Turbys_1700
Elite Member
It would be interesting to see metrics the World Health Organization uses to come up with those rankings. The devil is in the details.
Tort reform is not the answer to reducing the cost of malpractice insurance...(It has not worked in TX anyway)...
below is what I posted earlier in the thread...
Tort reform would only limit injured parties that is not the answer...
I am a medical provider and I can tell you that our health care outcomes are certainly NOT GREAT when compared to other first world countries. Period. End of story. We also, as a country, spend about twice as much per person. It really is pretty embarrassing.
But those savings have been insignificant to the patient base...otherwise everyone would be going to TX for health care...I would disagree. My malpractice insurance premiums had been cut in half and the coverage limits increased X 3.
Hospital billed.....
$20 for topical
$380.75 for material
$611.32 for level 3 room charge
Total hospital billed $1012.07
Physician billed
$669 for the physician
$486 for "sugery"
Total physician bill.....$1,155
Total bill was $2,167.07
High ded plan so still under deductible. So insurance pays nothing. But has "Discounted" rates.
So total I actually owe....$1,777.11
It would be interesting to see metrics the World Health Organization uses to come up with those rankings. The devil is in the details.
When my wife, son, and I were in the Philippines in 2014 our 2 year old son needed 3 stitches in his head. Total cost was under $60 US including antibiotics. This year he got an ear infection while we were there. The doctors office visit was $5 US and medicine was around $30. Our medical system here is so screwed up it's just sad. Kevin