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ObamaCare Tax Increases Are Double Original Estimate


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2013 Mar 13, 12:31am   27,158 views  140 comments

by zzyzzx   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2013/03/tax-prof-obamacare-tax-increases-are.html

The Joint Committee on Taxation recently released a 96 page report on the tax provisions associated with Affordable Care Act. The report describes the 21 tax increases included in Obamacare, totaling $1.058 trillion – a steep increase from initial assessment, according to the Tax Prof Blog. The summer 2012 estimate is nearly twice the $569 billion estimate produced at the time of the passage of the law in March 2010.

Patrick's code won't let me paste in a table here.

#politics

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54   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 2:50pm  

curious2 says

Meccos says

I would love to see evidence....

Just follow the links. That's why I provide links. Unlike you.

Curious unfortunately the links you post do not answer the questions which I specifically asked. Read my post and please respond with evidence to the specific comment you made.

55   curious2   2013 Mar 15, 2:52pm  

Meccos says

Curious unfortunately the links you post do not answer the questions which I specifically asked.

What were your questions? I don't see any question marks, only false statements that were refuted in the linked articles.

56   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 2:53pm  

curious2 says

Meccos says

Curious unfortunately the links you post do not answer the questions which I specifically asked.

What were your questions? I don't see any question marks, only false statements that were refuted in the linked articles.

Here is my question:
Meccos says

Also I would love to see evidence to prove that tort reform increases costs because "entrepreneurial doctors take advantage and cause more injuries". Regardless of tort reform, malpractice cases are constantly getting get trialed or settled, which ruins physicians professionally and financially, leaving really no reason for these doctors to "take advantage and cause more injury" as you suggest. Injuries will always happen unfortunately...

57   curious2   2013 Mar 15, 2:54pm  

Again no question marks, follow the links to see the report.

58   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 2:59pm  

Curious...
the links you provide mainly talk about unethical physicians who do procedures unnecessarily to make money. The truth is that you will find people like these in any industry. However some physicians being unethical and the cost of defensive medicine are completely separate issues, which you seem to blur. Unfortunately there will always be physicians who are unethical. However, make no mistake, the threat of malpractice DOES change practices of HONEST physicians and WILL increase costs.

http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=416067

59   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:00pm  

curious2 says

Again no question marks, follow the links to see the report.

again copped out on answering an obvious question regardless of whether there is a punctuation point or not.

61   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:08pm  

curious2 says

From one of the linked articles: "El Paso and McAllen function under the same Texas malpractice laws that capped malpractice awards in 2003. As doctors there noted to me, premiums have gone down substantially, reflecting the major drop in lawsuits. And even if McAllen doctors were especially fearful of lawsuits, it is hard to imagine that “defensive medicine” would lead to McAllen’s vastly greater number of pacemaker insertions, knee replacements, carotid operations, coronary artery stents, or home-nursing visits. Certainly the doctors I spoke to there did not think lawsuit fears affect their decisions for surgical therapies and other such interventions."

Again, you blur the lines of dishonest physicians who increase medical costs by unnecessary procedure with the actual cost of defensive medicine. I am not saying that some physicians dont this... all I am saying is that there are TONS of other HONEST physicians who will order extra tests which eventually increase medical costs. You seem to think that there is no distinction here.

http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=416067

should provide some evidence to back my claim.

62   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:13pm  

Curious I will give you another example of how defensive medicine costs money...

Millions of dollars each year are spent on unnecessary tests like MRI's and blood work. Contrary to the article you linked, physicians who order these tests cannot financially benefit due to federal laws that prohibit the prescirbing physician having ownership of the diagnostic centers. These tests are ordered to avoid lawsuits... yet the physicians do not benefit financially in these cases. This is an unnecessary added costs clear and simple.

63   curious2   2013 Mar 15, 3:13pm  

Meccos says

should provide some evidence to back my claim.

It doesn't. It's a mail-in survey with a 50% response rate asking about physicians in general, not respondents' own personal behavior. Essentially they asked, "Do you agree with the Republican talking point repeated endlessly on TV and elsewhere," half said yes.

BTW, what area of medicine do you practice, and do you order up extra tests and procedures as defensive medicine?

64   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:17pm  

curious2 says

Meccos says

should provide some evidence to back my claim.

It doesn't. It's a mail-in survey with a 50% response rate asking about physicians in general, not respondents' own personal behavior. Essentially they asked, "Do you agree with the Republican talking point repeated endlessly in the evening news," half said yes.

BTW, what area of medicine do you practice, and do you order up extra tests and procedures as defensive medicine?

No it was a simple question asked to hundreds of physicians from different specialities from many different regions. The simple question was "Do doctors order more tests and procedures than patients need to protect themselves against malpractice suits"

Unfortunately, you completely misread the article. ABout 50% responded back to the survey. However of thsoe that responded back, 91% believed they ordered more test and procedures to protect themselves...

Please read more carefully before you respond. makes you look silly

65   curious2   2013 Mar 15, 3:21pm  

Meccos says

91% believed they....

Please check again your use of the word "they." The survey asked respondents to speculate about the behavior of physicians in general, it did not ask them to report their own experience.

Which brings me back to my question, which you have not answered. What area of medicine do you practice, and do you order up extra tests and procedures as defensive medicine?

66   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:21pm  

curious2 says

BTW, what area of medicine do you practice, and do you order up extra tests and procedures as defensive medicine?

Yes, me and every one of my colleagues have admitted to ordering things unnecessarily. Unfortunately, I would not be surprised if EVERY single physician in this country has done this. Rather I would be surprised if one physician has NEVER done this.

Almost always, the decision to do this is based on the patient. You may never know, but many patients often demand these tests and even THREATEN lawsuits...

67   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:23pm  

curious2 says

Please check again your use of the word "they." The survey asked respondents to speculate about the behavior of physicians in general, it did not ask them to report their own experience.

Which brings me back to my question, which you have not answered. What area of medicine do you practice, and do you order up extra tests and procedures as defensive medicine?

They are "physicians" and since all these people are physicians, i wrote "they". What is the point of even commenting on this? If you have nothing better to say, just dont say it. Distraction is pointless.

Also give me more than 3 minutes to respond... why so anxious for my responses?

68   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:26pm  

Curious.

Let me ask you something serious. Why are you so resistant in believing that defensive medicine exists and it adds to the cost of health care???
Especially when someone like myself and hundreds of others in the industry admit that we have experienced this.

69   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:27pm  

one other thing... you know I am a physician. Just so I know what your background is and where you get your info from, what do you do and where?

70   curious2   2013 Mar 15, 3:28pm  

The question, "Do you believe that Physicians..." invites the respondent to speculate about the behavior of others, not to report their own behavior. If it were a study of physicians' own behavior, it would ask, "Do you do this..." not do you think other people do.

Why are you so resistant to disclosing your area of practice? If you were proud of it, you would disclose it, since you boast endlessly about how much $$$ you make at it. I have a guess...

71   Meccos   2013 Mar 15, 3:32pm  

curious2 says

The question, "Do you believe that Physicians..." invites the respondent to speculate about the behavior of others, not to report their own behavior. If it were a study of physicians' own behavior, it would ask, "Do you do this..." not do you think other people do.

Hahahahh pointless for me to keep going. Even if i give you evidence you wont accept it.

73   zzyzzx   2013 Mar 15, 11:22pm  

Meccos says

That article you quote is an LA times article. Hardly credible research. Even if this were true, im not a spine surgeon. Try a little harder next time. BTW you gonna respond to any of my previous posts or will you continue to distract everyone by going off topic?

I'm inclined to believe that the LA Times article is understating the health care spending problem in that it's not just back treatment spending that is ineffective and way more expensive than it used to be.

74   zzyzzx   2013 Mar 15, 11:24pm  

Meccos says

one other thing... you know I am a physician

So I am guessing that you like Obamacare since it's essentially more welfare for doctors?

75   zzyzzx   2013 Mar 15, 11:25pm  

Meccos says

Hahahahh pointless for me to keep going. Even if i give you evidence you wont accept it.

Just like you.

76   zzyzzx   2013 Mar 15, 11:26pm  

Meccos says

Curious.

Let me ask you something serious. Why are you so resistant in believing that defensive medicine exists and it adds to the cost of health care???

Especially when someone like myself and hundreds of others in the industry admit that we have experienced this.

So you are agreeing that the lawsuit reform can save way more than the 2.4% number cited above?

77   Homeboy   2013 Mar 16, 4:54am  

Battle of the trolls. LOL.

78   curious2   2013 Mar 16, 5:25am  

Meccos says

Why are you so resistant in believing that defensive medicine exists and it adds to the cost of health care?

Because the claim has been investigated and refuted. To be fair, I don't say it doesn't exist at all or that it doesn't add anything, but the evidence shows that "tort reform" (taking away patients' right to sue when they are injured or killed by malpractice) does not on balance reduce costs. To the contrary, it increases costs. When there is no accountability, the incentives are all one way: more. More unnecessary and injurious procedures (e.g. useless back surgery that carries a risk of paralysis), more prescriptions, more more more, because the fee-for-service model creates myriad opportunities for revenue and kickbacks without accountability as reported from Texas and elsewhere. Consider the unnecessary and injurious coronary bypass operations reported in Redding, for example. When you take away accountability, you take away "defensive medicine", but you don't reduce costs; they increase. Every unnecessary bypass operation adds a cost of $10k/year for the remaining life of the patient, if nothing else goes wrong, i.e. if the patient doesn't die on the table. When a hospital amputates the wrong leg, what kind of person says the hospital shouldn't even be required to buy a prosthetic for the person whose leg they cut off? By far the largest cost associated with malpractice is the cost of the malpractice itself, including a hundred thousand Americans killed by hospital-acquired infections each year. And Obamacare responds to all this by requiring even more of the same, everybody mandated into the same system, with unlimited upside for hospital corporations ("No lifetime caps! We can all be Terry Schiavo now! Yay!") at the expense of every other priority.

79   MMR   2013 Mar 16, 6:07am  

Typical MD lack of logical/critical thinking. To learn how to conduct an argument, here is a list of intellectually honest and dishonest debate tactics

http://www.johntreed.com/debate.html

Typical MD tactic: My resume’s bigger than yours. All the more reason why you ought to be able to cite specific errors or omissions in my facts or logic, yet still you cannot........Got tons of relatives just like you

Peer approval of subjective opinion: “Proving” correctness of a subjective statement by citing the approval of political allies in the same subject—so-called peer review in academia. Peer approval has value when it relates to objective standards like those in mathematics, chemistry, and physics. Such peers check the accuracy of calculations, the cleanliness of laboratories, and whether they can replicate the results in their own experiments. But peer review is of little probative (proving) value when it relates to subjective areas like sociology, economics, or women’s studies where the peers in question, and indeed the whole field or large portions of it, have a particular political agenda. What is considered correct academic teaching in high schools is determined by long-term, circular, self-reinforcing, peer group-think unaffected by results achieved by their students........I will add: medicine often falls short of this standard (esp psychiatry)

JAMA, Annals of Internal Medicine, is often a circle-jerk. Lot of articles don't properly disclose their potential and absolute sources of conflict of interest. Also, based on your speaking style on this forum, it's also probably the only thing you've read in last 20 years also while proclaiming to be an expert. Try reading pubmed more often. And when you come across articles that prove your point, post them here so we can read them.

I have 30 uncles, first cousins and second cousins in medicine and I'm gunning for 2015 residency. So what is your point?

Meccos says

Just so I know what your background is and where you get your info from, what do you do and where?

80   MMR   2013 Mar 16, 6:12am  

But radiologists sure do. It seems like they make the money they make not as a value-add, but just to help doctors practice CYA medicine. One estimate (can't remember where) was that it was about 4.4 billion dollars a year.

Meccos says

yet the physicians do not benefit financially in these cases. This is an unnecessary added costs clear and simple.

81   MMR   2013 Mar 16, 6:13am  

Certainly provides a lot of leeway for abuse in the system. Also, it seems like obamacare did not effectively address this systemic issue.

Meccos says

Unfortunately there will always be physicians who are unethical. However, make no mistake, the threat of malpractice DOES change practices of HONEST physicians and WILL increase costs.

82   mell   2013 Mar 16, 6:14am  

Meccos says

one other thing... you know I am a physician. Just so I know what your background is and where you get your info from, what do you do and where?

What do you specialize in (or GP)? Just curious (not related to this discussion).

83   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 6:14am  

curious2 says

since you boast endlessly about how much $$$ you make at it.

Um, I made one or two sarcastic responses to you since you always claim physicians make too much money... care to link my "endless" boasts?

curious2 says

"The total cost of treating back pain in the United States has risen 65% in the last decade, but after all the pricey treatments, many people are still left with an aching back and an increasingly empty wallet, U.S. researchers said Tuesday.


They said treating spine problems in the United States costs $85.9 billion a year, rivaling the economic burden of treating cancer, which costs $89 billion.

***

Yet, for all of the spending, they found people with spine problems actually felt worse."

That article you quote is an LA times article. Hardly credible research. Even if this were true, im not a spine surgeon. Try a little harder next time. BTW you gonna respond to any of my previous posts or will you continue to distract everyone by going off topic?

84   curious2   2013 Mar 16, 7:08am  

Meccos says

I made one or two sarcastic responses to you since you always claim physicians make too much money... care to link my "endless" boasts?

Perhaps you were being sarcastic in one or two of your responses, but there's little point digging up a lot of links for you because you don't read them anyway. I suggest instead you should re-read your comments and mine in a different thread that was actually about whether doctors are overpaid, you seem to confuse me with someone else. If you read my comments, you will see that I do not "always claim physicians make too much money." To the contrary, in my opinion doctors are mispaid, i.e. payment does not correlate with value, and I have even said that some (e.g. GPs) can be underpaid, while others (e.g. Homefool's pushers and you) are overpaid for conferring little or no value. Other people have said doctors are overpaid, I have hewed to a more nuanced opinion of the subject, and if you re-read it paying attention to who said what I think you'll see the difference. As you read the thread I linked to, you might find the link I posted where GPs are suing the AMA over misallocation of Medicare funds; obviously I do not use "AMA" and "doctors" interchangeably, as I have often said the AMA represents less than 20% of doctors. You accuse me of "hating" doctors, but not everyone who disagrees with you hates you, let alone doctors in general.

There is a more basic issue with your comments though. This is a thread about the costs of Obamacare, which are becoming increasingly apparent as the time horizon approaches. It isn't about you personally, except the federally mandatory prepayment for your services whether wanted or not. As another comment put it, welfare for doctors, though I would call it mandatory redistribution primarily to PhRMA, AHA, AMA, and AHIP. If in a free market with open pricing and honest work, you made more or less than you do, I would have no comment about whether the number is too high or low or what you choose to say about it. The problem is the mandatory Obamacare, which makes everything cost more and requires everyone to submit to the whole takeover whether they want it or not, including Homefool's disproved pills etc.

85   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:33am  

curious2 says

Perhaps you were being sarcastic in one or two of your responses, but there's little point digging up a lot of links for you because you don't read them anyway.

You know very well I was being sarcastic... And of course you will say there is no point in digging them up because you cant and will not find any other examples. If you can find my "endless boasts" please post them to prove me wrong.

curious2 says

If you read my comments, you will see that I do not "always claim physicians make too much money."

perhaps not always, but you regularly do make this suggestion in several others posts.

curious2 says

This is a thread about the costs of Obamacare, which are becoming increasingly apparent as the time horizon approaches.

You are right, this WAS about costs of Obamacare, in which ironically we seemed to in agreement about. However along the way you hijacked this thread and began to refute that the costs of malpractice also contribute to the overall costs of healthcare. Even when faced with evidence that physicians practice defensive medicine (although even a little common sense will tell you it occurs) will obviously increase costs to health care spending, you are in denial.

86   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:34am  

zzyzzx says

Meccos says

one other thing... you know I am a physician

So I am guessing that you like Obamacare since it's essentially more welfare for doctors?

Zzyzzx... you would think so based on what curious2 says. HOwever I challenge you to go to physicians and see what they say about Obamacare. I will guarantee you that the overwhelming # of physicians are against Obamacare.

87   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:35am  

zzyzzx says

Meccos says

Curious.

Let me ask you something serious. Why are you so resistant in believing that defensive medicine exists and it adds to the cost of health care???

Especially when someone like myself and hundreds of others in the industry admit that we have experienced this.

So you are agreeing that the lawsuit reform can save way more than the 2.4% number cited above?

I dont know how much it would save, but it will likely save some money.

88   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:42am  

curious2 says

Because the claim has been investigated and refuted.

by who? you cant give me anecdotal evidence... well not even evidence, but opinions from a few physicians quoted in some news paper article.

curious2 says

To the contrary, it increases costs.

really? evidence?

curious2 says

More unnecessary and injurious procedures (e.g. useless back surgery that carries a risk of paralysis), more prescriptions, more more more, because the fee-for-service model creates myriad opportunities for revenue and kickbacks without accountability as reported from Texas and elsewhere.

CUrious2. Again the problem you have is that you confuse defensive medicine with plain fraud. LIke I said in previous posts, you will always have fraud...regardless of tort reform or not. However my point has always been this. Defensive medicine exists and it DOES carry a cost to health care. The physicians who perform unnecessary procedures are not the ones doing it because of defensive medicine... they are doing it to make money. However there are thousands of physicians who may order a test or a procedure JUST in case to protect their butts when in reality the symptoms and presentations of a patients do not warrant a test or a procedure. In most these cases, there is no financial gain or ordering these test, rather is a prevention of financial loss due to lawsuits....hence defensive medicine.

89   curious2   2013 Mar 16, 7:44am  

Meccos says

You are right, this WAS about costs of Obamacare, in which ironically we seemed to in agreement about. However along the way you hijacked this thread and began to refute that the costs of malpractice also contribute to the overall costs of healthcare.

If you read this thread, you will see that the subject was changed from Obamacare to malpractice by someone else, just yesterday in fact, and his numbers were off by a factor of four. I corrected that, and you got defensive as usual. What I find curious is, when other people say something you dislike, you attribute their comments to me, as if I occupy somehow a disproportionately large and nebulous place in your head. You seem to need to get the last word, which is ok if you will please say something that is demonstrably correct and hopefully relevant, e.g. we both agree that Obamacare will cost a lot of money.

90   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:52am  

MMR says

But radiologists sure do. It seems like they make the money they make not as a value-add, but just to help doctors practice CYA medicine. One estimate (can't remember where) was that it was about 4.4 billion dollars a year.

Meccos says

yet the physicians do not benefit financially in these cases. This is an unnecessary added costs clear and simple.

Radiologist dont order the studies. My quote was taken out of context. My point was that the physicians ordering these tests do not benefit financially. If a blood test was ordered, the lab and the lab technicians make money correct? Well if an x-ray was ordered, the radiologist would make money also.

If you are going so far as to claim that a radiologist have no added value, then you should really back up with evidence or your reasoning. Keep in mind radiologist function mainly with diagnosis. If you feel that making a diagnosis adds no value, then I could see your argument. However, most if not all, patients and clinicians would argue that diagnosis is the first step in any treatment.

91   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:55am  

MMR says

Certainly provides a lot of leeway for abuse in the system. Also, it seems like obamacare did not effectively address this systemic issue.

Meccos says

Unfortunately there will always be physicians who are unethical. However, make no mistake, the threat of malpractice DOES change practices of HONEST physicians and WILL increase costs.

There is always and likely will always be abuse in the system... no one has refuted or denied this. We can make similar arguments in many other fields.. financial system, government bureaucracies, even the local mechanics can abuse your lack of automobile mechanics.

92   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 7:57am  

mell says

Meccos says

one other thing... you know I am a physician. Just so I know what your background is and where you get your info from, what do you do and where?

What do you specialize in (or GP)? Just curious (not related to this discussion).

Spine specialists, which is why curious felt he needed to spend the time to link those articles...purely to try to bring me down. unfortunately he thought I was a surgeon and thus linked articles on spine surgeries... im not a spine surgeon however.

93   Meccos   2013 Mar 16, 8:06am  

curious2 says

If you read this thread, you will see that the subject was changed from Obamacare to malpractice by someone else, just yesterday in fact, and his numbers were off by a factor of four. I corrected that, and you got defensive as usual.

Well if anyone got defensive I would say it was you. The only point I have been trying to make for the past day was that physicians practice defensive medicine and that is an added cost to health care. You do not want to believe this and will go to extremes to refute this fact, although most would agree that even just a little bit of common sense would lead you to this fact.

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