ç i p h é r wrote:It's hard to find data on the aggregate, however, here's an interesting article from NYT in 2005 which seems to talk about the subject and report some statistics:
Your article seems to agree with me. There has been no "exponential increase," in fact it meanders up and down over time. As for rewards getting higher, there are two factors: First, people were starting to make more money, and income loss is a
major component of damages in many cases. Second, the plaintiff's bar is getting better at prosecuting these cases.
ç i p h é r wrote:The high rates of insurance (upwards of 50% of income) on surgeons is verifiable, though. Just ask them.
I've heard the rumor too, but I've never seen it verified. At any rate it's a tax deductible cost of business.
ç i p h é r wrote:
You're talking about a multi-trillion dollar industry. A few million dollars here and there is a rounding error.
More like a few billion. But as I've said, it's one of many sources of cost.
It's like saying, "Wow, I pay $20.00 a month in parking meters. We need to get rid of those meters, that's a big part of my budget!" Really?
ç i p h é r wrote:Actually, that's one of the things I've discussed before. People accept care from a provider without ever knowing the cost of that care. The costs are obfuscated and you only get a statement after the fact (unless you have an HMO - I envy you bastards) from your insurance.
Now in an emergency situation, costs are pretty irrelevant to accepting care. You need it and you need it now! But non-emergency care (which is substantially more common I think) suffers from the same problem. Cost obfuscation. Consumers ought to know what the price is of the services they receive before they accept that care.
Well, the free market will never do that on its own. It would take consumer protection laws or nationalizing/socializing medicine. Most low income folk I talk to want socialized medicine like they have in Canada. They're tired of not having access to affordable healthcare for themselves and their kids. I don't blame them.
ç i p h é r wrote:I was being serious, but that's not to suggest there aren't any legitimate concerns about the use of that kind of science.
Sure, but it's not the legitimate concerns that will prevent it from happening. It'll be the irrational, ignorance based fear. Old eugenics programs were in no way scientific, they were just an application of racism. Allowing a medical option to prevent birth defects and medical frailties through genetic engineering would be the holy grail of health. I'd do it for any future children or grandchildren of mine, so long as the technology was safe.
I doubt the human race will evolve out of its irrational fears soon enough to see it happen in my lifetime.
Back to politics and on a related note,
No Child Left Behind Screws the Disabled.
School Attendance Law 'Gone Awry'
'No Child' Rule Vexes Md. Special-Ed Center That Raised Test Scores
Stephen Knolls School suffered the ignominy of failure under federal law in 2006 and 2007 for low test scores. This year, the Kensington school finally made the grade in reading and math -- only to be sanctioned for poor attendance.
The challenge in this case is not truancy. Stephen Knolls serves medically fragile children with severe physical and cognitive disabilities, such as cerebral palsy, spina bifida and Rett syndrome.
One student missed 119 days of school last year because of illness. An eighth-grade boy logged more than 80 absences before dying in January. When school health aides call home for routine matters, they take pains to begin each conversation by saying, "This is not an emergency," because parents generally prepare for the worst.
"We know that there are legitimate reasons for [students] to be home," said Tina Shrewsbury, school coordinator. "They're going to [medical] specialists. . . . They're having lab tests done. They're being hospitalized."
Stephen Knolls faces the stigma of three consecutive years on a state watch list of underperforming schools, due for release in coming weeks. Its dilemma highlights how students with disabilities can get caught in the politics of the federal No Child Left Behind law. Under the law, schools must show annual progress in test scores, attendance and graduation rates for all students and groups of students, including those who receive special education.
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Last school year, 27 of 1,145 Maryland elementary and middle schools failed to make "adequate progress" under the law because of attendance. Repeated failures plunge a school ever deeper into the machinery of accountability and trigger escalating sanctions.
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In 2007, four of 16 Stephen Knolls students passed the state reading test. This year, 18 of 18 passed. But because of low attendance, the school failed to make adequate progress for a third year. State rules dictate that the school must prepare "a detailed plan to solve problems in student achievement." After several more years of failure, the school could theoretically reach the end of the accountability process: "restructuring," a top-to-bottom shakeup.
Susan "Sam" Campbell, mother of a 10-year-old Stephen Knolls student, said it is unfair to sanction the school for low attendance. Her son, like many at Stephen Knolls, misses school from time to time for visits to medical specialists.
"I think the fact that these kids are in school as much as they are is a minor miracle," she said.
Obama is going to be so busy undoing the Bush legacy he won't have time to make one of his own.