doctors do not kill or hurt people. doctors save them and despite of their best efforts, some patients die.
Look up the word 'iatrogenic.'
death caused by your medical care is the 3rd leading cause of death in this country.
Medical care is the 3rd leading cause of death in the U.S.
when a police officer points a gun at suspect, it's to kill him.
when a police officer raises a baton at suspect or aim mace/taser, it's to hurt him.
When a police officer points a gun it is to stop the suspect. If the suspect can only be stopped by shooting, then he will shoot, but the police officer usually hopes pointing the gun is good enough.
does doctor cut to kill? or to hurt?
Abortion doctors always cut to kill.
C-sections are typically necessary for about 3 percent of births, or less, but doctors perform them ten percent of the time and even more. that means that every years thousands of doctors cut open women for their own convenience rather than for the best interests of the women or their children.
There are sadistic doctors out there who do things for own selfish reasons, just as there are sadistic cops, teachers, and selfish human beings everywhere. No profession (or political party) sanctifies its members with holiness just because they are a member of that profession (or political Party).
we do not pay for their malpractice. doctor's insurance does. but we taxpayers do have to pay for wrongful deaths or injury caused by police officers.
Jiro, a doctor sets his or her fees based on his or her expenses. Like everybody else who works for a living, they pass on the cost of doing business to their customers or clients.
When their expenses go up, their rates go up, when their expenses go down, if they are nice people, their rates go down. It works the same way for hospitals. Occasionally a clinic or hospital has gone bankrupt because of high malpractice insurance rates and lawsuits, in which case everybody in the community ends up paying the price.
High malpractice insurance payments are absolutely part of the cost of doctor's fees, so yes, we do pay for it. This is really a very basic economic concept- businesses of any sort must consider their expenses when they set their prices, and make sure their prices will be enough to cover their expenses and give them more than enough to live on.
when you buy groceries you are not just paying for groceries, you are paying for the store's costs of hiring and paying its employees, you are paying for their insurance against theft or flood or fire, you are paying for the benefits they provide, if any, to employees, you are paying their utility bills, and you are paying the owner. All of those things and more must be considered carefully by the business owner when he or she sets prices. It's not any different for a doctor.
We pay for it in other ways, too:
While the causes of rapidly rising medical malpractice insurance premiums remain contentious and unsettled, the consequences are rippling through communities, threatening to diminish patients' access to care and increase health care costs, with an uncertain impact on quality, according to findings from the Center for Studying Health System Change's (HSC) 2002-03 site visits to 12 nationally representative communities. The severity of malpractice insurance problems varied across communities, with some physicians changing how and where they care for patients. For example, rather than treat patients in their offices, more physicians are referring patients to emergency departments. And many physicians, especially those practicing in high-risk specialties, are unwilling to provide emergency department on-call coverage because of malpractice liability concerns.
I urge you to read the entire article:
Issue Brief No. 68