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A very unpopular opinion, I'm sure.
Why not just shut down 70-80% of medical schools? Seriously. Dead serious.
Socialized healthcare is going to go for cost-effective savings. There isn't a lot of evidence that there is a HUGE danger in using PA's/Noctors, at least in comparison to the amount of money saved with an NP serving in a primary care capacity.
I mean, it's already happening. They're encroaching more and more, and soon they'll have quite a bit of the primary care field/anesthesiology/and probably a few other fields.
So my question is...why not give it to them?
With all that power they're getting--and continue to get--soon there will be too many chiefs (MD's) and not enough indians. By shutting down a lot of the med schools/converting them to nursing/PA schools we can just feed nurses/PA's into their primary care role and divorce from it entirely, then consolidate power in specialized fields that they've barely touched. It also decreases competition among MD's since the field will, over time, become less saturated.
With such a dramatic downturn in physician output, physicians that still want to pursue primary care can just manage large practices run by nurses since there won't be enough doctors to actually provide the service themselves. It puts doctors back into a supervisory role and saves the advanced specialties for just MD's.
Really though. Reading all of these topics, looking about on the Interwebs, I don't think we can obstruct nurses/PAs from taking more power, but if we become proactive we can carve out a role for ourselves in the future rather than just be hit by it.
I mean, admissions to medical school will get even more competitive but with a smaller field of medical schools you'll have better chosen students and tuition may actually go down. We'll be encouraged to go into a subspecialty field or manage mid levels as they practice.
I was just thinking about this as I finished up a PBL class that we take with PA students. They're learning quite a bit. Not everything I am, but they're still quite knowledgeable and I feel that with basic care they'll probably do OK, especially if someone is just watching distantly. Of course there will be mistakes, but with the way the economy is going I can't see anyone overlooking the cost savings here, and this would probably save the most.
Am I really crazy? Completely alone in thinking this? Maybe. I'm just curious what other medical students/residents think.
Why not just shut down 70-80% of medical schools? Seriously. Dead serious.
Socialized healthcare is going to go for cost-effective savings. There isn't a lot of evidence that there is a HUGE danger in using PA's/Noctors, at least in comparison to the amount of money saved with an NP serving in a primary care capacity.
I mean, it's already happening. They're encroaching more and more, and soon they'll have quite a bit of the primary care field/anesthesiology/and probably a few other fields.
So my question is...why not give it to them?
With all that power they're getting--and continue to get--soon there will be too many chiefs (MD's) and not enough indians. By shutting down a lot of the med schools/converting them to nursing/PA schools we can just feed nurses/PA's into their primary care role and divorce from it entirely, then consolidate power in specialized fields that they've barely touched. It also decreases competition among MD's since the field will, over time, become less saturated.
With such a dramatic downturn in physician output, physicians that still want to pursue primary care can just manage large practices run by nurses since there won't be enough doctors to actually provide the service themselves. It puts doctors back into a supervisory role and saves the advanced specialties for just MD's.
Really though. Reading all of these topics, looking about on the Interwebs, I don't think we can obstruct nurses/PAs from taking more power, but if we become proactive we can carve out a role for ourselves in the future rather than just be hit by it.
I mean, admissions to medical school will get even more competitive but with a smaller field of medical schools you'll have better chosen students and tuition may actually go down. We'll be encouraged to go into a subspecialty field or manage mid levels as they practice.
I was just thinking about this as I finished up a PBL class that we take with PA students. They're learning quite a bit. Not everything I am, but they're still quite knowledgeable and I feel that with basic care they'll probably do OK, especially if someone is just watching distantly. Of course there will be mistakes, but with the way the economy is going I can't see anyone overlooking the cost savings here, and this would probably save the most.
Am I really crazy? Completely alone in thinking this? Maybe. I'm just curious what other medical students/residents think.
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