I didn't meant to suggest that ALL, a majority, nor even a substantial minority of HC providers are crooked, they aren't. That said, I think you and for that matter everyone would agree that SOME of them are. There have been PLENTY of cases of Medicare fraud. I've also dealt with crooked WC Docs. Not saying all are, just that there are enough that it has an impact on the system as a whole.
Old Joke:
Plaintiff is on the stand being questioned (Direct) by his attorney:
Attorney: After your injury did you see a Doctor?
Plaintiff: Yes I did.
Attorney: What kind of doctor did you see?
Plaintiff: I don't know, but you said he was a good Plaintiff's Doctor.
That joke applies because it DOES happen.
Of course it happens. But the company's insurers also send the plaintiff to a good defendant's doctor. In California--and probably most places--there is now an IME (independent medical examiner). I haven't been around WC for so long that I don't remember / keep up with how that person is selected, but it's to try to avoid this issue. It helps, but it isn't perfect (nor does it completely do away with party-hired doctors).
Medina, to your point about the government contractors in WWII and asbestos: absolutely. There were criminally bad actors in the world of asbestos manufacturing/supply. The actively hid the killing that their product inflicted. There is an infamous memo that says (paraphasing): the bad news is this stuff is killing our employees; the good news is they will be productive workers for most of their working years if we don't tell them. Might have been Johns Manville execs? One of the big asbestos manufacturers in any case. Most of the users, including the contractors whose people installed the stuff, weren't aware of the risks as of the 40s; and as the risks were becoming more and more known, because asbestos was such a valuable material, the research focused on the biggest problem areas first: (1) employees in the manufacturing plants; (2) workers who installed the stuff in enclosed dusty environments (definitely including the interior of ships); then it spread out to most anyone who works with the stuff.
But people still die terrible deaths because of exposure and the manufacturers were wiped out a long time ago, so plaintiffs put on stories about how everyone knew that working in dusty environments was bad for people, so if someone was exposed to the dusty environment, their employers were negligent. It is still a winning strategy. In a sense it's very closely related to the WC problem: you were injured on the job (or because your parent--normally dad--brought the stuff home on his clothes) through no fault of your own. Should there be compensation? I think it's fair. Should there be massive jury awards because you tick all the right sympathy blocks? Probably not. Should companies that didn't really do anything wrong be paying for the lack of full understanding of the risks? They should probably contribute (their insurers, truth be told), but at this point, my argument is that the insurers should pony money up into a pool, and the feds should probably supplement that pool, and there should be an administor who pays compensation based on a set of established criteria. That should have been done 20-30 years ago, but there wasn't quite enough political will to make it happen.