Ummmm...I don't pretend to know much about finance, but I do know something about medicine; it's been my career since 1982. Before that, my career was getting into medical school...

, fortunately a much shorter career than the one afterwards. If you all will permit me a couple of observations:
1) it is hard to comprehend how badly off the American system of medical care is unless you work in it. Even getting sick and getting overpriced and poor quality care doesn't really send it home to you. Working in it, however, is eye-opening and distinctly unpleasant. There isn't a single day of work that I don't wish things were a great deal better. My experiences with my family members, living and dead, have been no better, I regret to say.
2) there are quite a few new medical schools opening up; the issue of a poor supply of doctors may become slightly less of an issue. However, the issue of poor distribution of the doctors that we DO have will not change. The solutions to this problem are not complex and have been well worked out in other countries, but until all the players involved in medical education (the government, the hospitals, the schools, the students- everyone) have the backbone to actually DO something about it, we will continue to have too many specialists, not enough primary care physicians, and uneven distribution of the doctors we do have. We will also have too many of the wrong kind of specialists- for example, too many plastic surgeons, and too few intensivists. What is particularly distressing is that quite a few new grads would go into primary care specialties (FP, IM, Peds, OB/GYN, EM) but the debt load accumulated in medical school discourages people from doing so. Other countries have dealt with this far better than we have- including Mexico and Cuba and Brazil. Embarrassing that countries regarded as third-world are actually better at serving more of their population with medical care than we are here.
3) I am painfully aware that the legislation which is about to pass is flawed and does not address many of the above concerns. In addition, the legislation does not actually address medical care; it addresses the availability of health insurance, which is a different thing altogether, although it is related to medical care. Initatives which help give citizens the financial wherewithal to see a physician are not the same thing as actually providing medical care, although they may be helpful, and we should not confuse the two. But everyone does.
However, the current situation is SO bad (please believe this from someone who has spent his professional life, or most of it, in the current situation) that it is essential to do something that begins to move us out of the mess we are in. It took decades to make this mess, and it will take at least decades to get us out of it. The process will be painful for all the players involved- patients, physicians, hospitals, schools, insurers- have I left anyone out? But it is essential to transform the current dysfunctional and unproductive system into something that more nearly meets our needs and wastes somewhat less of our money, effort and time. Unless you work in this system, you cannot comprehend the degrees of inefficiency and waste with which we all suffer. I may love what I do, but I don't love the situation in which I do it.
Please note that in pointing out the above I have tried very hard to avoid inflammatory rhetoric and fingerpointing. As Pogo said years ago, "we have met the enemy and he is us." We all made this disaster; unless we all participate in fixing it, it will go unfixed.