The proposed healthcare reforms and the resultant debates are the rage nowadays. Proponents and opponents are getting in each others’ face in ways not perhaps imagined by the administration. The head butting is so intense at times that to a casual bystander, it might appear that people have forgotten why they were arguing in the first place. No one is ready to give an inch as they stand nose to nose, screaming and sending spittle flying, the viewers’ eyes riveted to their jugulars which appear dangerously close to burst point.
In this milieu, hospitals and doctors’ offices continue to go about their business as usual. As a matter of principle, we tend to keep our views to ourselves, as surely a majority of doctors do. Sometimes a patient would attempt to get us sucked into the current national argument but they don’t get very far, running into our carefully crafted stone wall of non-committal answers. But there are other times, when one encounters a situation that tends to precipitate musings. I found myself in such a situation on a busy office day recently. A situation which can be frustrating and is probably played out almost every day in physicians’ office all over the country.

