election – The Health Care Blog https://thehealthcareblog.com Everything you always wanted to know about the Health Care system. But were afraid to ask. Wed, 30 Nov 2022 14:40:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 THCB “SPOOKY” Gang: Episode 30 10/29 https://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2020/10/29/thcb-spooky-gang-episode-30-10-29-live-1pm-4pm-et/ Thu, 29 Oct 2020 18:52:00 +0000 http://thehealthcareblog.com/?p=99242 Continue reading...]]>

Episode 30 of “The THCB Gang” was live-streamed on Thursday, October 29th! Watch it below!

Matthew Holt (@boltyboy) was joined by some regulars and this episode was a spooky be a COSTUME PARTY! On this episode were data privacy expert Deven McGraw (@healthprivacy), writer Kim Bellard (@kimbbellard), health economist Jane Sarasohn-Kahn (@healthythinker), CTO of Carium Health Lygeia Ricciardi (@Lygeia), MD & hospital system exec Rajesh Aggarwal (@docaggarwal), policy & tech expert Vince Kuraitis (@VinceKuraitis), and me, THCB’s Editor-in-Chief (@zoykskhan). The conversation had a more spooked tone to it as many of us are worried about the safe transition of power, the safety of voters, the misinformation about herd-immunity, the rising COVID-19 cases, and everything happening in the Senate. What will the results of November 3rd bring for this country?

If you’d rather listen to the episode, the audio is preserved as a weekly podcast available on our iTunes & Spotify channels — Zoya Khanproducer

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Doctors Will Vote With Their Patients https://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2019/07/30/doctors-will-vote-with-their-patients/ https://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2019/07/30/doctors-will-vote-with-their-patients/#comments Tue, 30 Jul 2019 13:00:27 +0000 https://thehealthcareblog.com/?p=96611 Continue reading...]]>

By MIKE MAGEE, MD

As Robert Muller’s testimony before Congress made clear, we owe President Trump a debt of gratitude on two counts. First, his unlawful and predatory actions have clearly exposed the fault lines in our still young Democracy. As the Founders well realized, the road would be rocky on our way to “a more perfect union”, and checks and balances would, sooner or later, be counter-checked and thrown out of balance.

On the second count, Trump has most effectively revealed weaknesses that are neither structural nor easily repaired with the wave of the wand. Those weaknesses are cultural and deeply embedded in a portion of our citizenry. The weakness he has so easily exposed is within us. It is reflected in our stubborn embrace of prejudice, our tolerance of family separations at the border, our penchant for violence and romanticism of firearms, our suspicion of “good government”, and –unlike any other developed nation – our historic desire to withhold access to health services to our fellow Americans.

In the dust-up that followed the New York Times publication of Ross Douthat’s May 16, 2017 article, “The 25th Amendment Solution for Removing Trump”, Dahlia Lithwick wrote in SLATE, “Donald Trump isn’t the disease that plagues modern America, he’s the symptom. Let’s stop calling it a disability and call it what it is: What we are now.”

Recently a long-time health advocate from California told me she did not believe that the majority of doctors would support a universal health care system in some form due to their conservative bend. I disagreed.

It is true that, to become a physician involves significant investment of time and effort, and deferring a decade worth of earnings to pursue a training program that, at times, resembles war-zone conditions can create an ultra-focus on future earnings. But it is also true that these individuals, increasingly salaried and employed within organizations struggling to improve their collective performance, deliver (most of the time) three critical virtues in our society.

First is the patient-physician relationship marked by compassion, understanding and partnership, committed to individualized care without prejudice.

Second, in the normal course of care, though inclusion, involvement and planning, doctors reinforce important bonds between individuals, families and society.

Finally, doctors allay fear and worry, which, in their absence would accumulate and eventually undermine safety and security in our society.

In a short two decades of this new century, technology, global markets, and climate change have left the American experiment in all manner of disarray. Justice, tranquility, defense, welfare, and liberty itself have been undermined. Our prime-age workers in the bottom 60% have seen no real income growth in four decades. During this span, the income of the top 10% has doubled, and the income for the top 1% has tripled.

Our nation has not figured out how to get along economically with our market equal, China. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman says we have no “rules, norms, or laws” to protect trust and truth in a world of social networks, cybertools, and cyberbullies. We have moved from a “work, learn, retire” model to a “learn, work, learn, work, learn, work” survival mode.

We need to listen to our own Preamble and our own history. It states:  “We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

It suggests that, in establishing our Constitution, we continually must determine how best to promote and maintain a healthy nation filled with healthy citizens – mind, body and soul.

The 2020 election is an opportunity to reclaim self-governance, to plan, to work, to build together. Universal health coverage is not the only platform from which to launch a recommitment to our common future, but I would argue, it is a logical starting point to pursue “a more perfect union” during these turbulent times.

Excluding moments of self-doubt and discouragement, I believe most doctors know they are appreciated, and even loved by most of their patients. They also know that the current system is highly variable, inefficient, and wasteful.  They have spent enough time idled on insurance pre-approval lines, seen enough Pharma ads imploring their patients to “Ask your doctor”, and witnessed enough lives shortened by human error to know we can do better than this.

When push comes to shove, doctors will vote with their patients.

Mike Magee is a Medical Historian and author of “Code Blue: Inside the Medical Industrial Complex” (Grove Atlantic/June, 2019).

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