Feature

Survey: Docs see health care improvements as unlikely in 2017


 

Physicians appear to be quite pessimistic about the chances for improving health care quality, costs, and access in 2017, according to a survey conducted by InCrowd, a market insights technology firm.

Of the 150 physicians who responded to the 3-minute “mobile microsurvey” conducted on Dec. 4, 2016, 70% said it was unlikely that the cost of health care would improve under the incoming Trump administration, 69% said it was unlikely that access to care would improve, and 60% said it was unlikely that the quality of health care would improve, InCrowd reported.

Physicians make health care predictions for 2017
“Our data show that most U.S. physicians are viewing the new Trump administration as negatively impacting the most significant health care issues facing the nation – the need to improve health care and drug costs, health care access, and quality of care,” Diane Hayes, the company’s president, said in a statement.

Recommended Reading

Clinical Practice Improvement Activities: The New Reporting Requirement
MDedge Surgery
From the Editors: The Clinical Congress: Something for everyone
MDedge Surgery
Potential Operating Room Fire Hazard of Bone Cement
MDedge Surgery
FDA bans powdered gloves
MDedge Surgery
Diabetes, ischemic heart disease, pain lead health spending
MDedge Surgery
Hawaii continues to top ‘America’s Health Rankings’
MDedge Surgery
How to reduce readmissions after vascular procedures
MDedge Surgery
Law & Medicine: How case law shapes EMTALA
MDedge Surgery
Fewer people having problems with medical bills
MDedge Surgery
What’s in store for CMS under Seema Verma?
MDedge Surgery