I might find this suspect IF I didnt know a couple doctors personally who said the same thing.2 I know said they would quit/retire and one said no more late night deliveries(she is an obgyn) office hours only. They claim it is already way too difficult to get paid by the government from medicare/medicaid.And with socialized type medicine it will be horrendous.
From Investors.com
Two of every three practicing physicians oppose the medical overhaul plan under consideration in Washington, and hundreds of thousands would think about shutting down their practices or retiring early if it were adopted, a new IBD/TIPP Poll has found.
The poll contradicts the claims of not only the White House, but also doctors' own lobby — the powerful American Medical Association — both of which suggest the medical profession is behind the proposed overhaul.
It also calls into question whether an overhaul is even doable; 72% of the doctors polled disagree with the administration's claim that the government can cover 47 million more people with better-quality care at lower cost.
The IBD/TIPP Poll was conducted by mail the past two weeks, with 1,376 practicing physicians chosen randomly throughout the country taking part. Responses are still coming in, and doctors' positions on related topics — including the impact of an overhaul on senior care, medical school applications and drug development — will be covered later in this series.
Major findings included:
• Two-thirds, or 65%, of doctors say they oppose the proposed government expansion plan. This contradicts the administration's claims that doctors are part of an "unprecedented coalition" supporting a medical overhaul.
It also differs with findings of a poll released Monday by National Public Radio that suggests a "majority of physicians want public and private insurance options," and clashes with media reports such as Tuesday's front-page story in the Los Angeles Times with the headline "Doctors Go For Obama's Reform."
Nowhere in the Times story does it say doctors as a whole back the overhaul. It says only that the AMA — the "association representing the nation's physicians" and what "many still regard as the country's premier lobbying force" — is "lobbying and advertising to win public support for President Obama's sweeping plan."
The AMA, in fact, represents approximately 18% of physicians and has been hit with a number of defections by members opposed to the AMA's support of Democrats' proposed health care overhaul.
• Four of nine doctors, or 45%, said they "would consider leaving their practice or taking an early retirement" if Congress passes the plan the Democratic majority and White House have in mind.
More than 800,000 doctors were practicing in 2006, the government says. Projecting the poll's finding onto that population, 360,000 doctors would consider quitting.
• More than seven in 10 doctors, or 71% — the most lopsided response in the poll — answered "no" when asked if they believed "the government can cover 47 million more people and that it will cost less money and the quality of care will be better."
This response is consistent with critics who complain that the administration and congressional Democrats have yet to explain how, even with the current number of physicians and nurses, they can cover more people and lower the cost at the same time.
The only way, the critics contend, is by rationing care — giving it to some and denying it to others. That cuts against another claim by plan supporters — that care would be better.
IBD/TIPP's finding that many doctors could leave the business suggests that such rationing could be more severe than even critics believe. Rationing is one of the drawbacks associated with government plans in countries such as Canada and the U.K. Stories about growing waiting lists for badly needed care, horror stories of care gone wrong, babies born on sidewalks, and even people dying as a result of care delayed or denied are rife.
In this country, the number of doctors is already lagging population growth.
From 2003 to 2006, the number of active physicians in the U.S. grew by just 0.8% a year, adding a total of 25,700 doctors.
Recent population growth has been 1% a year. Patients, in short, are already being added faster than physicians, creating a medical bottleneck.
The great concern is that, with increased mandates, lower pay and less freedom to practice, doctors could abandon medicine in droves, as the IBD/TIPP Poll suggests. Under the proposed medical overhaul, an additional 47 million people would have to be cared for — an 18% increase in patient loads, without an equivalent increase in doctors. The actual effect could be somewhat less because a significant share of the uninsured already get care.
Even so, the government vows to cut hundreds of billions of dollars from health care spending to pay for reform, which would encourage a flight from the profession.
The U.S. today has just 2.4 physicians per 1,000 population — below the median of 3.1 for members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the official club of wealthy nations.
Adding millions of patients to physicians' caseloads would threaten to overwhelm the system. Medical gatekeepers would have to deny care to large numbers of people. That means care would have to be rationed.


Comments: 19
I recently saw a Orthopedic doctor, without me mentioning anything about Obamacare and his thoughts, he started the conversation and told me if this plan passes it will be a catastrophe for the American people.
Something will pass and in 2010 the people who care dem or repub or conservative must go to the voting booth and oust all these jerks who forced this plan down our throats.
They are like diapers; should be replaced often and for the same reason.
VOTE THEM ALL OUT!
My, my... tsk, tsk.
However, I would not leap to the conclusion that this obgyn is overpaid currently. She might make more, or clear more after good legislation.
Universal health care, single payer, public option, or whatever it's called is not the regulation I'm talking about. I am talking about a pay cut for many well-paid people, though.
Tim, I hope your medical ins. is up to date, someday soon you are going to have to get your head surgically removed from your SOCILIST ???..
Point of fact is that many people in the medical community ARE unhappy about the amount of paperwork they do now. Not many want to deal with Medicare either and its low rate of reimbursement. Government care will only add to that and if one thinks government is more likely to be moved by public outrage than the insurance companies, the change coming will make them wish for those horrid HMOs soon enough.
A Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) study published in the September New England Journal of Medicine shows that a majority of physicians (63 percent) support a health reform proposal that includes both a public option and traditional private insurance. If the additional 10 percent of doctors who support an entirely public health system are included, then approximately three out of four physicians nationwide support inclusion of a public option. A minority (27 percent) support a private-only option that would provide subsidies for low-income individuals to purchase private insurance.
There oath they take has clearly been discarded while in there practice.
As it states up there "They claim it is already way too difficult to get paid by the government from medicare/medicaid".
Is this why doctors will not see these people? Or will only see them during curtain times of the day? Or sit and talk about skiing trips or the dinner the pharmaceutical company is putting on for there customers while these people sit waiting in the tiny office listening to the whole conversation..... being forgotten about in exam rooms for hours while the doctors go out to lunch??
The quality of care the poorer people get in this country is shameful! More and more people are in the category of the poor.
Try working for 15 years at the same company and not even be able to afford to get a bad heart looked at without going into debt, because the health care you have is such poor quality.
So you all keep bicker and fighting over this while I and the other disabled people sit back and try to hold our tongues..... Not all of us can afford expensive private health care.
What idiot would believe such BS?