How many people are still uninsured after the Affordable Care Act goes into full effect? The left sings the praises of this bill, when the vast majority has no idea what is in it. It does not actually provide anything close to universal coverage, which seemed as though it was the express goal of those seeking its passage. There seems to be a pervasive notion that the ACA is going to fix all of health care's problems, and yet it fails to address some of the most important problems facing the field. I thought people with pre-existing conditions were going to receive coverage? My father has CHF and got a new job (finally!) where he was insured. However, because of his heart failure, he could not visit a cardiologist for 6 months after the insurance took effect... So much for how great the bill is...
I think minimizing the problem of a rapidly expanding patient population is disingenuous, at best. The physician population, like the general population, is rapidly aging, and many are approaching retirement. In fact, the present trends in medicine are probably pushing many of them into an early retirement. I would probably be heading that way if I was in a position to do so. There is immense uncertainty associated with this bill, as evidenced by your appealing to its lack of perfection. "It my cause problems that need addressing." I suppose it depends on your definition of the "short-term" as well. It takes quite some time to train a fully functioning physician... So even if you expanded the number of medical schools available, and then expanded the number of spots in residency, and then expanded the number of fellowships/ specialty training program... You see where I am going? It is not as simple as you seem to believe! Increased employment is not a bad thing, so long as we continue producing qualified doctors...
I don't think there are many, if any, doctors and future doctors who feel that people should not have access to affordable health care (they do have access to health care at the moment, by the way... an important distinction)... However, access to everyone should not come to the very serious detriment of those who provide the services that some are claiming is a right. It reminds me of Leon Kass... Talk of rights is fashionable... But health care, in my opinion, is not a right... Who do you hold that right against? Do doctors have to prescribe you medicine? I don't think so!!!
In closing, I am so tired of the argument that the only doctors who oppose the ACA do so because they are greedy and want to take advantage of poor and sick people. That is complete and utter nonsense. There were alternatives that could have been studied more fully. Instead, we choose to violate individual rights in favor of the "collective good" which, in my opinion, will not ultimately improve the situation at all.