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More consequences of the ACA

Posted: Thu Nov 22, 2012 7:37 pm
by rubato
Guess who is hiring?

"Massachusetts has been vacuuming up doctors and nurses from Costa Rica and elsewhere and still has been finding that the cost of treating your state population is higher when 97% are insured than it was when 88% were insured. And there aren't enough loose doctors and nurses in the rest of the world for the ACA to vacuum up enough of them to meet the needs of not 1 state but 50 states."

UC has planned at least 1 new medical school but it looks like more will be needed.


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http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2012/11/a ... gurus.html

A Question for ACA Implementation Gurus...

I understand that CMS has absolutely no desire to encourage more cream-skimming, and every desire and internal incentive to make sure that those who treat more difficult patient populations are not financially penalized by doing so.

I understand that as a country we are spending twice as much as western European countries while lagging 2 years behind them in life expectancy and 20% behind them in treatment coverage. I understand that the hope is that it will be cheaper and quicker to treat your 32 million new Medicaid and exchange-based insured now that they are showing up regularly with insurance rather than showing up in severe crisis only.

But Massachusetts has been walking down this exchange-and-public-program-expansion road for six years now, since Mitt Romney signed RomneyCare. Massachusetts has been vacuuming up doctors and nurses from Costa Rica and elsewhere and still has been finding that the cost of treating your state population is higher when 97% are insured than it was when 88% were insured. And there aren't enough loose doctors and nurses in the rest of the world for the ACA to vacuum up enough of them to meet the needs of not 1 state but 50 states.

The investments in medical infrastructure and workforce--less than $30 billion for 32 million newly insured, less than $1000 for newly insured--seem an order of magnitude low.

What is your guess as to what will happen if the ACA works for access, works for quality, works for coverage--but the extra health-care workforce needed isn't there, and the lines start to get longer?
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yrs,
rubato

Re: More consequences of the ACA

Posted: Mon Nov 26, 2012 7:24 pm
by oldr_n_wsr
the cost of treating your state population is higher when 97% are insured than it was when 88% were insured.
And this is a surprise!?!?!?!?!?

Even if prices did go down, will they go down by 10% which might then somewhat even out for the almost 10% more that are now insured (depending on what demographic that newly insured 10% make up).

The doctors association for years has held down the amount of new doctors entering the field to the point where many have to train over seas (a buddy of mine was in Grenada for med school when Reagan invaded) and then have a more lengthy residency upon returning.

Surely there are plenty here in the states who would become good doctors who are forced to seek med school overseas because of lack of access to US schools.