Obviously you had a terrible experience. A perfect storm
Originally Posted by Vercengetorix
This is more deception. My experience was typical. 85% of doctors who were sued said that they felt persecuted and felt they did nothing wrong.
As for unscrupulous experts, you can report them to the AMA or their State Board of Medical examiners, that isn't privileged, and your case would be heard and decided by medical professional, not attorneys. If they truly are doing what your suggest, your profession can weed them out. Physicians, as you know, have their own ethical standards that are enforced by their medical associations.
Originally Posted by Vercengetorix
I appreciate that comment, however, the medical board used to be led by an attorney, and the investigators are nurses not doctors. The medical board is not the pristine place you suggest or were led to believe it is. In fact, there was an 11 hour hearing on the board's abuses held by the legislature's appropriations committee. A board reform bill was passed by a vote of 11 to 1 in the committee only to see the bill held up by the Dems in the legislature. Still, a complaint to the medical board will be in order.
The AMA is worthless, a lobbying organization that I think only 5% of doctors belong to anymore.
I am probably going to get this medical expert through peer pressure, but I think you can see my frustration about how to handle someone who lied about me and admitted doing so under oath.
If you have liability insurance what are you paying out of your pocket? Nevermind.
Originally Posted by Vercengetorix
The fact that all you lawyers have to make this personal shows how fucked up your position truly is. Fine, if you want to know more about me, I will be happy to tell you. There came a point in my life that having basic civil rights was more important to me than the income from medicine, and I wasn't alone. All the best and most financial successful doctors I knew quit. We all said the same thing: we could breathe after quitting.
What civil rights? Oh, you know crazy things like due process, being innocent until proven guilty, the right to sue people who libel/slander you, being judged by your peers, not having a government suck $20,000 out of your bank account claiming that you overbilled them without any due process.
In fact, one of the reasons I quit was talking to another doctor who did so and when I asked him if he missed medicine, his response was "not for a second."
In this most recent deposition I expressed my frustration. I said, "I got tired of complaining. It never did any good. I quit and was content to just watch the bodies pile up." All around the deposition table I saw the lawyers' eyes gray with guilt.
What has happened in the last five years has been insurers have cut expenses so badly to the bone, quality has suffered, and doctors were left holding the bag. Insurers can't be sued, so doctors were. Doctors got so tired of being screwed by insurers that they changed how they practiced. Instead of going fee for service, they changed to getting paid salaries.
Of course, this change is being hailed as positive but like anything else, it has its issues.
So Charles Tudor comes along and stupidly says doctors should be sued for malpractice for colon perforation, a known risk for colonoscopy. So what does the salaried doctor do when asked to perform colonoscopy. Well, he gets paid whether he does a procedure or not, so he now has incentive to talk patients out of getting it. Who loses? Society and the patients because it is far easier to catch and cure colon cancer earlier rather than later. The costs to society go up 100 fold.
And even if he does get sued, who cares? He sits in a court room instead of working. His personal wealth is not threatened because he is a salaried employee. And for all the arguing about how incompetent he is, unless he is a true butcher, the rate of colon perforations will not change. If the best doctors there are do enough of any procedure, they too will have bad outcomes.
The other part of the change is that doctors now have incentive to see fewer patients. So in the last five years, there has been a sudden and profound shortage with regards to medical care and quality. If you get paid the same no matter how you perform, why provide better care? The current attitude with care is that it not be the best but it be good enough. Pursuing the best care is too time consuming and filled with pressure. If you do what is best for your patient, that often means knocking some heads in. Why bother with that now? And if you get paid the same whether you see 10 or 40 patients a day, why not see ten? Even the rise in midlevel providers like PAs and NPs has not stemmed the tide.
The good thing about you attorneys is like insurance companies you have wound up hanging yourself with your own rope. Insurance companies treated their customers so fucking badly that the public did without. Their entire model was so broken that they had to get the government to bail them out by mandating people buy insurance. Health insurance was so costly and so worthless that a huge portion of well people were opting out.
Texas passed a law that limited damages for pain and suffering to $250,000. Despite all the pleas by plaintiff's attorneys that this would lead to huge suffering and a drop off in quality, nothing happened. Quality of care didn't go down at all. Malpractice lawyers lost what little credibility they had. Instead of being shown as defenders of the public, these lawyers were shown to be what they truly were, a bunch of leaches.
And juries have caught on to this too. A lawyer has told me that juries are now applying criminal standards to malpractice cases. That means unless you can prove a doctor was malicious in his care, they aren't going to find against the doctor. So Charles, if you want to take a colon perforation case to trial, good luck. Chances are you are going to lose.
And finally to put a bow on this, the video was about a lawyer complaining about public expectations with regards to lawsuits. Well, whose fault is that? I have had so many lawyers on this thread defend the system and bitch at me for being ignorant with regards to the law.
Bottom line is that you guys don't give a rat's ass about quality of care. You just care about money, and you don't care if you take it from a doctor who did nothing wrong. You cloak this immorality by saying you acted "in a client's best interest".
People know that politicians are liars, and that most politicians are lawyers. The public has gotten so sick of your lies that they have been making up their own set of rules. The real issue with me is if you guys have the capacity to clean up your own mess. If you haven't noticed, the only people defending the current system are lawyers, and that more than anything else is fucking pathetic. If people don't understand how the legal system works, that is on you. You people have been lying about how the system really works for decades for your own personal benefit. You shouldn't expect any sympathy from me or from anyone else given your behavior.