I have a few points I would like to make about this, and let me start out by saying my knowledge of this pretty much comes from personal experience. In 1985, my dad was diagnosed with stage 4 Lymphoma. He decided to fight it, and literally took part in every trial and experiment imaginable. He was part of the early interferon trials, for example. He had two bone marrow transplants along with countless other things, and ended up living until 2005. His battle with it also inspired my sister, a Chem E graduate from MSU, to go into medicine. She ended up attending the Mayo Clinic and becoming a hematologist/ oncologist who is now running her own clinic out of St. Vincent's, Birmingham. Now my dad was a college professor and had to build a rental property business to be able to afford to pay the medical bills. We honestly do not know what his entire course of treatment would add up to in dollar figures, but it would have been staggering. Thank god he did have some insurance and was willing to create other income streams to account for the rest.
Through the experiences with dad, and now my sister, I have seen the healthcare industry from the perspective of a patient trying to stay alive, and now a doctor. When my dad was getting treatment, I will always remember that we stayed in the Rotary House Hotel close to the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. That was a place for the patients and families that were dealing with the ravages of cancer. I can remember every summer it seemed like we had to go stay in Houston for a few months, and I made friends with the other kids of patients. Over the years, I began to notice that there were kids that I never saw again. The easy answer would be the patient they were with died, right? When I talked to my dad, I was told most of them did not die. They simply ran out of coverage. That is when I was introduced to the idea that medicine is a for-profit industry. Now, over the years of being by my dad's side at every doctor's appointment, all I heard were the doctors talking about the best results for the patient.
You should have seen my dad when my sister graduated from the Mayo Clinic. To me and my brother, it was pretty clear which child my folks loved most on that day. She started out wanting to be a doctor that was different from the other oncologists because she had seen how my dad was treated over the years of his treatment along with all the people close to him. She even said she wanted to be different in terms of supporting the families and patients. That sentiment lasted until she took over her own clinic and got her first real big check. Now she lives in a 12,500 square foot house in Mountain Brook with literally 3 different Porsches in the driveway and my Bil's Ford Black Widow diesel. She became about money so fast. It was amazing to me given the experiences our family had gone through. I love my sister, but it has been hard to see her become all about money and not about the patient.
Now comes the points I wanted to make, and I have no grand answer as to how to reform the system. I do know that when you put money over patients' lives and run the system for profit, you end up with what we have now. As a little kid I was told by countless doctors that the goal is patient care in terms of my dad. Once I got older, I got to see what it really is about, and most things are about it, money. As long as we have pharmaceutical companies, doctors, and all the people associated with the healthcare care industry chasing the bag and not the best results for patients, we will continue to have what we have in terms of the healthcare system. And let me say I am all for capitalism, but not at the expense of patient lives. I am all for doctors making as much money as they can, but not when the patients suffer because of it.