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Posts Tagged ‘national healthcare’

September 7th, 2009

Public Healthcare and Major League Baseball

Margarita

Dr. Thomas Lee

Dr. Thomas Lee

Dr. Thomas Lee had a wonderful editorial trying to contrast baseball to public health care option.

Dr. Thomas Lee says the better way of understanding the appropriate role of government and regulation in health care is to take a closer look at a completely different industry — such as, say, baseball. To many, baseball represents an American ideal for free-market opportunity. Player and team performance can be measured objectively and comprehensively with a wide array of statistics such as RBI, HR, ERA, and OBP. And the best players advance to the major leagues and garner the highest salaries. Regulation and centralized intervention play a minimal role in major league baseball. Or do they?

A closer look reveals that something as simple as baseball has more than 220 pages of rules and regulations. The 2009 Official MLB Rulebook has 17 pages alone devoted to the objectives of the game.

In that rulebook, it’s stated that “the infield shall be a 90-foot square.” The bat “shall be a smooth, round stick not more than 2 3/4 inches in diameter at the thickest part and not more than 42 inches in length.” And the ball “shall be a sphere formed by yarn wound around a small core of cork, rubber or similar material, covered with two stripes of white horsehide or cowhide, tightly stitched together. It shall weigh not less than five nor more than 5 1/4 ounces avoirdupois and measure not less than nine nor more than 9 1/4 inches in circumference.” Avoirdupois? And we thought health care IT standards harmonization was obscure?

The point is that all competitive markets have some form of central regulation and control. Whether you call them rules, laws or regulations, they allow competitive markets to work better. And a central body needs to define those rules, whether they be a baseball commissioner or Congress.

If you accept the baseball analogy, then it’s easy to concede that government (or some central body) should have a significant role in shaping how health care is “played.” This is true of almost all industries big or small and should apply to health care as well. The bigger question then is: What role should that be?

For those in the Obama administration, it appears that the government should not only provide the regulatory framework for how health care is financed and delivered in this country. But it should also offer a health insurance option that competes with private insurers. And to carry the metaphor into the health IT market, should government offer a competing electronic health record?

 

The analog in baseball would be for Major League Baseball — the corporate entity that oversees the game — to field a team that competed with other MLB teams. And that this MLB-owned team could play by a different set of rules (didn’t need to support its expenses, could have losses subsidized by taxpayers, etc).

One can imagine that such a team could hire the best players, charge less for tickets and potentially win the most games while running huge deficits. Even if the MLB-owned team was forced to play by the same financial rules, it would nevertheless send a strong message to others that it doesn’t believe that the other MLB teams were playing to their potential, and that it could do better. 

Granted, it’s fair to say that many employers, patients and physicians are not happy with their current private insurance options. But is creating a public insurance option really the best solution? If baseball were played with a 50-pound lead ball, would adding an MLB-owned team to the mix solve the underlying problem? Of course not. The fundamental rules for playing the game need to be changed, not the number or types of teams.

Which Game Are We Playing?

Unfortunately, the “game” of health care today is much more complicated than baseball. And certainly more important. Birth, health, illness and death are more profoundly intertwined with our humanity than bases, bats or balls. But it’s possible that the simple principles that make baseball such a successful, competitive sport could apply to the health care industry as well.

Such principles could include:

  • Design the playground, not the players. As tempting as it might be to say that health care should be delivered in a certain way by specific types of people or organizations, that stifles any form of creativity and is only likely to drive labor costs up. Defining the landscape with simple constraints and fair play in mind will foster better competition in the long run.
  • Foster a single competitive arena with uniform standards of competition. It rarely does a sport any good if there are two separate leagues playing with slightly different rules and teams. No victory is ever complete. And competition is never as vigorous. This certainly could be no truer than in the health insurance market where it’s more cost-advantageous to have everyone sharing from a single, large risk insurance pool. Risk-adjusted payments could level the playing field to avoid cherry-picking.
  • Empower, don’t patronize, the consumer. If consumers are spending their own money directly, they are much more likely to seek value-based outputs. Yes, health care quality is more difficult to understand and not everything should be a consumable. But providing consumers with the right incentives will allow them to find and select better solutions in the long run.
  • All teams should play by the same rules. This should go without saying, but it sometimes can get lost that the government may not need to play by the same rules as the private sector. If that happens, then the concept of true competition is lost.

 

There are plenty of other principles that could likely be applied but the key point is the health care industry, unintentionally or not, has been designed in a fundamentally flawed way. We’ve been playing in a health care system with 50-pound lead balls, balsa bats and free admission. And blaming or competing against the team owners or players will not solve the primary problem. The rulebook simply needs to be rewritten.

(Article source: ihealthbeat.org)

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September 6th, 2009

Pregnant Women will wait for Epidurals with National Healthcare

Irving

Dr. Ronald Dworkin is an anesthesiologist at the Greater Baltimore Medical Center. Dr. Dworkin has authored the book  Artificial Happiness: The Dark Side of the New Happy Class. His essays on religion, medical science, and healthcare have appeared in The Weekly Standard, Commentary, Public Interest, and Policy Reviews.

Dr. Dworkin has uncovered a desire to skimp on anesthesia in the healthcare bill that Congress’s is proposing. On one of the health-care bills in Congress, H.R. 3200, the public option would reduce reimbursement for anesthesia by over 50%.

Dr. Ronald Dworkin (mentalhelp.net)

Dr. Ronald Dworkin (mentalhelp.net)

There is an old adage: You can skimp on some medicine, but you can’t skimp on obstetrics or anesthesiology. An elderly surgeon explained it to me this way, “In surgery, people die in days and weeks—a doctor has time to fix a mistake. But in obstetrics and anesthesiology, they die in minutes and seconds.”

Quality of anesthesiology care will inevitably decline. A woman in labor should not wait much more than five minutes for her epidural.  During an obstetrical emergency, a short-staffed anesthesia departments will scramble to send someone to perform the C-section. Don’t forget, a baby has only nine minutes of oxygen when the umbilical cord prolapses, so time is of the essence.

 

So we should expect that pregnant women will be waiting a lot longer for epidurals. But more pain on the labor floor is only the beginning. If hospitals delay the administration of anesthesia because Congress skimped, needless deaths will certainly result.

In 1996, he co-founded the Calvert Institute for Policy Research, a Maryland public policy center directed at looking at the entire range of state and local public policy issues. In 1998, he was Ellen Sauerbrey’s senior health policy advisor during her gubernatorial campaign and chairman of her health policy task force. In 2000, Dr. Dworkin joined the Hudson Institute as a senior fellow.

READ MORE ABOUT DR. RONALD DWORKIN

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August 26th, 2009

Dr. Vance Harris Concerned for Future of Primary Care Physicians

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Dr. Vance Harris

Dr. Vance Harris

The pending Obama Health Care reform, although negatively anticipated by many, stresses the importance of a stable and caring primary physician to each and every citizen of United States.  However, if health care were to become available to millions more Americans, would there be enough primary care physicians available?

Dr. Vance Harris addresses this problematic concern in his CNN commentary:

“Fewer and fewer medical students are choosing primary care and many primary care doctors are leaving the field.”

Considered to be the busiest physician specialty, primary care physicians (PCPs) filter the initial medical concerns for each new and old patient, and if necessary, refer patients to specialists accordingly.  This allows the specialists to see more patients (and charge a higher fee), while the PCP has a higher volume of patients and receives considerably less compensation .

With the surge of patient volume, more and more family physicians are not accepting new patients and an even higher percentage is finding it more profitable and less stressful to go into a streamlined specialty.

“Nearly half of all doctors surveyed by the Physicians’ Foundation have said that over the next three years they plan to reduce the number of patients they see or stop practicing entirely.  Good luck recruiting primary care specialists when we are projected to be short 39,000 by 2020, according to the American Academy of Family Physicians.”

What can we do to entice more medical students to become primary care physicians?

According to Vitals.com, Dr. Vance Harris is family practitioner in Redding, CA.  He completed his medical degree in UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine and finished his residency in Northridge Hospital Medical Center.

READ MORE ABOUT DR. VANCE HARRIS

(news.medill.northwestern.edu)

(news.medill.northwestern.edu)

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August 2nd, 2009

Grandparents get Health Rations with National Healthcare

Irving
Dr. David Janda
Dr. David Janda

Dr. Dave Janda, MD, is an orthopedic surgeon, and a world-recognized expert on the prevention of sports injuries, particularly in children. He has authored books on preventative health care and has a website: www.noinjury.com.

Dr. Janda read the 1,018-page Obama-Pelosi-Reid Bill and has issued the following statement:

“it should be clear that the same warning notice must be placed on The Obama Care Plan as on a pack of cigarettes: Consuming this product will be hazardous to your health.” “If you are over 65.” Dr. Janda continues, “or have been recently diagnosed as having an advanced form of cardiac disease or aggressive cancer…..dream on if you think you will get treated. Pick out your coffin. After each American turns 65 years of age, they have to go to a mandated counseling program that is designed to end life sooner.”

The underlying method of cutting costs throughout the plan is based on rationing and denying care. There is no focus on preventing health care need whatever. The plan’s method is the most inhumane and unethical approach to cutting costs I can imagine as a physician.

The rationing of care is implemented through The National Health Care Board, according to the plan. This illustrious Board “will approve or reject treatment for patients based on the cost per treatment divided by the number of years the patient will benefit from the treatment.”

A great example is cardiac care which is the number one killer for the elderly. According to the Pelosi bill, Medicare payments to doctors for cardiac care, not including expensive heart surgery, will be cut by 20% in 2010. With a population of baby boomers soon to reach 65, the shortage of dollars will be spread more thinly.

Dr. Janda in a recent post wrote the following;

“Oh, you say this could never happen? Sorry…. this is the same model they use in Britain. The plan mandates that there will be little or no advanced treatments to be available in the future. It creates The Federal Coordinating Council For Comparative Effectiveness Research, the purpose of which is “to slow the development of new medications and technologies in order to reduce costs.” Yes, this is to be the law. The plan also outlines that doctors and hospitals will be overseen and reviewed by The National Coordinator For Health Information and Technology. This ” coordinator” will “monitor treatments being delivered to make sure doctors and hospitals are strictly following government guidelines that are deemed appropriate.” It goes on to say…..”Doctors and hospitals not adhering to guidelines will face penalties.”

According to those in Congress, penalties could include large six figure financial fines and possible imprisonment. So according to The ObamaCare Plan….if your doctor saves your life you might have to go to the prison to see your doctor for follow -up appointments. I believe this is the same model Stalin used in the former Soviet Union.

Section 102 has the Orwellian title, “Protecting the Choice to Keep Current Coverage.” What this section really mandates is that it is illegal to keep your private insurance if your status changes - e.g., if you lose or change your job, retire from your job and become a senior, graduate from college and get your first job.

Yes, illegal.

When Mr. Obama hosted a conference call with bloggers urging them to pressure Congress to pass his health plan as soon as possible, a blogger from Maine referenced an Investors Business Daily article that claimed Section 102 of the House health legislation would outlaw private insurance.

He asked: “Is this true? Will people be able to keep their insurance and will insurers be able to write new policies even though H.R. 3200 is passed?” Mr. Obama replied: “You know, I have to say that I am not familiar with the provision you are talking about.”

Then there is Section 1233 of The ObamaCare Plan, devoted to “Advanced Care Planning.” After each American turns 65 years of age they have to go to a mandated counseling program that is designed to end life sooner.

This session is to occur every 5 years unless the person has developed a chronic illness then it must be done every year. The topics in this session will include, “how to decline hydration, nutrition and how to initiate hospice care.” It is no wonder The Obama Administration does not like my emphasis on Prevention.

Read more information about Dr. Dave Janda on Vitals.com

Over 65 Couple (kaushik.net)

Over 65 Couple (kaushik.net)

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July 31st, 2009

Dr. Scheiner Still Concerned About Obama’s Choices for National Healthcare

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Dr. David Scheiner (chicago tribune)

Dr. David Scheiner (chicago tribune)

As we mentioned on June 22, Obama has been getting a lot of criticism lately, and his personal doctor is definitely not shying away from sharing his.  Dr. David Scheiner, has not been very vocal about his thoughts, however, he’s concerned for what is unraveling for America’s health care.

“This isn’t that kind of health care program that I think is going to work,” he said.

AOL News has questioned an audience of over 58,000 to see how they feel about Obama’s health care plans, and more than 78% voiced their disagreement, while only ten percent support his action.

However, only 23% are influenced by Dr. Scheiner’s opinion of Obama’s health care plans.  Everyone is looking out for themselves and their personal interests.  While President Obama is trying to provide options that everyone will be happy with, and that means giving American citizens the option of “joining a government-run plan that would compete with private insurers.”

“Nobody is talking about some government takeover of health care. I’m tired of hearing that,” said President Obama in Raleigh, N.C., this week.

Dr. Scheiner is wary that options are still not solidified and along with other doctors had gathered in Washington to meet with lawmakers and rally supporters, to get the word out before it’s too late.

“I just hope that the Congress, the American public and the president will hear some of my words,” he said. “We’ve got to do something better.”

GET MORE INFORMATION ON DR. DAVID SCHEINER

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