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by wfunction
4783 days ago
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> So there's no way to tell the patient beforehand that their care will cost x amount. I call B.S. -- unless you're calling B.S. on the data. There's something called "estimation" which comes in very handy when you don't know something with certainty. If you have absolutely no idea, then you just guess the average cost for each patient with a similar background, with a disclaimer that it may not be accurate. Problem solved, unless you don't want to do it because then it'll prevent you from ramping up the prices unnecessarily later. |
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This happens all the time in software. Non-techies put a project out for bid. They will get estimates from a variety of consulting companies. The estimates could easily vary by an order of magnitude. Do they go with the lowest, because they are the most efficient operation? Or is the low price a sign that they're the dumbest, and are underestimating? Do they go with the highest, because in a market economy price is correlated with value? Or are those guys just the gougers?
And medicine is worse, because things are so contingent. Complications get complicated indeed. And the person trying to make the decision is pretty likely to be sick. I tell you true: deciding what to do about cancer is hard enough without trying to organize and judge a multi-round competitive bidding process.