tailieunhanh - Physician Attitudes in Medicine: Survey results

Significant developments, especially in the past two decades, have resulted in greater relief from pain for an increasing number of patients. However, the overall quality of treat- ment for pain in the United States remains unacceptable for millions of patients with acute or persistent pain. While the potential for attaining a standard of optimal care within the discipline of pain medicine is consider- able, contemporary pain care has not achieved the synergy that can be afforded through a comprehensive and integrated approach to research, diagnosis, and treatment of pain. Contemporary medicine has had notable but incomplete, success with investigating, diagnosing, and treating pain, especially when a one-to-one relationship. | Physician Attitudes in Medicine survey RESULTS DOCTOR PATIENT MEDICAL ASSOCIATI N FOUNDATION Doctor Patient Medical Association Foundation conducted a faxed survey of random doctors in May 2012. Below are results from the survey. Total respondents 699 OVERALL CONCLUSIONS------------ Almost unanimous that medicine is on the wrong track and overwhelmingly blame the government Government-imposed solutions PPACA electronic health information destined to fail Highest numbers ever opting out of Medicare or refuse Medicaid Vacuum in leadership in medical profession feel abandoned by AMA organized medicine Corporate medicine including hospital and insurance companies is intentionally trying to destroy private practice Doctors are pessimistic - failing financially assume things will worsen See doctors and patients as the solution - not government Believe direct payment by patients will restore accountability patient control Restored autonomy elimination of government involvement increased patient responsibility and free market reforms are solutions. REPRESENTATIVE COMMENTS I have been in practice for 28 years and medicine is now the worst for doctors it has ever been and I don t see it getting any better. We needed insurance reform not health care reform we got neither. Orthopedist TX The most important thing would be to eliminate third party payments. Patients and physicians should decide what tests need to be done and what treatment will be administered. The patient should pay the physician for service. Whether they then get reimbursed is between the patient and the third party payer. This would put patients and physicians in charge. Cardiothoracic Surgeon IA Congress has failed. We need to leave Medicare and band we are referred as providers and not surgeons the government considers us a replaceable commodity Ophthalmologist AZ How do current changes in the medical system affect your desire to practice medicine Makes me think about B Unsure no .

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