Doctor gaps in Texas persist despite Perry’s stats (AP)

PRESIDIO, Texas – Presidio County is bigger than Delaware and has just one practicing physician who doesn’t deliver babies or treat emergencies. It’s the kind of underserved region that Gov. Rick Perry suggested would benefit when he proposed a crackdown on medical malpractice lawsuits in 2003.

Now running for president, Perry says his tort reform plan proved the wisdom of his business-friendly policies by expanding health care across the state.

Yet none of the 23,000 doctors Perry says Texas has newly licensed have come this way.

“Some patients, when they find out they’re pregnant, bam — they’re out of here,” said Dr. Darrell Parsons, whose practice in Presidio is just across the Rio Grande from Ojinaga, Mexico.

An analysis of Perry’s tort reform initiative in Texas reveals a more complicated bottom line than his campaign rhetoric on the issue would suggest. State medical data show that the number of physicians practicing in Texas has increased since the initiative passed in 2003, though by considerably less than the total Perry cites. And the bulk of that influx has come in larger cities where health care was already abundant, leaving large rural swaths of Texas still without doctors.

In many ways, the growth in the health industry

Read More from the Article Source: Full Article


Filed under Politics and tagged , , , , , .

Leave a Reply