blackshoe, on Feb 13 2008, 07:12 PM, said:
finally17, on Feb 13 2008, 06:34 PM, said:
The words "First, do no harm" seem to imply an active requirement to prevent harm when possible
They do not.
The words say "do no harm". That doesn't mean "prevent any harm from occurring," it means "don't do any harm yourself".
I'm not at all sure that the Hippocratic Oath is still undertaken by doctors, to be honest. But let's assume it is. Does that impose on doctors a requirement to put a (potential) patient's welfare above their own? I don't think so. I do think most doctors would not consider payment or non-payment a primary issue. I know that my father (who was a cardiologist) didn't - he often got paid in kind rather than cash - and at values much less than his services would have rated. He often did not get paid at all - and didn't go around suing people for it. But he's old school, and practiced and believes in the Hippocratic Oath. Does that mean that hospitals should turn away people who can't pay? Well, I think emergency care is in a separate class - if there's an emergency, you deal with it, and worry about payment later, if at all. But people go to the emergency room for things that
aren't emergencies, because they either haven't thought about it, or don't understand why they shouldn't. Or both. I don't think emergency facilities should be required to provide free care in those cases. Or be prohibited from turning away such cases.
As for whether the government should be in the health care business, I'd say "no". Consider two old sayings: "An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications" and "Would you want to fly in an airplane built by the lowest bidder?" So, no. And no again.
First off, I said "SEEM TO." That means "this is my interpretation, but I acknowledge that it is not clear and that others will have valid disagreement.
Secondly, let me explain why they SEEM TO: because of the word FIRST, which you completely ignored. To me, "first" here SEEMS TO mean "this is the primary consideration, when this and another consideration conflict, this one takes primacy. If the idea that harm is bad takes primacy, is most important, more significant than anything else, then INACTION when you can help is essentially harm, and is therefore as bad as active harm. But all that is just my interpretation.
And none of it is germane...I did in fact note that those words are not in "the oath," in quotes because it seems to vary from place to place these days.
However, consider the words I did find in a modern version: "I will treat without exception all who seek my ministrations, so long as the treatment of others is not compromised thereby." There is no wiggle room there. They do of course address the issue of danger to self caused by treatment of others.
As for non-emergency situations, I agree completely; I repeatedly indicated that I was talking about emergency situations. And so does the government. It is my understanding that "free" care is not required for non-life-threatening situations. And that is as it should be under the current system I suppose. The sticky problem with this situation is that, without proper medical care, including especially prescription drugs that one can't acquire without seeing a doctor, non-life-threatening situations very often quickly become life-threatening.
Consider for instance: I recently had an ingrown toenail. Seems like no big deal, right? Bit of pain, see if it grows out, get it cut out. But I am a diabetic with poor feeling and circulation in my feet. Ingrown nails very quickly become infected in these situations and can lead to toe, foot, leg amputation, death. It might sound extreme, it happens more often than it should. A single visit to a podiatrist and a course of anti-biotics can prevent all this. What is basically routine to treat is potentially life-threatening to many.
I don't come by my views due to my situation. My toe is fine now, I was treated. I honestly don't know how things should be in this situation.
I don't know what exactly you mean by "government in the health care business" so I won't comment on that.