It has been suggested that to improve quality in healthcare we must reduce variability in how diseases are diagnosed and treated.
It has been inferred that clinical outcomes would improve exponentially if doctors would only follow established guidelines instead of their own whims.
I take that to mean if doctors didn’t think for themselves so much, the health of our nation would be better. I take that to mean that we may be overqualified for the simple work of delivering “evidence based care”.
That is the fantasy of the non-clinician creators of our new medical world order.
Doctors spend all these years learning biology, biochemistry and physics. We learn about anatomy, physiology and pathology. Eventually we study diseases. Then we learn how to practice what we were taught. Finally, more than a decade after we started, do we earn the right to practice independently, only to become the obedient instruments of a healthcare system that demands conformity and disciplines those who put their training to use by questioning politically motivated health policies and overly simplistic clinical guidelines.

In these first days of the Trump Administration, there is a great deal of uncertainty, but it’s clear that healthcare will remain in the spotlight. Repealing and replacing “Obamacare” is still at the top of the Republican party’s—and President Trump’s—agenda.



On Friday night the administration issued an executive order giving Trump administration appointees enormous flexibility in modifying how the Obamacare individual health insurance market works.