Doctors are driven, intelligent,
caring professionals. The People who work for the Division of Motor Vehicles
are not driven, they are not intelligent, and they could give a crap less about
your health. Physicians do not want to be associated with DMV…Obamacare would
make physicians DMV workers (and patients the people waiting on line)!
Published: 2:20 PM
07/09/2012
By Sally Nelson in the TheDC
Eighty-three
percent of American physicians have considered leaving their practices over
President Barack Obama’s health care reform law, according to a survey released
by the Doctor Patient Medical Association.
The
DPMA, a non-partisan association of doctors and patients, surveyed a random selection
of 699 doctors nationwide. The survey found that the majority have thought
about bailing out of their careers over the legislation, which was upheld last
month by the Supreme Court.
Even
if doctors do not quit their jobs over the ruling, America will face a shortage
of at least 90,000 doctors by 2020. The new health care law increases demand
for physicians by expanding insurance coverage. This change will exacerbate the
current shortage as more Americans live past 65.
By
2025 the shortage will balloon to over 130,000, Len Marquez, the director of
government relations at the American Association of Medical Colleges, told The
Daily Caller.
“One
of our primary concerns is that you’ve got an aging physician workforce and you
have these new beneficiaries — these newly insured people — coming through the
system,” he said. “There will be strains and there will be physician
shortages.”
The
DPMA found that many doctors do not believe the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act will lead to better access to medical care for the majority
of Americans, co-founder of the DPMA Kathryn Serkes told TheDC.
“Doctors
clearly understand what Washington does not — that a piece of paper that says
you are ‘covered’ by insurance or ‘enrolled’ in Medicare or Medicaid does not
translate to actual medical care when doctors can’t afford to see patients at
the lowball payments, and patients have to jump through government and
insurance company bureaucratic hoops,” she said.
The
American Medical Association, which endorsed Obama’s health care overhaul, was
not able to immediately offer comment on the survey. Spokesperson Heather
Lasher Todd said it would take time to review the information in the survey.
Janelle
Davis of the American Academy of Family Physicians said the AAFP could not
provide thoughtful commentary without studying the survey’s findings and
methodology.
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