It seems lots of the problems facing health care will not be things that physicians deal with, but more that politicians deal with.
I remember hearing a speech about doctors being in the senate. When the senate started there were something like 10 or 15% physicians in it (I can't remember the exact %), then 25 years later it got cut in half, then again it got cut in half in another 25 years, on and on. Now there are hardly any doctors that will be voting on these things.
It seems like on the America side at least, if we could just get some excellent policies in place that things could be improved greatly for our nation.
Overseas is different, as they seem to just need basic health care in some of the 3rd world countries to prevent diseases that are easily curable with the levels of care we have here.
I think we are all entering this field at an exciting time, but we have a lot of responsibility because big changes need to occur. And we will see who will drive the decision making, we can either let profit drive the decision or let the well-being of our future patient population.
I'm not quite sure how you handle these older populations though. Atul Gawande wrote a pretty good piece on "
letting go." It's hard to know how much we will need to spend on these patients and what is acceptable. There is definitely a point when spending more and more becomes ineffective.