Tales of a family doctor: Real cost control


This afternoon, my associate, Dr. Michele Gomez, spent over an hour battling (so far without success) to get approval for an MRI for a patient with new neurologic symptoms and a history of metastatic lung cancer.  The reason for this ridiculous waste of time?  Three different insurers each admitted that although she was insured, it was another local branch which had to take responsibility for payment.

Though written for physicians, I am sure that TPM readers will appreciate this as well.  The carefully researched links are definitely worth exploring. This will be cross-posted at The Daily Kos on May 7. Please look for it and my other posts here.

Listening to Dr. Gomez' crusade from across the room, I shook my head.  Since our President has started to move forward on health care reform I've heard and agreed with his stark diagnosis: "The biggest driver of long-term deficits are the huge health care costs," he warned in his March 24 press conference.  "It is going to be an impossible task for us to balance our budget if we're not taking on rising health care costs."

Yet while I nod in agreement with President Obama's diagnosis, his treatment seems homeopathically weak and divorced from the reality I experience every day.....

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A new approach to action on health care


Sione Alipate (name changed for privacy) has been a patient of mine since I started practice nearly twenty years ago.  Before that he was a patient of my predecessor.  His chart goes back to 1970, at least.

cross-posted on The DailyKos at http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/3/14/154550/702/88/705720

He is now seventy years old, a retired food handler for Sky Chefs, who immigrated to the United States over forty years ago from the island nation of Tonga.  At my urging he recently became an American citizen and voted, with great pride, in his first presidential election.

He is a strong but gentle and soft-spoken man.  But last week he was near tears in my office as he and I discovered that the choices he had been offered for his health insurance coverage meant he might no longer be able to keep me as his primary care physician.

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Another day, another story: A family doctor's cry for change


Saturday was a short day in the office.  I came in to handle some paperwork and to see a few patients whom I couldn't manage to work in over the course of a busy week. It was an ordinary day with a typical, ordinary selection of patients....which is to say, that almost every one came with a story which cried out about how we desperately need change in our health care system.

Note: In the interest of developing diverse dialogue on this topic, this essay was first posted in slightly modified form at RedState.com where it was surprisingly well-received.... before it was removed and I was "banned"...  for expressing a politically incorrect view?  It has also been cross-posted on The Daily Kos, here, also in a slightly different form.


The first item on my plate was a patient who called to say that the asthma medication he had been on for years and which had allowed him to control his symptoms and stay out of the hospital was no longer covered by his insurance.

I explained to him that there were likely alternatives that would probably work as well and proceeded to compose an email to his pharmacist, outlining the possibilities I wanted him to explore.

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Tales of a Family Doctor-- care delayed is care denied


Shirley Crandall (her name and circumstances have been altered slightly in the interest of privacy) has been a patient in my office since late October last year.  She's a hard worker who's held a demanding job for many years as the financial manager in a home improvement business.  She's survived a fair amount of hardship in recent years-- a divorce, pain from gallstones and then surgery, a temporarily disabling knee injury--but she's always bounced back.
Note:
This

Things changed, however, this summer when her boss went on a rampage, violently slamming his fist on her desk, yelling to her face, looking for a victim upon which to blame his own business failures.  She became frightened, unable to sleep, unable to eat properly.  She felt jumpy and was unable even to drive in the direction of her work without developing feelings of intense anxiety.  She had developed a form of post-traumatic stress disorder.



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Let's Take Them Seriously


No story today.  I've got one in the works but taking care of family and patients is priority one for the next couple of days... (cross-posted at Daily Kos http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/12/9/8172/04279/227/670987)

But there is some time pressure to consider what we've been asked to do by the Obama Transition Team. We've been asked to contribute, not just money and time (though these appeals do continue), but ideas. http://change.gov/

http://change.gov/...

Sign up to host a health care community discussion over the holidays

Health care is a top priority for President-elect Obama, and he wants your help in reforming the system to provide quality, affordable health care for all Americans. That's why this holiday season, we're asking you to give us the gift of your ideas and input.

Sign up to host a Health Care Community Discussion anytime from December 15th to 31st.

We'll provide all our hosts with special moderator kits that will give you everything you need to get the discussion going. And Senator Tom Daschle, the leader of the Transition's Health Policy Team, will even choose one discussion to attend in person.


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28 Minutes, 16 Seconds and Still Holding: Tales of a Family Doc


I have to admit it.  I'm feeling guilty.

In my last post I admitted that I had thrown in the towel.  Rather than go to bat again for my patient whose medication had been denied by his new insurance company, I gave in and prescribed an alternative that might not work as well.

Well, today the guilt got me going so I re-read the two page denial letter.  Again I found the words explaining the reasons for the denial, two of which amounted to advocating for unscientific medicine, even malpractice.  And I found the additional sentence, buried about two thirds of the way down page two, which said that I could call the "800" number on the page to talk with the doctor who had reviewed the case and denied my prescription request.


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Another day, another story: Tales of a primary care doc


Every day I practice medicine I get a new story.

 

Today I attended a "pod group" meeting over lunch.  Billed as meetings of primary care providers hosted by our local medical group to allow us to get together and share items of importance to our practice, the meetings instead have degenerated into coaching sessions about how to "code" patient encounters in order to maximize income, for the medical group and, secondarily, for us.

 

The care provided by family practitioners, pediatricians, and general internists--primary care providers-- is known to be the most cost effective in medicine.  We know our patients.  We understand where they are coming from.  We can use this knowledge to tell, often, when a belly ache is a sign of serious disease, when a serious investigation is needed, or when reassurance and a little "tincture of time" is all that is needed.


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I'm only a family doctor


I arrived this morning in the office at 8:50 a.m. to find Glenda, my office manager, buried in charts.  She had been there since 6:30, simultaneously arranging referrals that had been requested the day before, making sure that we had properly completed the detailed forms required by the Child Health and Disability Prevention Program that helps pay for the preventive care provided to some of our poorer patients, and listening to the voice mail from pharmacies to get the medication refill requests in order for me before the day begins in earnest. 

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A Chance to Begin From Scratch


A Chance to Begin From Scratch:

How Obama Can Fix The Economy and The Health Care System At The Same Time

Aaron M. Roland, M.D.

 

 

In the face of an economic crisis unprecedented in more than half a century, pundits are asking how President-elect Obama will alter his ambitious proposals.  The implication is that economic hardship must lead to scaling back or even abandonment of the change upon which he had based his campaign.  

 

            Certainly, in the face of changing conditions, the new President will have to reconsider his plans.  But in the case of health care, the crisis may have an unexpected effect. It may allow Obama move beyond his modest proposals to something far more comprehensive.

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How Real Health Care Reform Can Save Detroit


            Washington policymakers love to compartmentalize problems and their solutions.

            

            There is a bank bailout, a mortgage aid plan, an automaker rescue, a healthcare access proposal.

 

            But sometimes the solutions may be better conceived through a unified approach. 

 

            The near bankruptcy of the automakers which has alarmed us in recent days points to the nexus between multiple problems and their solutions.  While Washington insiders have proposed emergency funding for loan guarantees or retooling of the auto industry, another tack could address not just the Detroit's woes, but those of the nation as a whole.

 

            Of the various economic burdens faced by the automakers none is larger or more ongoing than that presented by health care costs.  This has become the focus of ongoing conflict with labor unions as workers face economic and health insecurity.  Health care cost add nearly $2000 to the price of each automobile, making competition with foreign automakers increasingly problematic.

 

            For individuals, health care costs are the number one reason for lack of insurance, contribute to the majority of bankruptcies, and are a factor in over one quarter of home foreclosures.

 

            Although President-elect Obama has proposed to include health care finance reform as a central part of his domestic agenda, his proposals so far offer nothing to cash strapped businesses.  Indeed, the employer mandate he has offered will only add to the cost of doing business.

 

            The solution to this problem lies in linking health care reform to economic incentive and providing truly universal coverage while reducing our national expenditures for health care.

 

The current private insurance based health care system has become a bureaucratic nightmare of buck-passing and profiteering.  It is rife with waste that has nothing to do with providing quality comprehensive health care.  Indeed, only some 65% of health insurance premiums are spent on health care. Instead, insurance company executives earn hundreds of millions of dollars while corporate marketing departments spend fortunes selling insurance to the healthy just as their utilization departments resist paying for the care of those who become ill.

 

Rather than inviting a mandate that business pay to expand this wasteful system, the economic crisis offers the new President the opportunity most other reformers have not had--the chance to begin from scratch.  The American people have voiced an overwhelming desire for change.  We have come to understand that business as usual isn't always good business and that the business models that private systems create don't always work in the public interest.

 

Turning to Medicare, the second pillar of our current national health financing system, the President and Americans can envision another alternative.  With centralized funding and near universal enrollment of the population it serves, Medicare provides better quality care and higher satisfaction at a substantially lower cost than the private health system. Paling before the bloated bureaucracy of its private cousin, Medicare's administrative costs are only 3% of its funding.  No surprise, as there are no resources spent on avoiding care for the sick, marketing, investor relations, or corporate profits.

 

Abandoning a private health insurance system for an improved Medicare For All would immediately result in dramatic savings to our nation's health care bill.  But to truly help the struggling business sector the financing of this system, ideally with a new and progressive tax, could be phased in over a several year period as an economic stimulus.

 

Businesses which now fund health care as a cost on their bottom line could immediately eliminate that cost, with the bill being paid through a combination of temporary deficit spending and a widely distributed low tax levied on consumption or as part of a revised and simplified income tax reform.

 

Eliminating the a multitude of public and private programs which currently pay for segmented components of health care, eliminating our national sense of insecurity about paying for health care, eliminating all parts of the health care bureaucracy that don't directly relate to providing care, a move towards Medicare for All provides a way to solve our automakers' crisis, and our own.  

 

 

 

 

             

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Dr. Roland is a family physician whose work within a private practice of broad economic and ethnic diversity has melded with his experience and training in politics and public policy to nurture a unique perspective on and commitment to fundamental health care reform.

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