Naw, they'll just find new ways to do it that the detection technology hasn't caught up with, and unfortunately the year-round baseline testing means more people will dope year-round, with the concomitant side effects, rather than just before an event.
I still don't know where you draw the line. LASIK? That surgery the baseball pitchers have? Reconstruction of a knee ligament? Targeted nutrition? Lactate threshold or arterial blood gas testing? Sleeping in one of those hypoxic tents? It's all medical technology that gives a clear performance advantage. What exactly is wrong with EPO that couldn't be said about any of those things?
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
It can kill you.
Of course, one could die on the operation table, but that is somewhat less likely than a misuse of EPO leading to heart failure. http://www.rice.edu/~jenky/sports/epo.html
When Geneviève Jeanson (a former queen of female pro cycling, especially climbing) admitted to doping at every single one of her winning races with EPO for her whole career (despite strongly denying it until that day last year), she also explained how she was scared of dying when her heart rate would go dangerously low at night. When EPO first came around, lots of racers died in their sleep. At some point they figured out that they needed to have an alarm to wake them up every other hour during their sleep to avoid dying.