Getting Care to the Sick
Michael Moore has stated that evil capitalism is the cause of all America’s healthcare woes, and that only the loving, warm, benevolent arms of the nanny state can provide what we need. (He has explicitly called for the abolition of private health insurance.) But it seems that (gasp!) maybe one solution to the problem is to get rid of the bloodsucking trial lawyers.
Tort reform, of course, resulting in substantially lower medical malpractice premiums and expenses, and an influx of 7000 doctors, including into many underserved regions. One indirect benefit: with less money spent on medical malpractice lawyers, self-insuring hospitals can spend more on doctors and on medical practice:
Take Christus Health, a nonprofit Catholic health system across the state. Thanks to tort reform, over the past four years Christus saved $100 million that it otherwise would have spent fending off bogus lawsuits or paying higher insurance premiums. Every dollar saved was reinvested in helping poor patients.
Also of relevance: the amusing results when Texas added evidentiary standards of medical harm to their asbestos and silicosis docket. Suddenly, over 99% of the cases went away because so few suing plaintiffs had a doctor willing to certify harm.
My God, what a concept! It should be noted, gentle reader, that trial lawyers overwhelmingly donate to Democrats. In return, the Democrats will inevitably put a stop to this terrible example of the deregulated free market actually, y’know, improving the lives of patients. For liberals, especially those like Moore, the means are more important than the ends. Moore doesn’t want to see more people get healthcare, he wants to prove that socialism is super peachy awesome, and he pimps out sick people to make that point. Any solution which is not directly attributable to government intervention will not sit well with him, because it won’t support his overall thesis that eeeeeevil capitalism is to blame for everything.
Update Well well well. It looks like the Democrats are dutifully bending over for their ambulance-chasing overlords with a nice $1.6 billion payoff which somehow managed to find its way into the Energy and Job Creation Act of 2008.
The language is from Sec. 311, Uniform Treatment of Attorney-Advanced Expenses and Court Costs in Contingency Fee Cases. The provisions allow trial attorneys to deduct advanced litigation fees regardless of whether their contingency fee was structured as a “net” or a “gross” fee arrangement. The law does not now allow lawyers to take a current tax deduction under a net fee arrangement.
Anything that makes it easier for bloodsucking mass tort lawyers to drive up the costs of healthcare (and everything else).
Comments
Lee, Moore’s motives may not be entirely pure (Gasp! really...?) with this suggestion… but you’ve got to admit, at least he has finally managed to accurately pinpoint at least one actual problem with our health care system.
I’ll stand behind anyone (even Moore, at great risk of accidental release of deadly flatulence) who promotes the idea of medical tort reform.
Of course, he’ll now have to answer to the dems… especially John Edwards, who just happens to be one of those ambulance chasers driving up malpractice premiums.
When has Moore made tort reform a central plank of his plan to institute global socialism?
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There must be some mistake. The Great Moore has taught us that the profit motive is evil and can only result in the total destruction of the world as we know it. The Great Moore is never wrong. We must embrace...oh, crap. I can’t even do it for fun.
Let’s just hope that other states figure it out too. Maybe Maine. That would be nice. Though with a governor like ours, I don’t see that happening anytime soon.