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On Fri, 05 May 2006 04:46:02 GMT, "Maxprop"
wrote: "Frank Boettcher" wrote in message .. . Today the average doctor makes approximately five times and much and many specialists make 15-20 times. Where have you been, Frank? 15-20x? Hardly. Nearly all medical reimbursement to physicians is now third party, and the rates of reimbursement have been cut dramatically. Whereas a cardiologist could reasonably presume to earn in excess of $500K per year in the mid-90s, today they are lucky to clear $200K before taxes on average. Top-notch surgeons used to earn well over a million per year, but work harder now, do more surgeries and make half that or less. There are a few physicians in private-pay only settings who still make the megabucks, but they are few and far between. In an industry that controls supply side by the number of available seats in Medical schools which is way out of proportion to the talent available. Really? Have you chatted with emerging med school grads these days? My recommendation to you is that you'd be well-advised to stay very healthy in your later years. Entrusting your life to some of these new physicians would seem riskier than skydiving. Medicine doesn't pay nearly as well as it used to, ergo the top-notch students don't apply to the schools in the percentage they used to. They now go into computer-related and finance fields, where the money is. I was one of 69 optometry students chosen from a field of nearly 1000 qualified applicants in 1980. Today the entering class at my school is 60 students drawn from roughly 450 qualified applicants. Med schools take about 250 students annually from a field of roughly 1500 applicants, but of the 1250 who don't get into one school, about 70% of them get into another school. You've implied that the supply side of medical doctors is controlled ostensibly to keep earning high for those in the profession. What would you propose? Would you take all of the qualified applicants in order to spread the money around? And what would the result of that move be? My best guess is that fewer and fewer qualified applicants would show up each year. Money and prestige are and always have been the primary driving force behind the interest in medicine, but are becoming mitigated more and more each year. Stay healthy. You're contradicting yourself Max. On the one hand you talk about emerging class being substandard as an indication of the pool and since I know a number of them (but not necessarily a relevant sample) I can't concur; on the other you talk about 450 qualified applicants with 60 selected. And I don't believe a high percentage of those not selected get in at another school. Are you concluding that doctors if paid $200K per year will become discouraged, quit the field and become something else, or will as a result of that "low" pay give substandard service. My position is that fees will come down with more competition but the pay will remain attractive to entry. And that has been going on most of my life. As a pre-65 forced retiree I spend five times as much for health care as gasoline. And I'm healthy. And I don't hear very much about that. Do you really believe physicians' fees are responsible for the high cost of medical care? Yes, to the extent of their poroportional impact on the total cost of health care. Their fees also include their overhead which includes their liability insurance among other things. If so, you'd better do some research. Dr. fees are only a small part of the equation. Hospital costs are a far larger percentage, and profits to health care insurers is an equally-large percentage. And I never indicated they were not. And the cost of absorbing the expense of hosptial and medical care for the uninsured, impoverished masses may just be the largest percentage. Come on Max. Since that slug Dickey Scruggs is suing most of the hospitals in the country in a class action to make himself another billion or so dollars, what they spend on the indigent is public knowledge. Not anywhere near the largest percentage. In any discussion of illegal immigration, this factor must be considered, because it's significant. My wife had an undocumented Mexican patient on her floor at the hospital who required extensive care and treatment for a period of 6 weeks. After incurring an unpaid and unreimbursed (by the gov't.) bill in excess of $1million, the hospital wanted to dismiss the patient to long-term care, but no one would take her. So the hospital covered the cost of putting the woman on a private jet and flying her to Mexico City, where she was turned over to Mexican authorities for extended care. My guess is that they let her die. But let gasoline go up and the cry begins. Mostly from people driving urban assault vehicles and throwing their plastic (oil) disposable junk out the window. And lining up at WalMart to get that cheap chinese stuff, which is the primary reason for the world market in energy going through the roof. Yup. Do you advocate paying more for inferior, more costly domestic goods? Do you think you'll find anyone standing in line behind you in that philosophy? Hitting a sore spot here, Max, since I was one of those domestic manufacturers making an "inferior" product that was "alledgedly" more costly. The product I used to make actually cost a little more now with a strategy to high chinese content. The Corporate genius were shooting for a 25% reduction in cost (with a strategy of no reduction in price BTW). The basic cost is a push, some models higher some models lower, The warranty element of the cost of quality is four times higher. With warranty four times higher, relative quality comparison fairly easy to make. Overall, everybody lost. The end user gets a crappy product with no choice in the matter, other than the competitors crappy product. The company is making less money,(so much less that they sold off the division as a defensive move) and many good people (with average seniority of 25 years) in this country lost their jobs. And were talking about $25-35K highly productive people. Market share for the product is down since it is now "just another chinese import" garnering no end user loyalty. And you might ask, why not just reverse it. Once you dismatle U. S. manufacturing and destroy tooling, the cost of reentry is prohibitive. If you try to go back you would have "more costly domestic goods" Don't get me started on this one. Oh, you already have ![]() Frank Max |
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