a professional class, that has been legally allowed in the past. To what extent it is part of the wholesale/retail schism is unknown by me, but if the drug distribution industry works as an oligopoly, and prices for therapeutic agents out of patent are rising precipitously,
rights to sell being sold off from the point of manufacture but the manufacturer keeps making it and agrees not to sell it to anyone else but the "rights holder": then, are the drug companies and doctors leveraging an artificially inflated wholesale/retail schism to keep the cost of treatment at doctor's offices higher than it otherwise needs to be?
Is 'the system' creating shell companies being run by favored persons and/or other affiliated 'corporate entities' simply to create a pyramidal accounting sham leading to industry specific hyperinflation as well as to undermine a free market and deliberately ration care for consumers?
So many bankruptcies are said to be for medical expenses, the doctors and health corporations that do this 'cost markup' as well as tacking on 'service fees' and accounting for them both as 'profit' must lack any economic empathy whatsoever. How can a doctor who claims to be "a professional corporation" be a human? Is that an alias and legal construct for "greedy SOB"?
Are doctors nickle and diming their patients? Do they truly need to? Or is it just to pay for that mansion so they can live on Highstreet USA and mostly to keep up with the rest of their professional 'pack'?
Was the historical American story of a doctor taking a live chicken in return for a house call simply a myth told to children and one designed to mitigate patients' perceptions of high fees and mask the tyranny of a professional class? Or did something fundamental change in the late 1800s, something in the laws governing the country, to make the consumer a preyed upon "class"?