Exactly -- it is not the cost of the malpractice claims that drive up health care -- that hasn't changed that much. It is the defensive practice of medicine that probably adds 15-20% to the cost. Originally Posted by pjorourkeNever let facts get in the way of a good talking point. I'd love to know where you get some of your statistics. Multiple studies have shown that at MOST wasteful defensive medicine costs about 60 billion dollars, which is about 3% of total spending. Most studies put the number a little lower at 1-2%. There was a largely discredited study done in the 1990s out of Stanford (I believe) which pegged the number at close to 9%, but nobody agreed with the methods and results. In 2004, the CBO looked at this and determined that the costs were about 2% of spending. Tort reform, which could potentially cut wasteful spending by 25% - 50% optimistically would only result in a pitiful 0.5% cost savings.
EgrBvr, you are right. Both sides will pull out statistics to help make their point. But somewhere in there is actual truth. Reality is not a matter of opinion or political viewpoint. My only hope is that decisons get made by people who are willing to change their minds when new evidence and data come out. Believeing the same thing on Wednesday that you did on Monday, no matter what happens on Tuesday isn't anything to be proud of.
I don't know about you guys, but maybe the most appropriate heath care related discussion for this board should be which lady looks the best in a nurse's outfit. Nominations?