The Pros And Cons Of Defensive Medicine

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The Office of Technology Assessment defines defensive medicine as: “Defensive medicine occurs when doctors order tests, procedures, or visits, or avoid high-risk patients or procedures, primarily (but not necessarily solely) to reduce their exposure to malpractice liability. When physicians do extra tests or procedures primarily to reduce malpractice liability, they are practicing positive defensive medicine. When they avoid certain patients or procedures, they are practicing negative defensive medicine” (U.S. Congress 13) Imagine this, a person enters a doctor 's office with chest pains. The doctor diagnoses them with indigestion. The doctor wants the patient to take medication and go home. But due to a worried look on the face of the patient, …show more content…

The former includes performing unnecessary diagnostic tests and invasive procedure, prescribing unnecessary treatment and needless hospitalization. The latter comprises avoiding risky procedures on patients who could have benefitted from them, thereby excluding patients from treatment and hospital admission. Both practices are increasingly becoming professional behavior in medical practice, thus increasing the cost of healthcare and sometimes lowering the quality of the service provided. For example, unnecessary invasive diagnostic tests are additional risks and costs to the patient” (Sekhar). Positive defensive medicine deals with how physicians deal with treating patients. Negative defensive medicine is how the physicians avoid patients who are high-risk, patients who should be given priority for treatment, and kept under regular review in order to identify and treat potential or emergent problems at the earliest opportunity, but are often denied …show more content…

Due to an increased amount of testing and medication, patients in the United States often see a dramatic price difference for the same medical procedures that are much cheaper in other nations. The average hospital bill in the U.S. is $1695 with $226 coming from defensive practices (Rothberg). It is also costly to the nation as a whole. “While defensive medicine may provide medical malpractice insurance savings for doctors, it increases healthcare costs for patients. Some estimates put defensive medicine healthcare spending at $650 billion nationally – roughly $100 a month for every American or 4.5 percent of our gross domestic product” (Defensive Medicine). With growing poverty levels in the United States, it has become increasingly hard for the average American to seek medical attention in a time of need. The extravagant costs of obtaining healthcare in the United States are related to the increasing amount of physicians practicing defensive

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