Message from @Magic Potato

Discord ID: 679422717014966334


2020-02-18 20:22:20 UTC  

Ok, that’s the American government

2020-02-18 20:22:23 UTC  

That’s the CDC

2020-02-18 20:22:29 UTC  

ur a commie

2020-02-18 20:22:33 UTC  

I wont click ur filth

2020-02-18 20:22:40 UTC  

Anyways. Sophia the evidence suggests occupational licensing does not *increase quality* or removing it reduce quality inversely.

2020-02-18 20:22:40 UTC  

Only Prostate and Breast Cancer have the US as their highest

2020-02-18 20:22:44 UTC  

Also the CDC stopped after like 09

2020-02-18 20:22:44 UTC  

But it ends up raising prices.

2020-02-18 20:22:49 UTC  

Also lung cancer.

2020-02-18 20:22:52 UTC  

Lol obviously you’re lying.

2020-02-18 20:22:52 UTC  

Those were back in 09 lol

2020-02-18 20:22:57 UTC  

No I'm not.

2020-02-18 20:22:59 UTC  

I can show evidence.

2020-02-18 20:23:04 UTC  

Licensing doctors doesn’t raise quality of care? Lol

2020-02-18 20:23:07 UTC  

Ok go ahead

2020-02-18 20:23:09 UTC  

No.

2020-02-18 20:23:12 UTC  

Lol

2020-02-18 20:23:14 UTC  

Right.

2020-02-18 20:23:17 UTC  

> The provision of health care to low-income Americans remains an ongoing policy challenge. In this paper, I examine how important changes to occupational licensing laws for nurse practitioners and physician assistants have affected cost and access to health care for Medicaid patients. T**he results suggest that allowing physician assistants to prescribe drugs (including controlled substances) is associated with a substantial (more than 11 percent)** reduction in the dollar amount of outpatient claims per Medicaid recipient. **I find little evidence that expanded scope of practice has affected proxies for access to care such as total claims and total care days.** Relaxing occupational licensing requirements by broadening the scope of practice for healthcare providers may represent a low-cost alternative to providing quality care to America’s poor."
https://www.mercatus.org/system/files/Timmons-Scope-of-Practice-v2.pdf

2020-02-18 20:23:18 UTC  

Mike Bloomberg is annoying. Hate the ads. 0/10 IGN

2020-02-18 20:23:19 UTC  

US is where all the best doctors come to train

2020-02-18 20:23:22 UTC  

Trump 2020

2020-02-18 20:23:38 UTC  

@sɪᴅɪsɴᴏᴛʜᴇʀᴇ do you think that supports your claim?

2020-02-18 20:23:38 UTC  

2020!!!!

2020-02-18 20:23:42 UTC  

Yes.

2020-02-18 20:23:46 UTC  

It does not.

2020-02-18 20:23:53 UTC  

looks like it does

2020-02-18 20:23:56 UTC  

Bloomberg actually is number 2 in national polls

2020-02-18 20:24:05 UTC  

It does not even mention physician licensing.

2020-02-18 20:24:08 UTC  

Trump 2020-forevermore

2020-02-18 20:24:16 UTC  

You’re literally advocating for accreditation of medical schools to stop

2020-02-18 20:24:22 UTC  

This licensing of physicians

2020-02-18 20:24:23 UTC  

...

2020-02-18 20:24:33 UTC  

Here's another study.

2020-02-18 20:24:35 UTC  

And your proof is that we should allow PA’s to prescribe drugs?

2020-02-18 20:24:40 UTC  

No no- make your claim

2020-02-18 20:24:44 UTC  

Then back it with evidence

2020-02-18 20:24:50 UTC  

> Our analysis of insurance claims data shows that the more rigid regulations increase the price of a well-child medical exam by 3 to 16 %. However, **our analysis finds no evidence that the changes in regulatory policy are reflected in outcomes such as infant mortality rates or malpractice premiums.** Overall, our results suggest that these more restrictive state licensing practices are associated with changes in wages and employment patterns, and also increase the costs of routine medical care, but do not seem to influence health care quality.
https://www.nber.org/papers/w19906

2020-02-18 20:25:00 UTC  

Do you think medical schools should be allowed to give licenses

2020-02-18 20:25:00 UTC  

frankly pharmacists can and should be able to prescribe most things