substantially similar to the one adopted by
Massachusetts
which is a
failure according to the
Boston
Globe
The program has failed to provide the universal care it
was supposed to guarantee. Coverage is not
affordable. The cost of the subsidized program has gone
from $630 million in 2007 to $1.3 in 2009. High
deductibles mean people who buy compulsory coverage may not be able to
afford to use it.
Low income families aren't the only ones who have trouble affording
health insurance. Many with incomes well above the poverty
level like
Ron
Norton of Worcester, Mass., make too much to qualify
for government assistance but not enough to afford insurance.
The key to successful medical treatment is an accurate diagnosis.
The problem with American health care is the high cost of health
care rather than lack of insurance. High costs make it difficult
for persons to afford insurance.
Doctors take x-rays or run tests as appropriate before choosing
treatment for any major medical problem. Congress needs to do the
same with health care. Congress needs to determine the specific
causes of high costs to see if they are unnecessary.
For example, are doctors, hospital administrators, insurance
executives, etc. receiving higher incomes than patients can afford to
provide them? Are hospitals or other medical facilities making
excessive profits by overcharging insurance companies? Are so
called non-profit hospitals or clinics actually functioning as if they
were profit making organizations? Are the uninsured including
illegal aliens really responsible for high costs or are they being used
as scapegoats by the health care industry to cover up the real
cause? Are courts forcing unnecessary costs on the industry?
This is
breast cancer awareness month
so perhaps a breast cancer analogy is appropriate. Thirty years
ago the treatment for all forms of breast cancer was usually a
complete mastectomy. Today some, but not all, forms of breast
cancer can be successfully treated with a simple
lumpectomy
that removes only the small tumors, provided the cancer is
detected early enough.
Thirty years ago toxic chemicals were used to treat breast and other
cancers. Today a growing number of cancers can be
treated with milder chemicals that may attack only the
cancer cells without damaging other healthy
cells. In some cases radiation can be targeted to cancer cells
without harming healthy cells.
The American health care "problem" doesn't require radical surgery or
toxic chemicals. Improving American health care only
requires a lumpectomy and mild chemicals.