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Healthcare in Singapore: a growing sham/scam???!!!

bic_cherry

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Healthcare in Singapore: a growing sham/fraud???!!!

Healthcare in Singapore: a growing sham/fraud???!!!
A letter by a kind whistle blower:
Reasons for soaring private health-care costs
"the fee-for-service model, which incentivises doctors to provide more(?excessive/ unnecessary) treatments."

The Straits Times, Published on Aug 14, 2014
Reasons for soaring private health-care costs
DOCTORS' bills are arguably the most rapidly escalating component of private health-care costs.
I am amazed at how expensive it has become to be treated by doctors in private practice over the past five years. The surgical fee for simple lumbar disc surgery has shot up from $5,000 to as high as $25,000, even when performed by junior doctors.
The free market in health care is among the reasons for the astronomical rise in fees.
An ear, nose and throat surgeon once told me that since the Government abolished guidelines on professional fees, he has been competing actively with his colleagues to see how high his fees can go.
The professional fee system in public hospitals, where foreign patients can be surcharged up to 400 per cent, is a good "training ground" for doctors charging higher fees when the market can bear it.
Then, there is the vicious circle of rising clinic costs and overheads.
Doctors who face escalating rents for clinic space have no choice but to charge more, which in turn attracts more doctors, mostly from public hospitals, to go private. With greater demand for clinic space, rents continue going up.
Another factor is the fee-for-service model, which incentivises doctors to provide more treatments.
I have been in private practice for 24 years and have not encountered any local surgeon operating on a closed collarbone fracture until the past year, when there were three cases. Last year was also the first time I saw a patient undergo an operation for plantar fasciitis, or jogger's heel.
On the other side of the equation are frightened patients who are eager to undergo treatment even if it is not necessary.
For instance, many patients with bulging spinal discs that do not cause any health issues have agreed to surgery after being warned they could become paralysed if they have a fall.
"Pay as charged" insurance policies also encourage doctors to charge higher fees, since these will be covered by insurance. A patient once said that a surgeon told her not to worry about her $55,000 cervical spine surgery as it would be paid by the insurance company.
Singapore patients have good reasons to be afraid.
Tang Kok Foo (Dr)
Copyright © 2014 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.
Reasons for soaring private health-care costs
 
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bic_cherry

Alfrescian
Loyal
At the mercy of greedy docs and MNC drug companies, the poor patient is ALWAYS at the

At the mercy of greedy docs and MNC drug companies, the poor patient is ALWAYS at the short end of the stick...

DaPing said:
Thread source(discuss): Healthcare in Singapore: a growing sham/fraud???!!!
sound very logical and possible scenario..
it can be scary for patient to be
Sadly, many so called 'licensed medical professionals' also enjoy receiving bribes from drug companies to promote certain drugs over others (the ones that give the juiciest profit margin/ free gifts for prescribers (holidays dressed up as foreign seminar sponsorships, fine-dining seminars, free gifts/ sponsorships etc)).

Why else do MNC drug companies marketing budgets so far exceed their research budgets???!!!
Guess at the mercy of greedy docs and MNC drug companies, the poor patient is ALWAYS at the short end of the stick...
Big Pharma Spends More On Advertising Than Research And Development, Study Finds
Big Pharma Spends More On Advertising Than Research And Development, Study Finds
Date: January 7, 2008
Source: York University
Summary:
A new study estimates the U.S. pharmaceutical industry spends almost twice as much on promotion as it does on research and development, contrary to the industry's claim. The U.S. pharmaceutical industry spent 24.4% of the sales dollar in 2004 on promotion, versus 13.4% for research and development, as a percentage of US domestic sales of US$235.4 billion. The study's findings supports the position that the U.S. pharmaceutical industry is marketing-driven and challenges the perception of a research-driven, life-saving, pharmaceutical industry
Big Pharma Spends More On Advertising Than Research And Development, Study Finds
 
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