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Two case studies in government waste:
As you can likely imagine right now a lot of people in medicine are sharing tales and taking sides in the great DOGE debate. Two that popped up on my radar and stuck out to me:
Some problems: -As an emergency room most of their patients have no insurance or Medicare or Medicaid, meaning the facility often get paid less than cost. They only stay open at all because of their state grants.
-Many of the patients are drug addicts or malingering (because of homelessness for example). Every day you’ll hear something like “you’ve been here every day for the last three weeks” or “have you considered stopping using PCP? You always seem to fight with the police when you do” and “here’s your follow-up appointment, will you go? No? Fuck me? Okay thank you have a nice day.”
-Many of the patients who do actually have mental illness are in denial about it, or have some sort of limitation that prevents them from attending aftercare appointments.
-The “best” solution is probably to violate patient rights and involuntarily commit them to make someone else be on the hook for making sure they go to their aftercare.
-In the meantime, the hospital has hired several additional staff to manage some of the administrative complexities associated with this change (for example hammer calling the patients to remind them to come to the appointment). They have also hired night staff whose job is to sit in an office overnight purely to schedule appointments with an outpatient program (otherwise no patient could be discharged overnight because they wouldn’t have an appointment to go to…).
Anyway, he dutifully completed his requirements in a timely fashion (which were all pointless! Ex: what is the motto of the VA???). So, months later his rotation is starting soon. He begins the process of emailing the education team once every 2-4 business days. You have to email them multiple times before they respond. The conversation goes something like this over the course of multiple weeks, “I think I’ve completed my onboarding do I have to do anything else?” “no” “okay is my onboarding done” “no” “okay when can I pick up my ID card” “when your onboarding is done” “I thought my onboarding was done” “yes” “okay what I am waiting on” “nothing.” I have seen the emails; it really looks like this.
At this point his program tells him to CC the chief of medicine at the VA hospital, at which point the person responds with “okay we put in a ticket for this a month ago, your training is complete but your training is marked as incomplete.” A screenshot has been attached that shows the request and an automatic response that says something about high ticket volume and that they will get to it at some point. The chief of medicine replies “….does the trainee need to do anything?” (we are here).
The resident will be able to rotate but will not be able to do any work without computer access.
It’s worth noting that the VA is paying for this resident to be there, despite the fact he will in fact not be able to do anything. At his last VA rotation (yes they go through this for every resident every time) he was six weeks into an eight week rotation before he got access.
Widespread narcan use is surely one of the biggest disasters in the history of modern America.
Imagine if tomorrow, a new medicine called Dementiolab or whatever comes out. It doesn’t prevent or cure Dementia, it doesn’t even slow its progression while someone still has a personality and life to hold on to. But, at the second-to-very-last-stage of the disease, the “giant violent baby” phase, the nightmare phase, Dementiolab prolongs life by 10x, keeping patients alive for many years. American hospitals rush to prescribe this new treatment, after all it literally prolongs the lifespan of dementia patients by a huge amount.
But for insurers, the public purse, families of patients and (I would argue) the patients themselves, it would of course be a disaster. It even further fuels the drug market because when customers don’t die, they come back to buy another day.
Narcan is like this for hard drug addicts. For generations, addicts who got into a really bad way, the kind you can’t really recover from (in 99% of cases), just died. But in Narcan, we invented a Dementiolab, a means to keep people alive in a horrific condition, resurrected again and again to keep suffering, and to keep making everyone else’s life worse.
Humanity, decency, even empathy requires that we stop giving addicts Narcan. If a 7 year old accidentally ingests some fentanyl then sure, otherwise no.
I am skeptical of any plan that involves causing large numbers of people to die on the basis that the world would be better off without them. What if it isn't? You would have just caused a bunch of deaths for no reason.
It'd be pretty embarrassing if you wiped out all the heroin addicts, then a few months later someone came out with a new AI-devised wonderdrug that can cure all addictions with a single pill.
Your framing of the problem is wrong.
In a suicide, the fault for the death ultimately lies with the one who pulls the trigger.
Overdose deaths are suicides.
That was their choice to make, and an isolated demand for rigor: if we actually cared about this for human beings more generally, cryopreservation would be a much larger industry.
If overdose deaths are suicides, then they're accidental suicides. The proper term for an accidental suicide is "fatal accident". Normally, when someone suffers a serious accident but survives, we give them medical attention to try to keep them alive.
I actually don't have a problem with suicide, provided it's intentional and done right. I think the authorities should make you wait a few weeks to confirm you're really sure you want to die, then shoot you up with lots of fun but deadly drugs.
What I do have a problem with is denying lifesaving treatment to people on the (unproven!) basis that they're a drain on society.
If you choose to repeatedly engage in an activity that you know has a high risk of death, that's just suicide with plausible deniability. I don't consider someone who loses a game of Russian roulette to have suffered a "fatal accident".
No, mere thrill-seeking is not "suicide with plausible deniability" nor is engaging in dangerous activities with more tangible rewards (e.g. tower-climbing as a job). Probably most addicts aren't trying to kill themselves either, they're just chasing a high. But since they aren't sharing the reward with the rest of us, I don't see why we should socialize the risk either.
I would distinguish activities that have a tangible, elevated risk of death from ones that have a risk of death high enough that the odds of dying in repeated acts over time approaches 1. Riding a motorcycle or smoking is risky, but someone who does those things, even their whole life, is not likely to die from them even though they might. Consuming recreational doses of street narcotics is something that, if you do it frequenlty enough, is very likely to kill you sooner or later.
I believe your distinction is arbitrary. And in any case I suspect the actual value of the thing you're trying to compute (probability of dying from the drugs instead of something else) is not something available, or even well-defined.
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Philosophy question: to what extent do we as people owe each other to stop suicide attempts? Discuss.
On one hand, we've put up nets and installed phones and nationwide hotlines and circulated narcan. On the other, some Western states have legalized euthanasia for increasingly minor medical issues. To me, the former feels reasonable (although I find OPs argument about narcan to be at least darkly intriguing), and the latter feels like it starts reasonably but quickly slides down the slippery slope. I know some moral codes (Catholicism, for one) are blanket-opposed to aiding suicide.
I'm interested to hear other opinions on where the line should be.
I think euthanasia should be legal. I think there should be quite a lot of oversight of the process, but I'm not against governments doing cost-benefit analyses of who gets care.
By revealed preferences, it's impossible to care infinitely about a given life. If that wasn't the case, then the entire global economic output would be spent on the first kid who showed up with terminal cancer. Not even those who claim that Life Is Priceless act like that's true. The Pope isn't selling his mobile to save one more starving child in Africa. Even the Dalai Lama has personal possessions, and expensive ones.
Once you accept that (and no population on earth could function without doing so) , all that remains is figuring out how much society implicitly or explicitly values life and making it legible. Yes, it sucks. But we're not gods with unlimited resources.
(If you wish to spend your own funds on your care, then I have no objection to you spending as much as you can afford, your money, your choice. But if you're spending my money, through taxes..)
I also think that anyone who can prove they possess capacity (in the medicolegal sense) should have the right to end their lives.
I'd be open to that being a difficult process, you'd need doctors to sign you off as sane and not suffering from a disease that impairs judgement (and can be cured).
No, I avoid tautology by not claiming that just wanting to die is sufficient grounds to be diagnosed with a mental illness and hence lack capacity. I think there are philosophical reasons that are consistent with wanting to die, for reasons other than depression.
(Severe depression that is resistant to all treatment is, IMO, a terminal illness)*
I hold this position despite being severely depressed, with occasional suicidal ideation. I recognize that I don't want to be depressed or suicidal, and want that part of me excised. I'm quite confident I would never act on that (and doctors know how to make it quick, painless, and irreversible), and if my disease somehow overwhelmed my true volition, I would want to be saved.
I think that unless someone has formally applied for a Suicide License, the default presumption should be that something is wrong with them, and they don't actually want it. This allows us to try and save people who jump off bridges or take paracetamol after a bad breakup. I differ from most people in that I would accept people wanting to die for more considered reasons.
Of course, in the Real World, my hands are tied by laws and code of conducts that physicians must agree to if they want to stay out of jail and in their job. But that's my stance on the matter.
*I haven't exhausted all options, far from it. I even expect that we'll have a generalized cure for depression in my lifetime. I still am not comfortable with telling someone with depression so bad life has lost meaning that they must hold out in hopes of a cure, suffering all the way.
"Safe,
lethallegal, and rare." I've been fooled by this before.That is to say, I believe you and believe your earnestness, but I just cannot conceive of how you would stop cultural slide on this without a solid Chesterton fence.
I'm a radical transhumanist who aspires to live forever, and wants that for everyone else. I can't think of any conclusive argument that proves beyond reasonable doubt that such measures won't be taken to a place that's not palatable for me, and I really wish I had them.
I just think it's worth a shot, even as a small pilot program.
Even if this never happens, I wouldn't lose sleep over it. I think that the kind of person who was that intent on dying would find a way, you don't have to be a doctor to figure out ways to kill yourself. It just makes it easier to achieve without leaving a mess.
Clayton Atraeus managed it, and he was down to two arms and a head.
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But how confident are you that you would never act on that if you had been raised in a society that not only tolerates suicide but excuses and justifies it? In the depths of despair, when the abyss swallows your vision and knowing that doctors could do it quickly, easily and painlessly, then are you confident you would never go through with it?
Quite confident. If my heterodox views are any indication, I'm not someone particularly susceptible to conformity or peer pressure. How many people do you think were born and raised in my circumstances and turned out the way I did? I defy neat classification.
If society was unchanged in terms of medical technology and overall technological progress, but actively encouraged suicide, I still don't think I'd opt for it. I'd demand that every possible treatment be tried first, then possibly ask for a legal document put in place that debarred me from applying for a lengthy period of time, no matter the cause. I'd spend the rest of my life hoping for a cure, and wouldn't give up until I was dying of other causes. If I really wanted to die, I already have more opportunities than I can count (not that the average person doesn't, bridges and busses aren't rare objects).
Do note that I would prefer that even if euthanasia on demand was an option, that there were multiple safe-guards in place to minimize impulse decisions. That would include medical review for reversible causes, counseling with therapists paid a bonus for every patient they talk out of it (to align incentives), and a wait time of a few months. If at any point someone has second thoughts, the wait time gets pushed back another few months.
Hell, keep it a secret under NDA that the first time they put you in the suicide pod, it's actually a drill. If you start screaming and want to be let out, that's when they tell you and swear you to secrecy. Even during the real thing, leave a big red button that would stop the process, if it's a lethal drug, have a bottle of antidote by their side when they're given it.
There was an incredibly poignant video of an elderly francophone lady taking her euthanasia meds for a terminal illness. She was lucid and in absolute control, and speaking till she went to sleep and never woke up. That's what I want the average person who takes this route to look like.
At that point, I'd be content that we're looking at people with incurable illnesses who can't be talked out of their intent. My confidence in an eventual cure for almost all disease isn't so strong that I would demand people hold out for it, that's their choice to make. My choice, at every point in the 10+ years I've been depressed, is to live for a better future.
Those are good measures, although like pusher_robot I would expect them to scope creep a lot. Rules or laws with any ambiguity seem to inevitably fall victim to the death of a thousand cuts. We've already seen euthanasia for a depressed 29 year old in the Netherlands.
But I'm not so worried about patients requesting assisted suicide as I am about the people with access to buses and bridges who suffer in silence and don't have educated medical professionals to help them. It's not really peer pressure, I'm talking more about a society where the emotional valence of suicide is not negative and how that will impact the depressed in general. A world where the water we breathe says 'suicide is an option actually' instead of 'suicide is a tragedy'. I am strong enough in this world to not submit to despair, but I don't know if I would be strong enough in that world. Not when that black dog has me and suicide seems like the only chance for something resembling relief.
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I think importing doctors from poor countries gives you doctors with lower than average amounts of empathy. Seeing human misery up close creates calloused human beings.
I'd be ok with writing a 30 day high dose script of dilaudid that a terminal patient could take all at once to kill themselves with, but the physical act of administering that lethal dose is where I draw the line. If they need help let the family do it.
I hope euthanasia never becomes legal here because I wouldn't like that in my job description and I wouldn't like to interact professionally with anybody who is ok with that. I wouldn't want to work alongside a high-kill-count sniper or kamikaze-drone operator either.
I think I've got plenty of empathy, or at least the average as doctors go. That being said, while empathy is always nice to have in a doctor, I'd personally prefer one that was incredibly competent at addressing your problems even if they weren't tearing up over your plight.
Would you say that a doctor who volunteers for the MSF has lower empathy because of their experience with crushing poverty and disease? Probably not, though I'm happy to note there are selection effects involved. What about one that grew up in an inner-city ghetto but was bright enough to enter med school? Is that a bad thing?
I've seen crushing poverty, and when I volunteered to transfer to one of the largest hospitals in my home country (to work for free), I saw things that emotionally wrecked me. As the essay notes, you either harden your heart or exsanguinate.
It didn't make me a worse doctor, quite the contrary. I went out of my way to help people, and still do.
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I think it’s probably good to help create a minimum effort threshold for suicide; things like putting railings on bridges and nets on high buildings make it so that individuals struck by an acute but fleeting suicidal urge are protected from doing something they’d almost immediately regret.
The people accessing medically-assisted suicide, or using other high-effort methods of suicide requiring persistent and focused intent, are probably people who genuinely are better off dead. Not every human life is destined to last until a peaceful death in old age. Not every person is psychologically constituted in a way that’s resilient to all of the various tribulations that life throws at us. I probably wouldn’t personally pull the trigger or inject the deadly solution myself if one of those people asked me, but I’m fine with professionals existing who are willing and able to do so.
As for hard drug addicts, my impression is that only a small percentage of junkies are the sorts of people who’d be very valuable contributors to society if we managed to fix their addictions. Drugs are not taking our best, in other words. I’m aware that there are some unknown number of totally normal middle-class individuals who got hooked on opiates because they were led astray by unscrupulous doctors overprescribing them; my impression is that this represents only a very small percentage of addicts, and that their numbers are being inflated by a populist coalition determined to treat impoverished white Americans as hypoagentic victims.
Junkies killing themselves, whether through overdoses or other means, is overwhelmingly a boon to society, and I think almost zero effort should be taken to prevent them from doing so.
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Suicide is a form of murder: self-murder. We make efforts to stop murders, we should make efforts to stop suicide. Overall, society must signal disapproval of suicide. Cultures that honor or otherwise approve (even the implied approval of not bothering to do anything about it) fall into failure modes that our current society doesn't, without much obvious benefit. See Imperial Japan, for instance, which continued fighting long past the point where there was no hope of victory because their culture venerated honorable death over defeat. It did their society active harm. Their suicide rate remained high up until around 2010, when it began to drop and has continued to drop until today, where the suicide rate is actually a little less than the United States (it went from a high of 25.6 per 100K people in 2003 to around 12.2 today, compared to the US's 14.5).
Why did suicide rates drop so significantly in Japan? Well, in 2007 the government released a nine-step plan to lower suicide rates. Since then they funded suicide prevent services, suicide toll lines, mental health screenings for postpartum mothers, counseling services for depression, and in 2021 created a Ministry of Loneliness whose job is to reduce social isolation. In other words, when the Japanese government tried to make a societal effort towards preventing suicide, suicide rates dropped.
Which is good, because Japan needs every citizen it can get. Population is still dropping, and everyone who kills themselves can no longer contribute to society nor create and raise society's next generation.
Those people don't owe Japan their lives. Maybe if Japan wants them to contribute to society or create and raise society's next generation, it can make doing those things seem better than literal oblivion.
People owe the societies they live in, actually. If you want to go live in the woods with wolves and bears for neighbors then more power too you, that’s the condition for opting out.
Giving someone a service they never asked for, then claiming they owe you for it, is a classic scam. And this isn't the 16th century. There is nowhere you can run that a government won't find you. They own everything.
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If the world owes you nothing, you owe nothing to the world.
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Why is living in the woods a valid way to opt out, but killing yourself isn't?
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No. Commun
istsitarians tend to think this because it allows them to demand infinite sacrifice for zero benefit, but the social contract is continually and constantly renegotiated.In this case, society isn't holding up its end of the bargain- the "owes its members a future that's at least as good as it was before" part- and as a result, the individuals that make up society will under-deliver in TFR until it starts delivering.
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Kind of seems that that is exactly what they are doing: providing mental health services, attempting to find ways to reduce social isolation, trying to change social norms so that literal oblivion does not look like such a nice choice in comparison to social disgrace, etc.
No, they're trying to convince them not to choose oblivion despite not actually changing the conditions. That is, they're trying to get some marginal people from "life sucks so bad I'd rather be dead" to "life sucks almost bad enough I'd rather be dead", not generally improving conditions.
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