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Disinformation and the healthcare system

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The False Promise of Electronic Medical Records (EMR)

Stanley Feld M.D. FACP,MACE

The
promise of the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) is fading for physicians and
patients. The EMR was supposed to reduce the cost of medical care, improve
quality of care, improve physician communications, reduce duplicate testing and
improve efficiency of care.

In
2009 President Obama declared that EMRs,

  would
save some $80 billion a year,
safeguard against medical errors, reduce
malpractice lawsuits, and greatly facilitate both preventive care and ongoing
therapy of the chronically ill.”
 

EMR’s have
done none of the above. EMRs have been a money-loser for most physicians.

I
had predicted that fully functioning EMRs were too expensive for most
practicing physicians.
EMRs bought in the past were not fully functional.
Therefore physicians would have to purchase new fully functional EMRs.

Physicians
understand that all data collected, whether accurate or not, has been used
against them in the past.
They are hesitant to provide more data at their own
expense that compromise the privacy of their patients and potentially harm their
own reputation.

They
would be happy to participate in the project if the EMR improved their ability
to serve their patients without a potential penalty.

Physicians
suspect there is another agenda underlying President Obama’s insistence on the
adoption of EMRs.

It
is clear the government and healthcare insurance industry want to control the
healthcare system.
As the payers they do not want the physician/patient
relationship to control the healthcare system.  

A
recent survey from
forty-nine community practices in a large EHR pilot study
by the Massachusetts
eHealth Collaborative studied the projected five-year financial returns on
investment to physicians’ practices. It was published in Health Affairs.

The
survey concluded,

We found that the average
physician would lose $43,743
over five years; just 27 percent of practices
would have achieved a positive return on investment; and only an additional
14 percent of practices would have come out ahead had they received the
$44,000 federal meaningful-use incentive
.

Only a few practices would
have had EMR’s that qualified for the Obama administrations meaningful –use
incentives. The Obama administration’s criteria for meaningful-use are too
strict and complex for EMR software that physicians can afford.

More amazing is that the
only way for a practice to have a positive cash return on investment for their
EMR is to game the healthcare system using their EMR. The resulting cost of
medical care would rise.

 “The largest difference between practices with
a positive return on investment and those with a negative return was the extent
to which they used their EHRs to increase revenue, primarily by seeing more
patients per day or by improved billing that resulted in fewer rejected claims
and more accurate coding.”

This does not constitute an improvement in medical care. It also
contradicts the idealistic advantages of the electronic medical record.

The survey concludes that current meaningful-use incentives
alone may not ensure a positive return on investment from EMR adoption.

The authors suggest,

“Policies
that provide additional support, such as expanding the regional extension
center program, could help ensure that practices make the changes required to
realize a positive return on investment from EHRs.”

 The government and
healthcare insurance industry’s goal is to reduce physicians’ reimbursement for
those physicians that do not meet Obamacare’s imposed criteria for quality
medical care. These criteria will be set by IPAB.

Many physicians in practice object to converting medical care
into a commodity. Medical care is a very personal and complex interaction.

I have said previously that about 50% of the therapeutic index
(therapeutic effect) is determined by the patient physician relationship.

 "We need to move to EHR forward for a number of reasons,
but if I am a small practice I am going to really think about a few
things," she says. "One is how to decrease the cost of adoption and
the cost of the system itself.

“ To the
extent you can reduce the upfront cost that is going to help bring down the
amount you have to figure out how to make up elsewhere. Increasingly there are
new models taking this into account for small practices to decrease the big
upfront costs."

There are two basic problems, cost and the real purpose of EMRs.
Both can be remedied.

The costs of an EMR to a medical practice can be remedied
easily.  My ideal electronic medical
record could reside in the cloud. It would be available at no cost to physicians.
The patient data would be fully secured and only used by patients and their
physicians.

Physicians would pay for its use by the click. The EMRs would be
maintained and updated for free.

The EMRs could only be used for physician education purposes and
not for penalizing physicians.

If there is a terrible physician in the community a way needs to
be found to deal with that physician within his community. This is where
consumer driven evaluation would work.

Lost in this discussion is the real politics of EMRs.

 Jerome Groopman and Pamela Hartzmen
wrote,

 The
electronic medical record (EMR) is touted as the key to containing costs,
reducing errors, improving quality, and simplifying administration: an “elegant
exercise in wishful thinking

Dr. Groopman and Pamela Hartzman debunk the 2005 RAND study that
led to this belief by President Obama. They show that there is little evidence
to support the president’s belief.

Dr. Groopman claims the RAND study is self serving to software
companies that sponsored the study.

 Allscripts
Healthcare Solutions
 ,  the Cerner Corporation  and Epic Systems of Verona, Wis. are the major EMR software companies.

In February 2009, after years of behind-the-scenes lobbying by
Allscripts and others,
legislation to promote the use of electronic records was
signed into law as part of President Obama’s economic stimulus bill.

“But today, as doctors and hospitals struggle to make new records
systems work, the clear winners are big companies like Allscripts that lobbied
for that legislation and pushed aside smaller competitors.”

At Allscripts healthcare solutions,
annual sales have more than doubled from $548 million in 2009 to an estimated
$1.44 billion last year, partly reflecting daring acquisitions made on the bet
that the legislation would be a boon for the industry.

At the Cerner Corporation of Kansas City, Mo., sales rose 60 percent during that
period. With money pouring in, top executives are enjoying Wall Street-style
paydays.

Current and former industry executives say that
big digital records companies like Cerner, Allscripts and Epic Systems of
Verona, Wis., have reaped enormous rewards
because of the legislation they
pushed for

The weird thing is many of
these EMR systems bought by large hospital systems are not fully functional
(meaningful-use). The EMRs are requiring additional hospital system outlays of
cash to make them fully functional.

These costs are passed on to
the consumer.

The president
and his health-care team have yet to address these difficult and pressing
issues. Our culture adores technology,
so it is not surprising that the
electronic medical record has been touted as the first important step in curing
the ills of our health-care system. But it is an overly simplistic and
unsubstantiated part of the solution.

It is important to note Drs. Groopman and Hartzman total and
refreshing frankness.

We both voted for President Obama, in part because of his
pragmatic approach to problems, belief in empirical data, and openness to
changing his mind when those data contradict his initial approach to a problem.
We need the president to apply
scientific rigor to fix our
health-care system rather than rely on elegant exercises in wishful thinking.

Please note that Drs. Groopman and Hartzman said it not
me.

I have said this many times in the past. The same statement
applies to the Obamacare in its entirety.

”We
need the president to apply
scientific
rigor to fix our health-care system rather than rely on elegant exercises in
wishful thinking.”

The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.



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Hospital Systems’ Abuses Of The Healthcare System

Stanley
Feld M.D.,FACP, MACE

In my very first blogs in
2006 I made the point that all the stakeholders are to blame for the dysfunctional
healthcare syste
m.

Most of the incentives that
created a technology driven healthcare system have been perverse. All the major
stakeholders’ incentives are misaligned.

The major stakeholders are
consumers, physicians, government, healthcare insurance companies,
pharmaceutical companies and employers.

The primary stakeholders
are consumers and physicians. The government, healthcare insurance companies,
pharmaceutical companies and employers are secondary stakeholders. Some
secondary stakeholders provide administrative services and some reimbursement.
None provide medical care.

None of the actions of any
of the stakeholders are transparent. All the stakeholders are trying to take
advantage of the payers (consumers, employers and the government).

The government should be
the neutralizing force. It should level the paying field for all the stakeholders.
Government should not permit one stakeholder take advantage another
stakeholder.

Everyone except the
primary stakeholders “patients and physicians” figured out the money game in
the healthcare system early on.

Government and employers
were next to last in figuring out the game of money gouging.  This happened in the early 1980’s when both
said they cannot pay any higher price for healthcare services.

At that point the hospital
systems and the healthcare insurance industry figured out another way to continue
the money gouging. The result was HMOs and managed care. They did not work.

The opacity of pricing
continued, cost shifting flourished, and the price of medical care continued to
rise.

Physicians are not
blameless. However, they are the easiest to blame. Physicians are the least
organized and least aggressive stakeholders in the healthcare system.

In the past, I have
pointed out the real problems that have resulted in the dysfunctions of the
healthcare system.
Health policy wonks seem to ignore the real problems.

Consumers and physicians
are mere pawns in this money game.

Without consumers or
physicians there would be no healthcare system.
They generate the engine that
provides the need for medical care and administrative services.

I have covered much of the
abuse of the healthcare system by most of the stakeholders.

I have been relatively
easy on hospital systems and pharmaceutical companies until now.

However, the basic problems
in the healthcare system must be to be recognized and then fixed. All of the
problems have to be recognized at the same time and fixed simultaneously.

A patch on one problem
simply intensifies the overall problems.

Obamacare does not solve
any of the real problems. It is an attempt at patching a problem. It will only
make the problems worse and will not reduce the cost of care.

On February 20,2013 TIME
Magazine published an article by Steven Brill. The article is an excellent article
pointing out the abuses of the hospital systems.

“Bitter Pill Why Medical Bills are Killing Us” presents
examples of the abuses of large and small hospital systems.

The basic philosophy that
hospital systems should operate by should be “Patients First.”  It is not. It is how much money can I make
from each patient.

Steven Brill asked the
major question. “ Why are hospital bills so high?”

He presented the answer:


 

http://www.time.com/time/video/player/0,32068,2178453595001_2136781,00.html

The answer is obvious to
all physicians.

One fellow physician
wrote.

Stan

Although
we know much of this, this is an excellent overview of healthcare costs.

 Steve

All Americans ought to
understand the distortions hospital system pricing creates. The government
ought to make hospital pricing transparent to everyone..

The government should include
the hospital system’s retail price, wholesale price and actual cost for an item
or service.

Then, consumers can choose
the hospital system to go to.

Policy makers continually criticize
this ideal saying that illnesses are sudden and patients are not in a position
to choose a hospital system or negotiate price.

If the hospital system is
compelled to compete on price the price will be the same as the competitive
price when the patient gets sick. If one hospital is much higher than the next
hospital the patient will know this before hand.

Hospital system charges
are actually higher than they appear. Most hospital systems are non-profit
organizations. The hospital systems do not pay taxes.

Hospital charges are
opaque to everyone, including physicians. Physicians generate the services
hospitals charge for.

As seen in Steven Brill’s
article oncology charges are extremely high.

One oncologist wrote to me
and said he could administer the same therapy in his office for one-tenth the hospital
cost.

However, neither the government nor the healthcare insurance industry
would reimburse him for the office procedure. It is the same procedure he performs
in the hospital.

Doesn’t that seem strange? What is going on?

Steven Brill discovered
that it is almost impossible to find out what hospital systems are charging.

The same opacity is true
for pharmaceutical charges.  The
pharmaceutical charges are further inflated by multiple middlemen involved in
drug distribution.

This has been less true
for drugs since Internet Drug stores publish drug prices.

However, since the patients’
physicians prescribed the drug patients are hesitate to use substitute drugs.
The patients’ attitude is that the healthcare insurance company will pay for
the drug less the copay.

Therefore the patients are not interested in looking
up the difference in price or the options for substitution.

This is the reason consumers need skin in the game.

The result of consumer apathy is an increase
in healthcare insurance premiums.

Steven Brill covers the
grotesqueness of retail hospital system charges. He also points out the amount
Medicare reimburses for the grossly inflated charge.

The consumers without
insurance are the consumers that get stuck with the retail charges. Insurer consumers recieve a large discount.  The uninsured
consumers are least likely to be able to afford these charges.

In some cases Medicare
reimbursement is less than 20% of the hospital retail charge. Steven Brill
points out that at this time Medicare reimbursement to hospitals is still 10
times its actual costs.

The article “Bitter Pill” is
excellent. It covers many categories of hospital system abuse by the use of
case studies.

The facts are
overwhelming.  I am going to try to
categorize these facts in my next blogs. The abuses will be easier to remember.

Consumers must be educated.
The hope is consumers can be activated by education. Only a consumer driven
healthcare system can drive the abuse out of the healthcare system. 

Then,
Americans will have an affordable healthcare system.

 The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.



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Why Obamacare Will Fail

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

Obamacare will fail because none of the stakeholders’ vested
interest are aligned.

The storm is brewing in the healthcare system.

Even Democrats are concerned.

Recently, I have been criticized for blaming the impending failure
on President Obama. President Obama would rather blame the impending failure on
congress.

 A reader wrote;

“President Obama is a nice
guy. He is trying very hard. Give him a chance.”

It is true. He seems like a nice guy. My criticism is not personal.
The fact is his philosophy and tactics are responsible for the mess. As time
goes on it seems more likely that Obamacare will not work out.

There are multiple reasons for the impending failure. A major
reason is Obamacare is developing new perverse incentives for stakeholders
rather than aligning all the stakeholders’ vested interests.

Obamacare is extraordinarily complex. It is confusing to all the stakeholders,
 especially as new rules and regulations
are being written.

By forcing the development of programs such as health insurance
exchanges, accountable care organizations, pay for performance plans,
functional electronic medical records, and the consolidation of healthcare
hospital systems and physicians against their will, Obamacare is creating
tensions and uncertainties that will be difficult to overcome.

Patients’ medical care and their relationships with their
physicians are personal issues. Obamacare is commoditizing medical care. It is
destroying the patient physician relationships. These relationships account for
at least one half of the therapeutic effect of medical treatment.

The 2300 page law usurps the power of the legislative branch of
government and shifts it to the executive branch. This is dangerous. It has
created additional tension and uncertainty for the nation.

Many congressmen who voted for the law did not read the law’s 2300
pages. The implications of much of the law were not understood. It did not have
bipartisan support.

In 2012, the executive branch of the federal government issued another
70,000 pages of guidance for participants in Obamacare. The executive branch
has created at least 22,000 new regulations and 68,000 new ICM codes.

The more complex a law becomes the more likely it is to be unsuccessful.

There is no question the healthcare system nears repairing. Healthcare
costs are exploding. Waste and bureaucracy are expanding.  Dysfunctional interactions between
stakeholders are mounting.

All of this results in an inability to deliver effective medical
care.

At present 55% of Americans of all ages receive healthcare
insurance through an employer sponsored healthcare plan. An additional 32% receive
healthcare insurance through government programs.

Thirteen percent (13%) of the population are uninsured or under
insured. Obamacare’s goal is supposed to provide healthcare insurance for that
13%.

Present predictions are that Obamacare will not provide universal
care. It is predicted that it will not save $850 billion dollars. The CBO, on
the basis of numbers provided by the administration,
predicted the law would
save $850 prior to the passage of the law.  The CBO’s current prediction is Obamacare will
cost the nation an additional  $1.2
trillion dollars over 10 years.

Healthcare insurance rates are rising by double digits each year.
Employers are passing the costs of the increasing insurance rates to their
employees through higher deductibles and copays along with lower healthcare
coverage plans.

 Obamacare will require
employers, who offer skimpy healthcare benefits such as Mini-med insurance, to
provide more robust ones.

To date the Obama administration has waived more than 2000
employers from providing more robust healthcare insurance coverage. At the time
these waivers expire companies with waivers, such as McDonald’s, will scream
bloody murder.

They will opt out of providing any healthcare insurance at all and
avoid government penalties. They will accomplish this by decreasing the number
of hours an employee will work to less than 30 hours a week. This is not good
for minimum wage workers. The uninsured rolls will increase.

The penalty of $3,000 per employee is less than the $15,000 healthcare
insurance cost per employee for employees working more than 30 hours a week.

Surveys have been published concluding that more than 50% of
employers are planning to drop healthcare insurance coverage.

The federal government is trying to discourage this by invoking
the IRS anti-abuse rules;

“The IRS has indicated that anti-abuse rules
will be implemented to curtail the use of Obamacare loopholes to
dodge the play or pay requirement.

  Yet as
some have already questioned, can the IRS legitimately utilize rule-making to modify
core components of a federal act? Or will this rule-based clean-up effort
simply spawn more lengthy litigation?”
 

Obamacare’s health insurance exchange program is in big trouble.
Less than half the states have signed up to participate.

 States have opted out
because of the potential cost overruns. States are struggling to balance their
budgets. The federal government is only going to pay for health insurance
exchanges’ development and execution for the first two years.  The cost burden will then fall on the states.

The federal government keeps extending the deadline for states to
sign up. The federal government does not have infrastructure or manpower to set
them up.

The health insurance exchanges are supposed to be up and ready to sign
up consumer up in October 2013 and operating in January 2014.

Physicians do not know what to do about Obamacare. Physicians feel
helpless. They know Obamacare cannot work. Physicians do not have a leadership
organization that can direct physicians to have an effective voice.

Accountable Care Organizations (ACO’s) will fail because physicians
are trained to use medical judgment. They have not been trained to obey the
rules of hospital administrators.

They bristle when their value is determined by hospital systems or
federal agencies such as IPAB. They prefer to have their value determined by
their patients.

Physician leadership needs a new mentality to enable physicians to
act and articulate  the steps needed to
be taken to repair the healthcare system.

Physicians want the healthcare system to function equitably for
all the stakeholders and effectively for their patients.

Medical organizations have been consistently losing membership
because it has not represented or articulated the needs of practicing
physicians.

If Obamacare works as President Obama hopes, he will have secured
his legacy and solved the long-festering problem of the uninsured.

Obamacare will not solve the problems of increasing healthcare
costs nor provide universal care in its present form. This has been a pipe
dream all along.

Another reason Obamacare will fail is because it does not consider
the cost of defensive medicine significant. President Obama is not interested
in tort reform.

Obamacare doesn’t align any of the stakeholders’ vested interests.

When Obamacare fails it will provoke a citizen backlash that will
be very difficult to overcome.

The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.



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The Real Problems

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

I
am becoming weary of the continuous political games President Obama and
Congress are playing.

President
Obama does best on playing the blame game.

Republicans
do not know how to deal with President Obama.  

As
we approach another Debt Ceiling increase neither the President, congress or
the press are discussing the major problems the country faces.

One
of the major problems is government waste in all departments and all agencies.

The
waste is reproduced by multiple agencies creating an increasing number of bureaucracies
leading to additional regulations. Some regulations are difficult to understand
and many impossible to enforce.

The
inability to enforce regulations leads to more agencies and greater waste.

The
unsustainable entitlement spending for Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security
are the key drivers of America’s deficit spending.

If
these entitlements were originally constructed properly they would be cost effective
and sustainable. They would not be a threat to America’s solvency.

They
would be actual trust funds. They are presently virtual trust funds. The
government borrows the money collected in the name of the trusts from the trust
funds in order fund increased government spending.

The
Social Security and Medicare Trust Fund receive unsecured government obligation
bonds the trust funds cannot call.

Essentially
the two funds are left to pay their obligation on a pay you go basis. As
Medicare and Social Security rolls increases and longevity increases there will
be more recipients than funders of Medicare and Social Security.

Our
“under-informed society” is not aware of these facts. No one has explained it
clearly enough to create a consumer reaction.

 “It is an
unfortunate fact that these programs cannot be modified for the long-term
without the cooperation of both houses of Congress and the White
House.”
  

“There is
absolutely no interest on the part of the Democrats in the Senate or Obama, in
being serious about any meaningful reform, except to demagogue these issues.”

The
media discusses everything but the causes of the problems. The public remains
uninformed.

The
administrative waste in Medicare has been estimated to be $250 billion dollars
in 2008. None of this waste has vanished.

Instead
the bureaucratic structure under Obamacare is causing the waste to increase.

Below
is the new bureaucratic structure being developed by Obamacare
.


 

Each one of
these agencies creates rules and regulations
. There have been 22,000 new healthcare regulations to date and
still counting.

Most of the
regulations pretend to add value to the healthcare system. However they all
make the healthcare system more complex and complicated. The regulations
decrease the ability of physicians to help patients get well and stay healthy.

The
regulations create industries for secondary stakeholders. These secondary
stakeholders make more money from the bureaucratic healthcare system.

America has
been warned before. Listen to the following You Tube

 

 


 

John Mackey,
CEO of “Whole Foods” is warning us again.
The media has obfuscated his point by
jumping on him because he used the word fascist.

The media has
blamed him for calling President Obama a fascist. He did not call President
Obama a fascist. However the “media is the message” and his real message has
been obliterated.

He is
promoting his new book ”Conscious Capitalism: Liberating
the Heroic Spirit of Business.”

 
http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/john-mackey-whole-foods-/50f802b678c90a0f500001ba 

His position
is capitalism creates value. Capitalism with higher value creates more value.

He is against total
government control over commerce. He state there are two kinds of government
control.

  1. Government controls the system by regulations and owns the
    means of production.
  2. Ownership of the systems is privatized. Production is
    privatized to private companies but production is totally controlled by
    excessive government regulations. This leads to inefficient production.

Mr. Mackey’s
point is neither system works. Free enterprise works because it creates
competition. Free enterprise “capitalism” should have a conscious.  Free enterprise businesses must have a higher
purpose.

Why do
physicians exist?

Physicians’
higher purpose is to make people well. Making money should be secondary and is
in most cases. However they should be compensated for their skills.

A plumber
should have a higher purpose rather than just making money.

The higher
purpose cannot be forced on the individual by government. It can only be
adopted through competition in a consumer driven healthcare system.

Mr. Mackey
wrote a beautiful article in the WSJ in 2009.
President Obama and his
administration have ignored Mr. Mackey’s WSJ 2009 advice.

 I think it is time our government starts
listening to our successful entrepreneurs.

Government
must be honest and transparent and inform the public with correct information.
Only then can America be in a position to balance the budget and eliminate
waste.

The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.



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Socrates Is A Man

Stanley Feld
M.D.,FACP,MACE

 

All Men Are Mortal

Socrates Is A Man

Socrates Is Mortal

This is the classical syllogism. Syllogisms are a
form of decisive logic that leads to a certain conclusion.

“A
syllogism (Greek: συλλογισμός – syllogismos
"conclusion," "inference") is a kind of logical
argument
in which one proposition
(the conclusion) is inferred from two or more others (the premises)
of a specific form. “

In my last blog I reported the 3.5% tax the Obama
administration is levying
on the healthcare insurance industry for ever
healthcare insurance policy it sells through Obamacare’s health insurance
exchanges. 

In 2014 the healthcare insurance industry is going to
be required to sell healthcare insurance policies through the health insurance
exchanges.

The healthcare insurance industry will also be
required to sell plans that comply with the rules and regulations of the Obama
administration.

The 3.5% tax “users fee” was published on a Friday
afternoon at the end of November. The tax received little media attention. I
said the healthcare insurance industry would pass this “users fee” on to the
consumer.

At the end of December the healthcare insurance
industry did better than that. It increased healthcare insurance premium rates
by double digits.

Health
insurance
companies across the country are seeking and winning
double-digit increases in premiums for some customers, even though one of the
biggest objectives of the Obama administration’s health
care law
was to stem the rapid rise in insurance costs for
consumers.”

The consumers most affected by the higher rates are
small businesses and consumer who must purchase insurance on their own.  

"In California, Aetna is proposing rate increases of
as much as 22 percen
t, Anthem Blue Cross 26 percent and Blue Shield of
California 20 percent for some of those policy holders.

The rate requests are in
addition to the 39% increase in rates last year.

In other states, like Florida and Ohio, insurers have been
able to raise rates by at least 20 percent
for some policy holders. The rate
increases can amount to several hundred dollars a month.

 In 2010 the
increase in healthcare insurance premiums increases provided springboard
for
public opinion sympathy of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).

Obamacare will go into full effect in 2014. 

Why would a business (the healthcare insurance
industry) facing loss of its customers because of high premiums increase
premiums even further?

Why, if the traditional media has published articles
stating that the cost of healthcare has been decreasing would a premium
increase be justified?

 “A report issued by the Department of
Health and Human Services today includes findings that might surprise
some people.


“During
the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 2012, the amount Medicare spent per beneficiary
rose by just 0.4 percent. That's three percentage points less than the economy,
as measured by gross domestic product, grew during that same period.”

 If Medicare spending has risen only
.4% why would Medicare premiums increase by at least 33% while private healthcare
insurance premiums are increasing by 10-30%?

Annually physicians’ reimbursement continues to
decrease.

Why do consumers’ deductibles continue to increase
each year?

It is illogical. The numbers do not make sense. The
actions do not follow the syllogistic logic.

How can Medicare be losing money? Medicare premiums
are means tested and represent a redistribution of wealth.

 The average
premium for Medicare with after tax dollars for a couple with a reasonable
pension fund is $15,000 dollars.

The average direct cost of care per Medicare patient
is $6,600 dollars
.

In 2014 Medicare premiums are scheduled to increase
to more than $20,000 for full Medicare insurance coverage.

Seniors have paid for Medicare insurance in payroll taxes
continuously for the last 47 years.

There is something wrong with the numbers. They do
not add up. Where is the extra money going?

Consumers must start becoming aware of these facts.

Only consumer protest will bring out the truth about
these illogical numbers.

 The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.



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An Unintended Consequence of Obamacare.

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

As we get closer to full implementation of Obamacare in 2014 corporations
such as Wal-Mart are figuring out ways of avoiding healthcare insurance
coverage for their employees.

Darden Restaurants, owner of Olive Garden and Red Lobster,
and a New York-area Applebee’s franchise owner has
announced that they will limit hours worked to under the thirty hours a week
threshhold. They will simply hire more employees who will work less than thirty
hours a week.

It will
mean that those workers will be forced to work two jobs if they can. With the
unemployment rates remaining high this might be difficult.

“iNew Obamacare rules that require companies
wi
th at least 50 full-time workers to offer health coverage to all employees
who work 30 or more hours a week or pay penalties.”

However,
these people might not be eligible for Medicaid coverage under Obamacare.

The
definition of eligibility depends on the state rules. HHS just announced rules
for Medicaid expansion. The goal of these “Medicaid Expansion Rules” is to
force states to participate in the expansion of Medicaid.

States must increase Medicaid eligibility to 133% of the poverty level in
order to receive 100% of
the matching federal funds made available under Obamacare.  A state will receive mating funds from January
1,2014- January 1,2017.

After
January 1,2017 the states are on their own. The increase in enrollees will
become a huge burden.

President Obama is counting on the states to
assume the cost of Medicaid as he has the CBO calculate his fictitious scoring
on the cost of Obamacare.

The Federal Poverty Level was defined inaccurately in 1955. The U.S.
still uses the 1955 criteria.

133% Federal Poverty Level for one person means an annual income of $14,856.
For a family of four it means $30,657.

Many states have poverty levels above the nationally defined levels. In Indiana
the eligibility level for Medicaid is an annual income below $63,000 for a
family of four.

An independent
restaurant owner and caterer, in the smallish town of McKinney Texas, employs
55 people full time.  He told me he is
going to have to fire 6 people in order to avoid the Obamacare rule. He must
also reduce hours worked to below 30 hours per week.

He must
also contract his business rather than expand it.  He cannot afford the $110,000 Obamacare penalty.

Wal-Mart is the nation’s
largest private employer. Wal-Mart employs 1.4 million workers.

It plans to begin denying
health insurance to newly hired employees who work fewer than 30 hours a week
starting January 1st 2013 to avoid the Obamacare penalty for not
providing healthcare coverage for employees.

Wal-Mart also reserves the
right to eliminate health care coverage for employees whose hours drop under 30
hour per week.

Tom Billet
a senior consultant at Towers Watson said,

”Some of his clients were planning to track workers’ hours
more carefully. “I expect health plans like Walmart’s won’t be uncommon as
firms adjust to this law.”

 Wal-Mart’s decision to exclude
workers from its healthcare plans is an attempt to limit costs while taking
advantage of Obamacare.  Obamacare is
going to have to expand Medicaid coverage well beyond 31 million people.

Many of Wal-Mart’s employees would qualify for the expanded
Medicaid program.

Wal-Mart would rather pay the $3,500 penalty than pay $12,000 to
$18,000 dollars a year healthcare insurance premium for their employees.

There are many other companies that are going to follow suit such
as McDonald’s, Burger-King and thousands of others that got waivers from
President Obama for Mini-Med healthcare coverage.

Mini Med healthcare coverage is in reality zero healthcare
insurance coverage. It is a giant rip off of people making minimum wage.

“Walmart is effectively
shifting the costs of paying for its employees onto the federal government with
this new plan, which is one of the problems with the way the law is
structured,” said Ken Jacobs, chairman of the Labor Research Center at the
University of California, Berkeley.

“Medicaid Expansion” is a big joke. The uninsured workers will increase
from 31 million to some higher number when companies drop healthcare insurance
coverage and pay the penalty.

“The Supreme Court ruled earlier this year
that the decision to expand the Medicaid program is voluntary for the
states. At least eight states, including Texas, have said
they will not expand the program,’ 

At present before “Medicaid Expansion” the entire Medicaid program is
unaffordable. Medicaid cost will now escalate. President Obama will not be able
to afford to keep his promise to the poor.

States realized President Obama has set them up to get stuck with the
increased Medicaid cost. States are not signing up for the “Medicaid Expansion“
even though they would like the matching federal funds.

The nation’s governors were told,

States that don't expand
their Medicaid rolls to include residents at 133% of the federal poverty level
won't get 100% of the matching federal funds made available under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Ac
t (Obamacare).

The unintended consequence of large employers and corporations not
covering their employees with healthcare insurance is escalating.

Who is going to qualify for Medicaid? Who will get stuck being uninsured?

The poor people earning an annual income of less than 133% Federal
Poverty Level will qualify for Medicaid coverage. 

Anyone earning a penny more than the Federal Poverty Level will be rejected
and not qualify to receive Medicaid coverage
.

The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone.

 

 

 

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Price Competition for Medical Care

Stanley Feld
M.D.,FACP,MACE

Thank goodness many physicians are starting to recognize the problems of abuse
and waste in government run healthcare programs.  The run up in cost is secondary to the
healthcare insurance industry taking 40% of the healthcare dollars off the top
as patient care dollars and the hospital systems over inflating the costs to
patients because of inflated operating expenses and administrative salaries.

Physicians realize that an efficient free market system will reduce the
cost of care. Physicians are tired for being blamed for the entire healthcare
systems problems. They do not deny being part of the problem.

Many physicians have decided to move forward and develop consumer driven
free market systems of care. 

One example is Nextera Health in Longmont Colorado. I have discussed this
previously.

Nextera Healthcare
is a new model for delivering primary care at an affordable price. It follows
many of the principles embodied in my ideal medical savings account
model.  Nextera delivers compassionate care at an affordable cost and
encourages patients to be responsible for their health.

Nextera
Healthcare
services all of a families needs at an affordable monthly cost. It is
combined with a high deductible healthcare insurance plan to cover costly
illness.  

The
reason I am so high on Nextera Healthcare is that it closely fits a model of
healthcare delivery that will work to decrease the cost of medical care. It
will increase the quality of medical care and permit primary care to be a
viable specialty. 

Nextera Healthcare has the potential to permit the patient
to be responsible for managing their health and their healthcare dollars.

Nextera
Healthcare has the potential to reduce healthcare cost to individuals, employer
sponsored self insured plans, associations and even government funded
healthcare plans while permitting consumers to make their own healthcare
decisions.

Surgeons are developing their own innovative systems.  In free standing surgery centers they are
developing surgical procedures that cost at least 70% less than Medicare is
paying hospitals for the same procedure.   

 Dr. Keith Smith, co-founder and managing
partner of the Surgery Center of Oklahoma, took
an initiative that would only be considered radical in the health care
industry.

Dr. Smith posted a
list of prices
 online for 112 common surgical
procedures. Dr. Smith ,an anesthesiologists, became disillusioned about how
patients were treated and charged at St. Anthony Hospital in Oklahoma City.  

Dr. Smith’s goal
was to create a for-profit facility that could deliver first-rate care at a
fraction of what traditional hospitals charge. The goal was to eliminate the
hospital and healthcare insurance industry as the middlemen while decreasing
the cost of surgical care without decreasing the quality of care.

He wanted to create a system in which consumers and their employers
could receive surgical value at an affordable price. In the existing healthcare
system patients have no incentive to look for dollar value.

A healthcare system in which consumers buy goods or services from a
physician, surgeon or hospital systems all being paid for by the healthcare
insurance industry or government does not constituent incentive for consumers
to seek value and quality.

The lack of patient responsibility and value hunting is one of the major
causes of exploding U.S. heath care costs.

Physician owned transparent Surgery Centers are becoming increasingly
common as Americans look for alternatives to the traditional health care market
which is unaffordable and out of reach.

Consumer-driven models are appearing as fewer people have healthcare
coverage from their employers and are on their own

The unintended consequences of Obamacare are creating more uninsured not
less. The Medicaid insurance coverage that Obamacare is offering is
unappealing.

Patients may have no choice but to look outside the traditional health
care industry in the face of higher costs and reduced access to doctors and
hospitals. It is only going to get worse as we get deeper into Obamacare.

The Oklahoma Surgery
Center demonstrates that it’s possible to offer high quality care at low
prices.
Surgeons can do twice as many surgeries in an outpatient surgery center
than they can in a traditional hospital surgical suite.

Most industries
try to improve efficiency. However, simple efficiencies have not occurred in
most traditional hospitals. Surgeons spend half their time waiting for the
patients to come to the operating room or for the availability of operating
rooms and equipment.

The Surgery
centers have solved these efficiency problems. They can service surgeons’ needs
at less than half the cost without the wasted time.

A key reason is
there are not multiple administrators creating multiple regulations and
collecting multiple $500,000 to $3 million dollar a year salaries. Surgical
centers have one head nurse responsible for everything and zero administrators.

The cost of a “complex
bilateral sinus procedure” at the Surgery Center was an all-inclusive $5,885.
The traditional hospital bill totaled $33,505 without the surgeon’s and
anesthesiologist’s bill included.

It was discovered
at the time of the nasal surgery that the hospital charged $360 for a
dexamethasone injection. A dexamethasone injection cost the hospital $.75.

 A fentanyl shot which is a pain-killer cost the
hospital system $1.50 but the bill to the insurance company was $630.00 dollars.
Everyone has heard of the $45.00 hospital aspirin   

A traditional
hospital discounted non-inclusive bill to the healthcare insurance industry for
a carpel-tunnel release would be $7,452. The fee for the procedure pre-op is
not be available. The same procedure done for the all-inclusive transparent
cost at the Surgery Center was $2,775.

More tragic was
that the patient would have had to pay $5,299 out-of-pocket  to cover her deductible and co-pay for the
hospital bill before she even received the bills for physicians’ services. 

Below are some
examples of the differences in costs for procedures.

 
Transparency-Matters-larger jpg
A list of the surgical fee for the Oklahoma Surgery Center is on its web
site. http://www.surgerycenterok.com/pricing.php

How do hospital systems get away with this?

The more the hospital bills the more the insurance company puts in reserve.
The reserves are in the medical costs column and include the non-discounted
costs. The result is greater profit for the insurance company.

President Obama does not want physicians to be innovative in this way.
He wants physicians to be dependent employees of hospital systems. His goal is
to control physicians and dictate their medical care.

President Obama has provided some non-transparent favors to hospital systems
that are forcing physicians to be employed by hospitals. 

"A new provision buried in Obamacare effectively prohibits doctors from starting their
own hospitals or expanding the hospitals they already own, which has been
widely interpreted as a give-away to the American Hospital Association."

Hospital systems claim they must charge more to cover their overhead and
bureaucratic inefficiencies. So fix your system. Surgery centers have.

Dr. Smith says: "Everyone can
see what the prices are at the Surgery Center, and that affordable health care
is possible. So the jig is up.”

Dr. Smith believes that despite the obstacles being put in the way by
Obamacare, market-driven facilities like his will thrive and proliferate as
consumers catch on to costly collusion between big government and big health
care.

I totally agree. As Obamacare’s unintended consequences proliferate
consumers and captured physicians (hospital employed) will pay more attention
to physician innovation. The jig for big government and big healthcare will
certainly be up.

 The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone

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Bad Ideas Made Worse By Unintended Consequences

Stanley Feld M.D., FACP,MACE

I love when someone has great innovative ideas that have a chance to be
effective. I dislike ideas that anyone using common sense can see it is going
to fail.

President Obama is trying to set up health insurance exchanges in all 50
states.

Common sense tells us the exchanges will not work. They are counter to
stakeholders’ vested interests. They are trying to force stakeholders into
doing something they do not want to do. Health insurance exchanges will be
unmanageable. The costs will be uncontrollable. They will lead to waste and
fraud and abuse.

Government’s role should be to level the playing field for all
stakeholders and then get out of the way.

America’s healthcare system needs innovations that inspire the
healthcare industry to be competitive and efficient.

What are the specific problems with health insurance exchanges?

Health insurance exchanges were supposed to be operational by October
2013.  Only preliminary rules have been
published to date.

The states are not anxious to be subject to federal controls that
challenges state rights and drives states deeper into debt.

The federal government is requiring full transparency from the states
while it is conducting all of the setup work in secret.

Federal officials have disclosed little about their plans to the states
or the press. They have been vague about the financing for the health insurance
exchanges.

The Obama administration has stated that if states decline to
participate in health insurances exchanges by December 15, 2012
(postposed from August 15 to November 15 and now December 15)
the federal government
will form its own exchanges for those states.

President Obama sold Obamacare to congress and the American people on
the basis that it was going to save $115 billion dollars in healthcare spending
in ten years. This number was calculated by the CBO on the basis of data
provided by the Obama administration.

The most recent CBO estimate using recent data is that healthcare
spending will increase by $2.5 trillion dollars over the next ten years.

Obamacare does not permit federally operated exchanges to provide
subsidies to enrollees that the enrollees would be eligible for in state
operated exchanges
.

This provision was included in the law to encourage the states’ creation
of exchanges. States would then receive additional money from the federal
government.

The administration did not anticipate so many states would refuse to
participate.

Sarah Kliff wrote for the Washington
Post
: wrote that there are many other problems
facing the health insurance exchanges.

“After people become aware of benefits, the health exchange faces its
biggest challenge: Figuring out who is eligible for what. In many states those
who earn less than 133 percent of the Federal Poverty Line are eligible for
Medicaid — except if the state has already extended benefits to an even higher
level, as
 35 states have for children.

“There may be different family members eligible for different programs,”
says Sam Gibbs, vice president of sales at eHealthInsurance. “There needs to be
a technology system that can support that activity, and look at multiple
programs for multiple people.”

A state can’t figure out how much an individual earns on its own. For
that, it needs to ping a federal data hub that does not yet exist.

The problems with President
Obama’s health insurance exchanges are worse. The exchange subsidies will vary
by income and family size. A federal agency does not exist that can tell a
family’s current income. It takes the IRS at least a year and a quarter to
determine last year’s income.

Family income can vary
substantially from year to year. 
Families have to pay healthcare insurance premiums based on what they
earned over a year ago. The breadwinners might be unemployed and required to
pay an unaffordable premium.

The federal government does
not seem to have developed its plans for a federally run health insurance
exchange. It looks as if the federal government’s plan was to stick the costs
and administration on to the states even though it promised to pay for the fist
two years.

Its goal was to force
states to do what the federal government wants them to do. Running a health
insurance exchange will be at great cost to the states and state budget
deficits.

The health insurance
exchange development is a mess. The real threat lies in its execution and
implementation.

It will be surprising if
they are operational by January 2014. The cost overruns will be astronomical.
They are already substantial. The unintended consequence will escalate.

In order to pay for the
exchanges President Obama’s administration just announced a 3.5% tax on every
premium sold by a healthcare insurance company. The result will make insurance
less affordable.

The original announcement
was revised. The 3.5% premium tax would only apply in states that did not have
state health insurance exchanges.

 The announcement sounds like a little power
play by the Obama administration.

The healthcare insurance
companies will simply pass the tax on to consumers with increased premiums.

The increase will have no
effect on the profitability of the healthcare insurance industry.

The government should enforce
the new Medical Loss ratio of 80/20. Eighty percent  of healthcare premiums should go to direct
patient care.

The government should not
permit help desk expenses and physician network development expenses to be
charged to direct medical care.

The government should
change the accounting rules. The formula for counting unpaid liabilities as
direct medical care expenses is outrageous. Much of these reserves are medical
reimbursement are the remains of discount fees have been  paid to providers already for direct patient
care.    

There are many other
categories of expenses that should not be included in the 80% of direct medical
care.

The federal government
needs the healthcare industry to adjudicate claims and perform all of the
administrative services for all the government funded healthcare services.
Government accounting for its own overhead does not include the fees charged by
the healthcare insurance industry to provide these services.

There is so much the public
does not know about how Medicare and Medicaid money is spent. If the government
were transparent it would let the people know what the defects are and then
force government to fix them.

Apparently President Obama
prefers to go deeper in debt.

All the stakeholders are
villains and take advantage of the healthcare system. The healthcare insurance
industry is the worst villain. Health insurance exchanges will not cure this.

They will make it worse. 

 

The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone

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Eyes Wide Shut

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

 

I cannot believe the results
of the Presidential election.

All of President Obama’s
policies have failed so far. All have served to inhibit economic growth or make
it worse.

Yet the majority of
Americans voted for President Obama. Why could this occur when many of the
structural ideas and ideals representative of the United States are being dismantled?

This is a great county.
Americans accept the winner and move on.  They continue to speak to their neighbors who
had the other guy’s sign in their front yard.

On the other hand it amazes
me to see that the electorate ignores the real issues and votes for the  personality. Marshall McLuhan was correct. The media is the message. Why the media
is ignoring the facts is beyond me.   

It is disappointing because
Americans are also ignoring the obvious coming unintended consequences that are
going to be the result of their voting decision.

The devil is always in the
details. I have presented my views of how the medical care system is going to
be destroyed by Obamacare
. It is only a matter of time.

The healthcare system is
becoming too expensive, unsustainable, impersonal, rationed. The result will be
a denial of access to medical care for many Americans. 

Obamacare’s effect will become
the opposite of what President Obama intended and  promised.

I have also stated that his
strategies for change have been misguided.  

President Obama’s advisors
are all ivory tower professors and bureaucrats. They have no understanding of
what is happening in the street at the interface between patients and
physicians.

Ideologically they want to
make medical care better for all. President Obama does not understand the
pressures and the reality of the real practice interactions between physicians
and patients or physicians and their communities.

President Obama believes
that healthcare should be an entitlement and not an individual responsibility. Healthcare
entitlements will never solve America’s problems with obesity and chronic
diseases.

In the process of making
healthcare an entitlement, President Obama is devaluing the skills of those
practicing medicine.

Many physicians have quit
practice because of adverse conditions. The result will be a decreasing
physician workforce in an increasing covered population. This is not a good equation.

Most physicians do not
accept Medicaid and many have stopped accepting Medicare.

This will shift the burden of
higher cost of medical care to seniors and poor people.  

Bob
Doherty is Senior Vice President of Governmental Affairs and Public Policy,
American College of Physicians.
His blog at The ACP Advocate Blog is reprinted below.
It deserves a wide audience.

Bob
Doherty has dealt with the socioeconomic concerns of Internists and Internal
Medicine Sub Specialists for at least 30 years both at the American Society for
Internal Medicine and later after ASIM merged with American College of
Physicians.

Bob
Doherty wrote this article discussing the effects of Obamacare on the practicing
physician. He presents practicing physicians’ complaints about  Obamacare.

This
article should be read carefully. President Obama should pay attention to
physicians’ complaints.

 “The
micro level of health reform cannot be ignored”

by BOB DOHERTY on November 5th,
2012in 
POLICY

 

Much of what passes for debate on
health care during this election year is focused on the macro side, on big
issues like how do we cover the uninsured or restructure Medicare and Medicaid
financing.  But for all of the talk about vouchers and block grants and
insurance mandates, the candidates are missing the micro issues that really
matter most to doctors and their patients, which is how health care policy
directly affects the quality of the patient-physician encounter.

Talk to physicians around the
country, as I regularly do, and these are some of the issues that have them
most concerned:

1. Will anyone do
anything about the oppressive burden of paperwork and red tape?
2. Will the candidates’ “macro” proposals for reforming healthcare and
entitlements result in more or less paperwork and red tape?
3. I already don’t have enough time to spend with patients but now I am
expected to counsel them on preventive care, lifestyle choices, and the
effectiveness of different treatments?   How is this possible?
4. Electronic health records, great concept, but they don’t really streamline
the process as advertised, if anything, they just make things more difficult,
and besides, they still don’t communicate with other systems.
5. Everyone wants to measure me, but the measures don’t agree with other, they
measure the wrong things and they are difficult to report on.   And
who is measuring the value and effectiveness of the measures themselves?
6. Okay, I am supposed to practice cost conscious care, but who is going to
stop a lawyer from suing me if I don’t give a patient the test they asked for?
7. Why is my cognitive care paid so little while procedures and drugs are paid
exorbitant rates?
8. Payers and government keep imposing more penalties, for not e-prescribing,
for not converting to ICD-10, for not meaningfully using my electronic health
record, for not complying with their pay for performance schemes.  By the
time they get done fining me for noncompliance, I will have had to shut my
office. Then who will take care of my patients?
9. And who has the time to keep track of all of these mandates, incentives,
rules, and penalties?  I would have to hire a full-time person keep on top
of everything. Who is going to pay for that?
10. So I am supposed to transform my practice?  Well, we all want to do
our part, but who is going to pay for that?  Besides, my patients seem to
think my practice is just fine as it is

Now, I don’t really expect Obama
and Romney to come out with plans to address these micro health policies. 
But it is reasonable to hold their macro proposals to a standard of whether
they will make all of these aggravations and intrusions better or worse. 
And at some point, policymakers–no matter their political leanings and plans to
reform healthcare at the macro level, need to pay attention to what is
happening at the micro patient-doctor encounter level.  After all, the
boldest of big ideas won’t make healthcare better if it makes it harder for
physicians to give their patients the care they need.

Physician advocacy
organizations also need to pay attention to the micro issues.  ACP prides
itself on taking on the big issues like controlling health care costs and allocating health care resources rationally.  
But the College puts at least as much effort into the micro issues, from objecting to the latest EHR mandates to offering alternatives to ICD 10 coding to advocating for higher payments.

The goal must be to fashion
public policies that improve care at the macro level — universal access to
coverage, spending health care dollars more wisely, and improving healthcare
delivery systems — while also removing barriers at the micro level that intrude
on the patient-doctor relationship.  Both are equally important.

Bob Doherty is Senior Vice President of Governmental Affairs and
Public Policy, American College of Physicians and blogs at 
The ACP Advocate Blog.”

 

Bob
Doherty has been an advocate of Obamacare in the past.
He has highlighted the
idealist principles of Obamacare. I am happy that he is starting to realize the
unintended consequences that will occur as a result of  Obamacare.

Healthcare
is only one area of life that President Obama is affecting adversely. I believe
the majority of the population will start realizing soon that re-electing
President Obama was a mistake.

Hopefully
it does not become an irreversible disaster.

  The opinions expressed in the blog “Repairing The Healthcare System” are, mine and mine alone

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