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Some in the crowd of more than 2,000 mostly doctors booed when Obama said he doesn't support caps on how much money patients harmed by doctors can seek in medical malpractice lawsuits. But the audience was largely receptive during his nearly hour-long speech. Doctors greeted the president like a rock star, standing on tiptoes and clicking cell-phone cameras in between loud applause. They gave him several standing ovations. Dr. Nicholas Vedder, a Seattle plastic surgeon, said several colleagues told him the president's speech persuaded them to support his public plan concept. Vedder, who supported the idea before the speech, said the AMA's vote shows "they've seen the writing on the wall." "To the extent we can help shape the policy rather than oppose, American medicine will be better served," Vedder said. Dr. Ted Epperly, a family physician from Boise, Idaho and public-plan supporter, said he's "philosophically troubled" the AMA didn't take a stronger stand, but that it was better than nothing. And Dr. Michael Goldrich, a former AMA board member who remains unconvinced on the public option, said he nonetheless supports the delegates' vote and AMA leaders' desire to have "a meaningful dialogue with the administration." "Everything that happened at this meeting," Goldrich said, "really reflects AMA's genuine desire ... to try to achieve effective health system reform." ___ On the Net:
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