A Report By Eddie G. Griffin, International Child Rights
advocate
I find it interesting that the
federal government thinks Medicaid expansion is the answer when the number of
doctors who accept Medicaid has decreased as the following numbers show.
2000 – 67%
2010 – 42%
2012 – 31%
2010 – 42%
2012 – 31%
Source: Dr. Mark Shelton,
Facebook Post
Dr. Michael Burgess, U.S. House District 26 of Texas, explains why doctors are abandoning
their practices, or refusing Medicaid patients. (See C-SPAN). In essence, the
Medicaid reimbursement rates are too small. And with the anticipated expansion
of Medicaid rolls under the Affordable Healthcare Act, they fear the medical
care market would be flooded with poor patients, and fewer doctors willing to
see them.
In 2009, in a one-on-one over
coffee, Michael Burgess and Eddie
Griffin debated the healthcare bill which was being drafted and reviewed at
that time. Eddie Griffin was the first to point out typos and other flaws in
the original 1400-page bill, before it was rushed through the Congress and
enacted as a 2700-page tome, known as “Obamacare” (socialized medicine, as some would say)
In the exchange, Griffin
pleaded the case of The Unborn at
risk of being born with a “pre-existing condition” like the Blue Baby. In his C-SPAN
interview on yesterday, Michael Burgess discusses his ideas about babies being
born with pre-existing conditions. And still he has no solution for the Blue Baby,
except a high-risk insurance pool, regulated by the state.
But there is irony in what Burgess
says about healthcare access. Just
because people have a healthcare plan, it does not mean that they have access
to healthcare coverage. Having Medicaid did not guarantee that patients
would receive medical attention, as there will be fewer and fewer doctors
willing to take new patients, as more and more patients come into the
healthcare system under the Affordable Health Care Act.
Millionaire doctors are in
revolt, some threatening to shut down their offices, some threatening to leave
the country and practice elsewhere.
Dr. Burgess asked: “Why vilify the doctors? These are the very
people that you need.” Good doctors? Yes. Bad, greedy doctors? No.
With over 650,000 doctors now
in the Top 1% of the income bracket, and 20% of doctors now in the Top 2%, how
can anybody ask why healthcare cost has gone through the roof?
Millionaire Doctors are
getting rich off their practices in a number of exploitative ways, from pushing
pills for the pharmaceutical companies, to worthless treatments and unnecessary
surgeries, to plugging the plug on terminal patients when coverage runs out, limiting
their own medical tort liability, while forcing some patients to mortgage their
homes to pay their medical bills, these doctors maximize profit over care.
They vilify themselves when
the take the Hypocrisy Oath instead of the Hippocratic Oath.
We have all had family members
bled by the system for premiums and later dropped, for some technical excuse of
other, written in a policy nobody could read and understand in the first place.
Simplification and streamlining
the system is necessary. Maybe that might mean that some of these millionaire doctors
need to shut down their operations for the betterment of the overall healthcare
system, if they refuse care to the “poorest of the poor” just because it does
not pay enough.
We have often disputed
whether healthcare was a right or a privilege, whereby Burgess believes the
latter. And, since introducing him to the plight of the helpless unborn and uncovered,
he has worked diligently to provide a fix, without having to rewrite another
2700-page Republican alternative.
And just when he puts the
final touches on his alternative to introduce to the Republican-dominated House
of Representative, and in anticipation of, at least, a partial victory from the
Supreme Court, the Roberts’ ruling was “not exactly” as he wished. Translated,
Justice Roberts threw a monkey wrench into his alternatives.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act is the law of the
land. That meant Burgess’ Republican alternative plan has to be altered.
Therefore, at a nexus in
time, when the Republican proposed to outright kill “Obamacare”, there is no
alternative on the table, only a promise from Burgess that one will be ready
before the month is out.
TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE
The law is in effect. And, it
will be defended. And, not until the Blue Baby is provided affordable health
care coverage, pregnant mothers, elderly, and terminally ill, without caps of
coverage, and patients without denial due to poverty, will we rest in the
defense of this Act.
Eddie G. Griffin (BASG)
No comments:
Post a Comment