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US doctors plan to quit or cut back :cause overwork
Well this is fatigue of overwork or financial maket collapse syndrome time will tell, but the US healthcare will suffer, as it depends heavily on immigrated doctors.The refusal to recommend medicine as profession will have very bad effect on the mindset of the probabals.
Primary care doctors in the United States feel overworked and nearly half plan to either cut back on how many patients they see or quit medicine entirely, according to a survey released on Tuesday.
And 60 percent of 12,000 general practice physicians found they would not recommend medicine as a career.
"The whole thing has spun out of control. I plan to retire early even though I still love seeing patients. The process has just become too burdensome," the Physicians' Foundation, which conducted the survey, quoted one of the doctors as saying.
The survey adds to building evidence that not enough internal medicine or family practice doctors are trained or practicing in the United States, although there are plenty of specialist physicians.
Health care reform is near the top of the list of priorities for both Congress and president-elect Barack Obama, and doctor's groups are lobbying for action to reduce their workload and hold the line on payments for treating Medicare, Medicaid and other patients with federal or state health insurance.
The Physicians' Foundation, founded in 2003 as part of a settlement in an anti-racketeering lawsuit among physicians, medical societies, and insurer Aetna, Inc., mailed surveys to 270,000 primary care doctors and 50,000 practicing specialists.
The 12,000 answers are considered representative of doctors as a whole, the group said, with a margin of error of about 1 percent. It found that 78 percent of those who answered believe there is a shortage of primary care doctors.
More than 90 percent said the time they devote to non-clinical paperwork has increased in the last three years and 63 percent said this has caused them to spend less time with each patient.
Eleven percent said they plan to retire and 13 percent said they plan to seek a job that removes them from active patient care. Twenty percent said they will cut back on patients seen and 10 percent plan to move to part-time work.
Seventy six percent of physicians said they are working at "full capacity" or "overextended and overworked".
Many of the health plans proposed by members of Congress, insurers and employers's groups, as well as Obama's, suggest that electronic medical records would go a long way to saving time and reducing costs.



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 08:18 on November 18th, 2008
I work in the hospital setting in the Administrative Realm of Medicine even though I graduated as a Doctor of Medicine. Medicine in the USA has become a cumbersome professional with politicians moving in one direction and the people asking for miracles.
At one time, the people wanted American Graduate Doctors and other Health Care Professionals but some of the American Graduates would prefer to work where they could make a living instead of rural states.
Afterwards, government and people wanted an even distribution of Physicians and Health Care Professionals around the country with the restrictions on the scope of practice.
The people wanted more and more and all of the health care professionals regardless of where they graduated are overworked.
The people wanted everything in a platter but when they find out that there is not enough health care professionals, they should only blame themselves.
at 22:45 on November 18th, 2008
Thats really strange but an unavoidable reality,expectation kills.