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In reply to the discussion: Is it unethical for a doctor to refuse Medicaid and Medicare patients? [View all]JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)136. The average may be $150,000, but it depends.
If your parents are rich, you owe nothing. If your parents are poor, you owe maybe twice that depending on what school you went to. that's the problem.
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Is it unethical for a doctor to refuse Medicaid and Medicare patients? [View all]
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
OP
Most doctors are half a million dollars in debt when they come out of med school
bubbayugga
Mar 2013
#7
Health care, Education, and Justice are the three modern necessities and should be socialized. n/t
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#38
People should go into medicine out of a desire to help people, not to get rich or die trying. n/t
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#39
No one said that anyone should not be paid, I think you are capable of understanding that.
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#124
Apparently I was wrong about your capacity to understand. So, let's do this the DU way,
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#175
If I had made any assumptions you might be right, but I haven't and you're not.
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#180
Arbitration boards are there just to protect the industries that will own them
MattBaggins
Mar 2013
#20
Living in NYC I always find these OPs strange because Medicare/aid is accepted almost everywhere
JaneyVee
Mar 2013
#17
I'dI'd imagine it is quite unethical for a doctor, or anyone else to imply...
LanternWaste
Mar 2013
#19
Because he/she has a government licensed and enforced monopoly to practice his trade, that's why. nt
bemildred
Mar 2013
#31
S/he also has an obligation to pay the employees, rent, taxes, malpractice insurance,
cbayer
Mar 2013
#32
"When the ACC kicks in, we will see a primary care physician shortage..." More speculation?
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#54
Lol, you found the single article on the entire first search page that takes this position.
cbayer
Mar 2013
#69
The issue here is that it would actually be better to spread medicaid patients over more doctors.
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#75
Show me where it demonstrates that the new healthcare laws will cause physician shortages.
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#115
You can't accuse me of being unconvinced when you do not try to convince me.
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#118
It doesn't come from the government. It comes from the state medical boards and is enforced
cbayer
Mar 2013
#72
Yes, they are actually. ""The Medical Board of California is a state government agency..."
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#90
Poor? None. Took no salary for periods of time? Forced to spend less time with each patient?
cbayer
Mar 2013
#165
Does Medicare and Medicaid offer such low payments that doctors make no money?
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#51
Absolutely true for Medicaid. It often costs primary care doctors money to care for these patients.
cbayer
Mar 2013
#53
We who? You aren't going to look forward to it if you need medical care while it's happening.
cbayer
Mar 2013
#68
All of us who think it is unethical for MDs to turn people away because of "cost".
bemildred
Mar 2013
#70
I think it is. Medicare and Medicaid will only pay out so much. That is what keeps cost down.
liberal_at_heart
Mar 2013
#25
I tried to see a doctor that does not take CASH, believe it or not.
Manifestor_of_Light
Mar 2013
#27
Take out an ad in your local newspapers, name the doctors if that is possible. nt
bluestate10
Mar 2013
#29
Or talk to the doctors that do take Medicare and Medicaid and see whether they are
bluestate10
Mar 2013
#35
That's true. I have no problem with people making money, if they earn it honestly. I wish they would
Honeycombe8
Mar 2013
#139
So they have an ethical right to deny treatment because they want more money.
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#59
Yes. That's their profession. I don't work for free, either. They have staff to pay for...
Honeycombe8
Mar 2013
#140
It wouldn't change anything. It's not unethical not to work for free. I don't work for free, either.
Honeycombe8
Mar 2013
#141
Is it ethical for someone who's intelligent and rich to go into Engineering rather than Medicine?
cherokeeprogressive
Mar 2013
#81
Yes I believe it is unethical for you to not treat medicaid and medicare patients.
Gravitycollapse
Mar 2013
#83
Be glad I don't treat Medicaid and Medicare patients. Be very glad.
cherokeeprogressive
Mar 2013
#86
Beggin' your pardon... I didn't falsely lead you to anything at all.
cherokeeprogressive
Mar 2013
#91
well I am happy to know you are a trash truck driver. Your job is just as important as a doctor.
southernyankeebelle
Mar 2013
#95
Is it unethical for a trash truck driver not to work for free at least some of the time?
Honeycombe8
Mar 2013
#143
Why? He is a wage earner and didn't go to college. He didn't take a Hippocratic oath yet if your
southernyankeebelle
Mar 2013
#152
I have a Bachelors in Vocational Education from Long Beach State. n/t
cherokeeprogressive
Mar 2013
#156
That is wonderful. What's your point? Just wondering. I'm not trying to down people who have a
southernyankeebelle
Mar 2013
#157
If medicaid and medicare don't cover the treatment for such patients, then no, it's not unethical.
X_Digger
Mar 2013
#92
No, it doesn't. The oath says that the medicine they practice must be done ethically and honestly.
Honeycombe8
Mar 2013
#144
Exactly why we need a not for profit system, but the Dems blocked any discussion ...
slipslidingaway
Mar 2013
#119
It is usually more likely the doctor is actually losing money for each Medicaid/Medicare patient.
guardian
Mar 2013
#111
Mosy physicians in the US are no longer in a position to individually make such a decision.
David__77
Mar 2013
#147
Only if it's unethical for you, personally, not to meet strangers' health-care costs singlehanded.
Donald Ian Rankin
Mar 2013
#149
If they don't refuse, how the fuck are the doctors supposed to pay for their Maseratis?
AngryAmish
Mar 2013
#158
I think you hit the nail on the head with your observation about "rich doctors" --
IdaBriggs
Mar 2013
#170
Anyone interested in making a list of DU's most consistent reich-wing defenders
Egalitarian Thug
Mar 2013
#176