A letter
from a reader about the Frist Campus Center
March 20, 2002
I apologize for being critical, since I am only obliquely
associated with Princeton, as a widow and a fiancee. However, on the President's
Page of March 13, the statement " the only complaint I hear
about Frist is that it needs to be five times bigger..." bleats for
comment.
Other than the name, there is no mention of the source of money to build
the center. Did it not come from profits made by the founder of HCA? Those
who believe that this money resulted from "efficiencies" in
the medical system should look more closely. They will see outstanding
doctors with the value of experience, not to be found in their young successors,
being forced into early retirement, in some cases financially devastating
their families. They will find excellent, . experienced nurses, exhausted
and frustrated to the point of tears, because they are unable to give
proper care to the increased number of patients for whom they are now
responsible. (Most of the new regime does not know the difference between
"treating" patients and "caring for" patients.) And,
of course, they will find the patients affected, who are prematurely forced
out of hospitals, an act which has, in some cases, resulted in preventable
death, as well as those who arrive at the hospital seriously injured,
and die because the hospital administrator decided to save money by eliminating
the specialist needed to save them.
The long-term effects of this bleeding of money from the medical providers
and transferring it to corporate executives and Wall Street investors
include the results of the reduction of funds to teaching hospitals, effects
which are seen now only by those directly involved. Alas, people in the
future will never realize that their or their loved one's life could have
been saved if our medical system bad continued its path before "managed
care," which is really "restricted care" and "managed
money." The physician's compassion, eloquently espoused in the Hippocratic
Oath, has been forced into a position subservient to profit.
These medical care providers are the individuals who paid, are paying
and will continue to pay the price for the elite of Princeton to delight
in their campus center.