Posts Tagged ‘doctor’

Shortage of Primary Care Physicians in Massachusetts

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Today’s Wall St Journal has an editorial entitled, “The Failure of RomneyCare”.  It contains some fascinating statistics about , the average physician availability in the Bay State.  In fact, the Massachusetts Medical Society refers to the situation as a “critical shortage” of primary care physicians.  “56% of Massachusetts internal medicine physicians no longer are accepting new patients according to a 2009 physician work-force study conducted by the Massachusetts Medical Society.  For new patients who do get an appointment with a primary-care doctor, the waiting time is 44 days… ”

Dr. Sandra Schneider, the vice president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, told the Boston Globe last April,  “Just because you have insurance doesn’t mean there’s a physician who can see you.”

Once again the issues are pretty clear.  Our ongoing medical issues are centered on access and cost containment.

Primary Care Physicians Cut Back Hours

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

You need to read this.  Keep in mind that if healthcare passes, it does not create more doctors.  It does not automatically give people access to medical professionals.  It does give them the means to pay for it, if they can find it.  Unfortunately, the shortage of doctors grows.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35545561/ns/health-health_care/from/ET

How do you feel about being your own doctor?

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Sound crazy?  Just read an ARTICLE  predicting that members of the public will soon be able to use technologies like smart phones to monitor and even treat their own health conditions.  I’m not quite ready to make that leap yet but once again this shows how fast this technology and telemedicine are moving.  The goal is not to replace doctors but to help them reduce their workloads, free them up to deal with their seriously ill patients and to reduce costs for everyone.  Let’s not get carried away with the technology, let’s use it to help our physicians and to reach the millions of uninsured or under insured who have no access.  The are many pitfalls to self-treatment as you will see if you read the article.  I would love to call myself Doctor but I’d also like to win the Masters.  Just isn’t going to happen!