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The Wall Street Journal
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    The Wall Street Journal‏Verified account @WSJ Aug 16

    NYU officials worry that rising medical-school tuition and soaring loan balances are pushing new doctors into high-paying fields and contributing to a shortage of researchers and primary-care physicianshttps://on.wsj.com/2PgXuV8 

    10:15 AM - 16 Aug 2018
    • 152 Retweets
    • 304 Likes
    • Peter Bartram Sanusi Bello Kalgo John Yard Phil Nurenberg Kevin Hernandez caitlyn Emi Sanz nina ferrer unevildjthunder
    15 replies 152 retweets 304 likes
      1. Pat Cirillo‏ @cypresspat Aug 16
        Replying to @WSJ

        This isn't exactly breaking news. Young physicians have been electing more lucrative specialties for decades. The industry controls the number of residencies, hence the number of doctors. And also fought advanced nurses from being allowed to do basic primary care functions.

        0 replies 1 retweet 2 likes
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      2. PaperVisuals215‏ @PaperLeAuteur Aug 16
        Replying to @WSJ

        Can anyone who chooses to read this tweet answer this question? NYU is currently 50k a year, right? So at 75k a year, what degree or network is worth that much? Serious replies only please!

        3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      3. puppacino‏ @puppacino Aug 17
        Replying to @PaperLeAuteur @WSJ

        I hope I read your tweet correctly if I didn’t I apologize. There is no current career that should warrant such a high tuition. Even if you were to rise through the ranks and get raise after raise, it would still take years to pay back that loan debt. It is absolutely ridiculous

        2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
      4. PaperVisuals215‏ @PaperLeAuteur Aug 17
        Replying to @puppacino @WSJ

        No argument there. I respect and I appreciate your response. I learned something new!! Thank you!!

        1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
      5. 1 more reply
      1. Sunny Deol‏ @sdeol88 Aug 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Increase number of residencies for primary care...Simple

        0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
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      2. RachelGoodstein‏ @rachelgoodstein Aug 16
        Replying to @WSJ

        Consider the role insurance company driven medical care decisions have on decline in interest in being a doctor. US medical care system needs TOTAL revamp. Profit driven Insurance companies are TOO powerful.

        1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. RLenks‏ @Rlenks Aug 16
        Replying to @WSJ

        Been happening for 20 years

        0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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      1. Erich Greenebaum‏ @ErichG69 Aug 16
        Replying to @WSJ

        Thank the parasites of the “health insurance” racketeering corporations.

        0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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      2. mlange221‏ @mlange221 Aug 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Ya think!? Why be a doctor when I can make $100k/yr as an Electrician after a 2 year apprenticeship.

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      3. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 17
        Replying to @WSJ

        Health care in USA is a broken system that doesn’t protect doctors against hospital machinations & agendas... many drs are improperly trained to perform their work to poorly supported because hiring into supervisory & admin positions are not based on merit or proving themselves!

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      3. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 17
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        I worked within the pathology department at #mtsinaiNYC that continues a record of poor performance & illegality along with 19 citations from toothless ACGME but none of my supervisors have suffered any consequences for their conduct towards me, patients, or failures but rewarded

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 17
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        I filed litigations based on illegal activities including racketeering by these hospitals & medical schools such as #notmymtsinai #RWJMS - result: more illegal activities, retaliation, threats including using police to harass me, they are out to prove my case & allegations for me

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      5. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 17
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        During the lead up to filing my cases to during litigation, I was threatened by various plaintiff lawyers including state funded lawyers out of legal services from whom I sought assistance so it’s a very entrenched racket serving nearly exclusively the elite and wealthy.

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      6. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 17
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        What am I getting at really about this health care system in USA? Want to venture a guess?

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      7. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 18
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        networked racketeering is what goes on in healthcare to embolden the rich to target & attack the public and their health while providing no security or quality control against illegal activities within these orgs where known rackets have been exposed costing taxpayers billions!

        1 reply 1 retweet 0 likes
      8. Leena Varughese M.D.‏ @LeenaV_MD Aug 18
        Replying to @LeenaV_MD @WSJ

        #Universalhealthcare #Medicareforall is a must in USA to provide a social contract not based on wealth or jobs but based on the wellbeing of this society and it’s citizens, which is what every developed nation has done with excellent standards of care compared to declining USA.

        0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      9. End of conversation

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