Healthcare

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marksiwel
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Re: Healthcare

#31

Post by marksiwel »

The Annoyed Man wrote:
marksiwel wrote:
74novaman wrote:Or Tort Reform?
Really when you look at it people are suing doctors at the same rate as they were in the 80's 90's its just with inflation its more money buts in % its about the same.

Tort reform just makes it harder for the non rich to sue.

Not that our Torts process is perfect or anything
[rant]

That argument is the refuge of an industry that doesn't want to see its cash cow gored. Medical malpractice attorneys have a unique opportunity to fix the problem themselves by taking the moral high ground and refusing to take cases that their experience has taught them are nonsense. They don't. Instead, they cynically pursue the suit anyway, knowing that they are going to get a big fat paycheck anyway — because they know that there will be a settlement in most cases since malpractice insurers will rather pay the settlement than pay to litigate. That is a cynical, ethically indefensible abuse of the system. Of course the problem is that attorneys get to decide what is ethical and what isn't, even though it doesn't take a legal genius to see the basic corruption of that system.
Basically you are complaining about a system that was created by the Mal Practice Insurers.
If the client believes they have a claim, how is it unethical to sue?
The Annoyed Man wrote: Loser pays is the solution to that. Any attorney who advises a client to pursue a frivolous suit and then loses, risks facing competence charges brought by their client before the Bar when their client has to pay the costs of losing a frivolous suit. And that applies to the wealthy plaintiff as well as well as the poor plaintiff. Justice should be blind, and the consequences for frivolity should not be excused just because you are poor, any more than the consequences of malpractice should be visited upon the poor to a greater degree than upon the rich. And there is no justifiable reason to insulate attorneys from the effects of legal frivolity.
Poor people who sue aren't paying anything unless they win. Also if you lose, are you willing to pay for the Insurers Millions of Dollars in Legal bills.
Example (partly based on a real case), guy gets his x=ray, its read wrong, they say he needs a ton of surgery. He doesn't have insurance (he's poor) so he still has to pay for his medical bills, then he finds out that his doctors screwed up. Is he going to risk further debt in a situation in which American Medical Association will side with the doctor 99% of the time, also the hospital is spending millions on Lawyers. Do you want to risk going further in debt based on a crooked system?
Also the poor have to go to worse hospitals than the rich, where the doctors are from worse schools, and are more likely to commit mal practice (Gross Negligence.) So now your making it harder for them to seek Justice.
The Annoyed Man wrote: If a complaint is legitimate, then plaintiff's attorney stands a very good chance of winning, and the cost of trial goes to the loser. If a complaint is frivolous, then plaintiff's attorney stands a very good chance of losing, and the plaintiff gets to pay the cost of being a punk. However, plaintiff then gets a chance to recoup his losses by suing his attorney for giving him bad legal advice, and now the shoe is on the other foot, where it's needed to be for a long, long time. The pendulum swung waaaaaaaaaaayyyy to the legal profession's side and then got pinned there artificially by ATLA and other organizations of legal professionals who are over-represented both as seat holders and hallway sharks in Congress. It is way past time for the pendulum to swing the other way in the interest of private citizens' pocketbooks.
YOU and Me are the Plaintiffs ala Private Citizens, we are the ones who collect these settlements, we are the ones who get the MONEY if we win. If you made it possible Lawyers have to pay for losing, then no lawyer would take a case because he couldnt afford to eat. More than 90% of the cases have merit. You can try and sue your lawyer for giving you bad "advice" but the lawyer would have to be incompetent on a GRAND Scale. Juries will often time disobey the law and Real Honest cases will lose because of Juries. ALso Lawyers suing lawyers, not gonna happen. You would make the whole system worse for your average person.
The Annoyed Man wrote: I'm all for attorneys making money for legitimate reason[/b]s, and I hope they make a ton of it because I am a capitalist at heart and they should be able to earn a good living based on the cost and work invested in education and establishing a practice. But I don't want them to make a red cent by representing a client without regard to the legitimacy of their complaint when there is no possibility of their not coming away with a settlement — not based on the merits of the case, but based entirely on the cost of litigation.
You are for having Attorneys make money but in your scenario PEOPLE cant make any money or collect on it. also Lawyers do have to answer to the Bar Association who do throw people out of the Lawyer club
The Annoyed Man wrote: That is the entire point of the whole thing right there. Malpractice lawsuits render malpractice meaningless when they are no longer based on the legitimacy of the complaint, but rather on a cost of settlement versus a cost of litigation calculation. Civil litigation involves an element of risk for the plaintiff and his/her attorney in every facet of civil law except malpractice (and possibly P.I.) That is not to say that genuine medical malpractice doesn't exist. It definitely does (as does legal malpractice). It just needs to be taken seriously for what it is, and not as some industry cash cow for a privileged class of attorneys.

Who regulates doctors' malpractice behavior? Attorneys.

Who regulates attorneys' malpractice behavior? Other attorneys. That's just a little too convenient in my book, and it is a recipe for exactly the system we have right now.

Doctors are regulated by Doctors aka American Medical Association which if Doctors are taken to court for Mal Practice the Judges give absolute difference to what is called "Custom" being the customary practices of doctors, so if you get a Doctor on the stand to say "every time this happens the doctors does THIS (injury illness), regardless of the cons Death/ injury doctors are not held liable. Doctors the only Industry that get Regulated by Doctors, all other industries are regulated by Courts.
The Annoyed Man wrote: Any attorney who takes a malpractice case he knows to be illegitimate simply because he/she is guaranteed a settlement payout is no better than the lowest ambulance chaser and he/she heaps dishonor on the profession.
We agree on that. What they (Insurers) need to do is fight these bad cases. Its encouraging people to take advantage.
The Annoyed Man wrote: I wouldn't use an attorney like that for stink bait.

BTW, in case this sounds like attorney bashing, my best friend is an attorney who brings honor to his profession. I've known a number of honorable attorneys over the years, and I have nothing but the highest regard for them. I just see a system that is broken, and I calls 'em like I sees 'em.

...or maybe I'm an idiot of the nth magnitude. I just REALLY don't like what I see, and legal frivolity is not the only cause of the dysfunction, but it definitely contributes to it, and it definitely can be controlled if the political will exists to do so. Sleazy people are always going to be sleazy, and they will find other ways to manipulate the law to their advantage, but that is not an excuse to not reform a law if it will close off at least one avenue available to sleaziness.

[/rant]

Many of you know I used to work in an ER. At the time, we had an ER doctor named Bruce Fagel. This is what he does now. I remember talking to him when he was preparing for his Bar exam. I asked why he wanted to be a lawyer since he already had a good career as a doctor. He replied that he was motivated to become a malpractice defense attorney. He told me that, at the time anyway, 95% of malpractice suits never get to trial, but of the remaining 5%, the doctor wins most of the time. He said that this was because in the other 95%, the malpractice insurer, who is the decision maker in whether or not to litigate, decides that the settlement is cheaper than litigating, even though litigation would be found in favor of the doctor most of the time.

So he became an attorney, and all his high-falutin' standards went out the window once he realized that being on the plaintiff's side is where the real money is. Today he is one of Beverly Hills' most prominent malpractice attorneys. What a putz.
Once again you and me are the Plaintiffs
Here is a fun link
http://carolina.hsinjurylaw.com/blog/vi ... ayouts.cfm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
97% of Cases have Merit (according to Harvard)
There has been no increase in Mal Patrice suits, its just more money because of inflation
The Mal Practice Insurances have people jumping at the boogie man.

The Majority of cases are good, over 90%. Also the Judges can throw out cases too. Why does no one seem to mention this?
I think there is alot of bad information out there and TORT is confusing enough, but those pushing for Tort Reform have some Serious backers in the Insurance Industry, I dont trust them.
In Capitalism, Man exploits Man. In Communism, it's just the reverse

cbr600

Re: Healthcare

#32

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The Annoyed Man
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Re: Healthcare

#33

Post by The Annoyed Man »

PBW, you are correct. I will cease and desist.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”

― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"

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marksiwel
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Re: Healthcare

#34

Post by marksiwel »

cbr600 wrote:
marksiwel wrote:Anyone care to point out where in the healthcare bill it would restrict our weight or guns?
Anyone care to point out where in the Constitution it says Congress is allowed to regulate health care or medical insurance?

Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
How?Commerce Clause!
I'll post more tomorrow, bed time
In Capitalism, Man exploits Man. In Communism, it's just the reverse

cbr600

Re: Healthcare

#35

Post by cbr600 »

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03Lightningrocks
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Re: Healthcare

#36

Post by 03Lightningrocks »

The Annoyed Man wrote:
03Lightningrocks wrote:I hate that woman so much I could not click the play button. She sickens me with disgust every time I see her. Odumbell is beginning too do the same thing for me. :shock:
What she says is:
But we have to pass the bill so that we can, uh, find out what is in it.
She's dumber than a mud fence, which shows that you can go a long way on just being vicious without much smarts.
Thank you for sparing me the misery of watching that clown. It sounds like she is giving us a Christmas present. "Have to open it up to see what it is". Oh goody... I just can't wait! The problem is, we all know it is an over sized sweater with a big kitten embroidered on the back.
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03Lightningrocks
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Re: Healthcare

#37

Post by 03Lightningrocks »

I normally don't offer to share personal information on the forum but since folks have brought up tort reform i think I will give everyone a first hand account of why we must be careful when protecting negligent Doctors.

Last July my daughter was prescribed a medication by her Doctor. Her Doctor has been her Doctor for a few years. When my daughter was fourteen years old she lost the vision in here right eye due to an ailment called Optic Neuritis. After taking this medication for three months her left eye lost vision. Thinking it was optic nueritis we rushed her to the emergency room and started her on the traditional treatment. The vision came back. The hospital did 20,000.00 dollars in procedures in an effort to find out what was going on. The symptoms did not appear to be optic neuritis. yep...20K and some of the tests seemed to have nothing to do with her eyes or other conditions that would cause this to happen. They even tested her for a disease that only Asians can get. We ain't asian :roll: . The second day in the hospital the nurse, while looking at my daughters chart, says hey... I am not suppose to say anything to patients but one of the medications you have been taking has been known to cause blood clots in the eyes. Guess what, that was what was causing the vision loss. We immediately brought this to the attention of the neurologist the hospital assigned and the internist, who acted as if he was on commission with all the tests he recommended. Both vehemently denied that said medication could cause these problems and said it had to be something else. well she went home and in two weeks the vision problem started again. back we went only this time my daughter quit taking said medication. The treatments brought her vision back but her optic nerve is now damaged in that eye. If these doctors had of told us when we asked that the side affects from said medication could cause this, she would have quit the medication then and not damaged her eye further. The info on said medication is out there for the world to see. Heck...we found it on the internet. Had to dig as the company that makes it does not make it easy to find.

My point in telling this story is that when Doctors or Hospitals act in a negligent manner, they need to pay out the wazoo. This medication is very clear about certain folks not taking it and my daughter is one of the types.
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Re: Healthcare

#38

Post by Dragonfighter »

Under honesty is the best policy heading:

I forget which hospital but IIRC it is in Houston adopted a doctrine of absolute disclosure. If the wrong thing was prescribed, the wrong procedure performed, surgery botched then they would immediately tell the patient/family of what happened. The news article at the time said their malpractrice suits dropped by nearly 95%. It's things like what happened to O3 that makes you want to draw and quarter these yahoos. God forbid they should bite the pharmaceutical hand that's padding their wallets.
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03Lightningrocks
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Re: Healthcare

#39

Post by 03Lightningrocks »

Dragonfighter wrote:Under honesty is the best policy heading:

I forget which hospital but IIRC it is in Houston adopted a doctrine of absolute disclosure. If the wrong thing was prescribed, the wrong procedure performed, surgery botched then they would immediately tell the patient/family of what happened. The news article at the time said their malpractrice suits dropped by nearly 95%. It's things like what happened to O3 that makes you want to draw and quarter these yahoos. God forbid they should bite the pharmaceutical hand that's padding their wallets.
The best part is that there are tens of 1000's of lawsuits pending on this drug and it is still being prescribed! Your right about one thing. It makes a feller want to go Old Testament on the Doctors involved. They are fortunate I am more civilized than I act like I am.
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Re: Healthcare

#40

Post by drjoker »

I really miss Reagan and Eisenhower.... Balanced budgets, small government, and resisted communism. All conservative Republicans.

All odious presidents have been Democrats;
Roosevelt: started the road to socialized medicine with Medicare. Socialist who increased income taxes.
LBJ/Kennedy: escalated the Vietnam War. Countless American lives lost.
Carter: gave the Ayatollah nuclear power and gave away the Panama canal, a vital American strategic asset.
Clinton: the Clinton gun ban, need I say more?
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marksiwel
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Re: Healthcare

#41

Post by marksiwel »

drjoker wrote:I really miss Reagan and Eisenhower.... Balanced budgets, small government, and resisted communism. All conservative Republicans.

All odious presidents have been Democrats;
Roosevelt: started the road to socialized medicine with Medicare. Socialist who increased income taxes.
LBJ/Kennedy: escalated the Vietnam War. Countless American lives lost.
Carter: gave the Ayatollah nuclear power and gave away the Panama canal, a vital American strategic asset.
Clinton: the Clinton gun ban, need I say more?
Didn't Reagen Leave with Higher Taxes and a Bigger Government than when he came in?
In Capitalism, Man exploits Man. In Communism, it's just the reverse
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Re: Healthcare

#42

Post by boomerang »

Isn't it a little past your bed time? "rlol"
3 hours ago, marksiwel wrote:I'll post more tomorrow, bed time
"Ees gun! Ees not safe!"

bdickens
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Re: Healthcare

#43

Post by bdickens »

marksiwel wrote:
cbr600 wrote:
marksiwel wrote:Anyone care to point out where in the healthcare bill it would restrict our weight or guns?
Anyone care to point out where in the Constitution it says Congress is allowed to regulate health care or medical insurance?

Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
How?Commerce Clause!
I'll post more tomorrow, bed time

Oh, the old commerce clause. The most abused bit of the whole Constitution and the leftist's favorite ploy to use in foisting stuff on us that is clearly Unconstitutional by any reasonable reading of it. Exactly how, might I ask, is ramming government-controlled health care down our throats "regulating interstate commerce?"
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Kythas
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Re: Healthcare

#44

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bdickens wrote: Oh, the old commerce clause. The most abused bit of the whole Constitution and the leftist's favorite ploy to use in foisting stuff on us that is clearly Unconstitutional by any reasonable reading of it. Exactly how, might I ask, is ramming government-controlled health care down our throats "regulating interstate commerce?"
Agreed. I'd have the same argument regarding auto insurance if the Federal government required everyone purchase auto insurance. However, that's required by the State which properly has that power. If the State had a requirement to purchase health insurance I'd have no objection to that exercise of power because that power is reserved to the States.

This is why I have no objection to Massachusetts Care, as it's a State mandate and not a Federal mandate. The Federal government needs to begin obeying the 10th Amendment.
“I’m all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let’s start with typewriters.” - Frank Lloyd Wright

"Both oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of arms" - Aristotle
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