Everything is optimized for corporations to make more money, to avoid liability and maximize the billable dollars. Doctors want to move meat as quick as possible, most consultations are a couple of minutes! Every doctor has to be part of this rat race because of how the system is designed!
"More than 200,000 people will die each year from preventable medical errors. He was shocked. Conservatively, these estimates amount to at least one fatal Boeing 747 crash per week."
"Doctors talk about electronic medical records as an unpleasant and frustrating chore. They object to how the charts have evolved to prioritize billing and liability defense over clinical care. And they regard the symphony of well-meaning alerts and pop-ups as a distraction at best."
"The check boxes and templates can aid efficiency, several doctors told me, but they also may distract physicians from the patients right in front of them."
I don't know a single doctor who wants this. Insurance companies want this. Don't blame healthcare workers for the hellish scenarios they are forced to work under.
A doctor (who is is a licensed professional, not unskilled labor) could accept lower pay for less work (fewer patients seen), instead high pay for less work (false-treating patients).
A doctor running their own private practice could do that. Most doctors don’t operate this way. Their boss isn’t going to let them take up additional resources (rooms, nursing staff etc…) so that they can spend 30 minutes with each patient instead of 15 even if they are willing to take less money.
>I mean, where is the money hungry corporation in this story?
In the staffing and service provider companies the nonprofit funnels its money into. And let's not even mention the cost of medical devices and medicine.
There are almost certainly physicians groups operating out of that hospital that are for-profit and likely owned by PE. A large part of your bill is going to come from them.
"More than 200,000 people will die each year from preventable medical errors. He was shocked. Conservatively, these estimates amount to at least one fatal Boeing 747 crash per week."
"Doctors talk about electronic medical records as an unpleasant and frustrating chore. They object to how the charts have evolved to prioritize billing and liability defense over clinical care. And they regard the symphony of well-meaning alerts and pop-ups as a distraction at best."
"The check boxes and templates can aid efficiency, several doctors told me, but they also may distract physicians from the patients right in front of them."