Stanley Feld M.D., FACP, MACE Menu

Permalink:

Entitlements Do Not Save Money

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

President Obama’s healthcare reform act is about to be repealed by Republicans in the House of Representatives. Democrat’s say this is a meaningless gesture. I do not think so. The House of Representatives is expressing the will of the people. The Harry Reid and President Obama will be exposed as ignoring the will of the people.

President Obama’s healthcare reform act will not Repair the Healthcare System. His new entitlement for 32 million people will not save money or reduce the deficit.

President Obama promised his healthcare reform act would provide universal access to care to all Americans, be affordable to both the government and its citizens, and increase the quality of medical care

“Of all the claims deployed in favor of Obama Care, and there are many, the most preposterous is that a new open-ended entitlement will somehow reduce the budget deficit, insure 32 million more people, and save money too!”

Americans have experience with open ended entitlements. They never save money. Most Americans understand that government cannot subsidize coverage for tens of millions of people and simultaneously reduce the deficit

The Democrats’ spin machine started working immediately as the Republicans prepare to repeal ObamaCare.

“Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius chimed in that "we can’t afford repeal,"

ObamaCare will cost at least $2.6 trillion over the next 10 years. Is this a bargain for taxpayers? Presient Obama’s healthcare reform act does little to Repair the Healthcare System.

ObamaCare is setting up Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). In my opinion, ACOs have little chance of being effective. ACOs will create a system of salaried physicians owned by hospital systems. All physicians have to be integrated into the system in order for the ACO to have a chance. Physicians’ productivity will decrease. ACO will create incentives for secondary stakeholders. There will be few incentives for primary stakeholders. .ACOs will generate regulations that will increase “paperwork” and decrease direct patient care. It will increase government control over the lives of patients. It will not reduce costs.

President Obama released a statement saying repeal will “explode the deficit.”

Meanwhile, other Democrats have taken up arms about House procedure. The GOP adopted a budget rule that says repeal doesn’t have to be "paid for," and the press corps is treating this exemption as a scandal against Washington decency.

The CBO was manipulated by the numbers given to it by the Democratic House of Representatives to score ObamaCare. I would not be surprised if the numbers change if Republicans request a rescore with different numbers. The Democratic controlled congress has gamed the CBO’s budget conventions.

The CBO is required to "score" the numbers presented to them by congress no matter how unrealistic.

The party in power at the time (Democratic Party) makes believe that the CBO’s forecasts are carved in stone. All the score really shows is that politicians have rigged the budget rules to hide the true cost of entitlements.

Americans now understand the congressional process. The congressional disrespect is the reason the polls are unfavorable toward congress. Americans want the truth.

President Obama managed to pass his bill despite the opposition of the majority of the American people. Americans continue to oppose the bill today even though the facts in the bill have become a blur.

“Gallup reported yesterday that Americans favor repeal, 46% to 40%.”

How did gaming the CBO budget scores make President Obama’s healthcare act seem to save money?

1. President Obama’s healthcare law uses 10 years of taxes to fund six years of subsidies.

2. Social Security and Medicare revenues are double-counted to the tune of $398 billion.

3. A new program funding long-term care frontloads taxes but backloads spending.

4. The law pretends that Congress will spend less on Medicare than it really will, in particular, through an automatic 25% cut to physician payments that Democrats have already voted not to allow for this year.

5. President Obama had the law shift the government doctor fix out of the healthcare budget

These are just a few of the tricks used by President Obama to get the CBO to score his healthcare reform budget neutral.

Richard Foster, the chief Medicare actuary separately published analyses of the Medicare and Medicaid spending that would have be devastating to President Obama’s healthcare law. He revealed the true cost. His report was not widely covered by the traditional media.

Doug Holtz-Eakin, a former CBO director and an economist has pointed out that ObamaCare creates an incentive for businesses to drop employee coverage. Employees will be forced into the private insurance market using after tax dollars or Medicaid. This was obvious to me from the start. The results will explode the federal and state deficits far more than the CBO projects. It will also result in a decrease in access to care as well as rationing of healthcare.

“ Entitlements are always sold as modest and "paid for," then years later everyone suddenly discovers that they are "unaffordable" without digging deeper into the pockets of the middle class. How do you think Medicare and Medicaid got to their current pass?”

When will our government ever learn? President Obama should be fixing the core problems in the healthcare system. Instead, he is creating an opportunity for increased government control over healthcare and greater healthcare insurance industry profit at the expense of consumers (taxpayers).

President Obama should try a consumer driven healthcare system and the ideal medical savings account.

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

  • Earl Nesbit

    Earl Nesbit

    Thanks for the article.Really thank you! Great.

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

Loser Pays; Everyone Wins

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

President Obama has done nothing about Tort Reform. Either he does not believe tort reform is part of the healthcare systems’ cost problem or the lobbyist for the plaintiff’s attorneys have gotten to him and the Democratic Party.

He humored Republicans when they brought up tort reform up at his “bipartisan” healthcare summit last year. He said he would take tort reform under advisement and think about developing some pilot programs.

Previously, I mentioned that I am not a Governor Rick Perry (R Tx) fan for several reasons. Lately, he has come up with some practical ideas. He could convert me.

In 2003, Rick Perry and the Texas legislature unenthusiastically changed tort reform laws in Texas. The revision has changed the liability climate in the state for businesses and physicians. Texas rewrote everything from class-action certification to product liability. One big success was eliminating the asbestos-silica litigation scam.

Rick Perry and the Texas senate rewrote the medical malpractice laws, ending plaintiff attorneys’ practice of venue shopping for friendly judges. They also put a cap of $250,000 on noneconomic damages like pain and suffering.

These reforms have been great for the legal climate in Texas. The reforms limited plaintiffs attorneys profitability on frivolous liability claims. Texans believe that because of these reforms and the lack of a state income tax, Texas is the country’s best state for job creation.

Before tort reform, Texas was considered the state in which to initiate law suits of all kinds. We had the “Kings of Tort” in Texas. Medical malpractice rates have fallen by 27.5% on average since 2003. It is no longer profitable for malpractice attorneys to file a frivolous law suits. The result has been a 60% increase in the number of doctors applying to practice in Texas. The overall population of the state has only grown 14%. Texas no longer has a shortage of obstetricians or emergency room physicians.

Rick Perry has been impressed with the results of his tort reforms. He now wants to extend his state’s impressive tort reform record.

Mr. Perry is proposing a British-style "loser pays" rule, which would require plaintiffs to pick up the legal costs of their targets if they lose their suits.

Almost all of America’s economic competitors in the world follow this standard. “Losers Pay” as a deterrent to law suits decreases the cost of doing business resulting in lower prices and a competitive advantage for business. “Loser Pays” would deter junk lawsuits.

Trial lawyers and their Democratic codependents have blocked states from making this revolutionary improvement to U.S. civil justice.

It would add an extra disincentive for the tort industry to bring suits that Texas law already defines as "groundless." The lawyers and firms that file such claims would pay an additional penalty, a downside they would have to weigh against their chances of personal enrichment.

The previous changes in malpractice reform have helped end the Texas physicians shortage in rural areas.

Twenty-three counties now have their first E.R. doctor, 10 their first OB-GYN. Hospitals are reinvesting the malpractice savings in scarce services like neurosurgery and neonatal units and expanding access to care.”

The earlier success in Texas with tort reform has opened the eyes politicians and produced advocates in Oklahoma. Even Democrats have been forced to agree to some legal reform. The lawyers are lining up to fight the “loser pays” initiative. Limits on damages have worked wonders for the state economic growth in Texas.

“Loser pays” will increase job growth and economic development even further.

Republicans picked up 16 governorships and at least 675 state legislative seats throughout the nation in November. The new state governments are looking at the progress in Texas. They are starting to follow Texas’ lead.

America will not need President Obama to do the right thing regarding tort reform. The states will get America out of its damaging litigation mess.

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

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) With My Son Brad

 

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

I love going to CES every January. I go to Las Vegas the day before the show starts so I can be in the exhibit hall early the next morning.

I also like to arrive the morning of the day before the show to avoid the long taxi lines at the airport. The Las Vegas airport taxi line is the worst.

I check into the hotel and leave my bags. I enjoy walking the Strip. I wander into the casinos. I study the players at the slot machines, the blackjack tables, the roulette wheels, and the craps tables. I watch the people play and study their reactions.

During my walk on the strip and in the hotel shopping malls I am always looking for a new deli to test their hot pastrami sandwiches.

This year I ate at the Carnegie Deli in the Mirage. The Carnegie Deli has lost its tall. Cindy’s Deli in Dallas, owned and run by Koreans, make a better hot pastrami sandwich.

After five miles of walking around I was tired. When I got to my room at 4 pm, I put my head on the pillow and was immediately asleep. Next thing I knew it was 5.45 pm.

Brad told me he would be working on his next book with his partner Jason Mendelson after 2 pm. He invited me to hang out in his room while they worked. Dinner was at 7 pm. I got to his room at 6.15 pm. We hung out and talked until dinner.

The incredible thing about my relationship with Brad Feld is that he always teaches me something. His perceptions are keen. He has the ability to evaluate issues he is interested in holistically.

The Foundry Group invites colleagues to dinner during the two nights they are at CES. They invite principles in companies they have invested in, VCs they have invested with, angel investor they know and some journalists they know.

I was the oldest person at the dinners. Everyone was under 50. Many are under 40. Most everyone knows of me through Brad’s references to my blog in Feld Thoughts. One person even said I was an icon and a legend.

How can you beat that?

The dinner at Bouchon was wonderful. The guests were great.

Brad went out of his way to introduce me to people I did not know. All the conversations I had were intellectually stimulating. All of them fascinated me. They were all focused on their work. They all had a very optimistic view of the future. I believe they all understand they represent America’s future.

On Thursday, I got to the convention center early. Brad was on a panel at 10.30 am. The topic was “Government policy and technology.” I wanted to see the CES best picks and scope out the exhibit halls.

The first booth I hit was the WIRED Magazine booth cosponsored by AMD. They were having a contest for who could construct the best WIRED magazine cover page. Below is the cover I made.

clip_image002yone            WIRED call off the contest in mid-stream. Everyone was using the contest to promote his or her product. Isn’t that what magazine covers do?

Brad’s panel consisted of four bureaucrats and him. Brad was the only one that got it. I was not the only one in the audience who came to that conclusion. During a convoluted debate about software patents Brad received an ovation from the audience when he declared that software patents should be eliminated.

Brad and I walk the floor of all three exhibit halls for the next five hours. Each exhibit hall was at least the size of 2 football fields. Each exhibit hall was covered wall to wall with exhibits. I love going around with Brad because he is a “speed looker.” I usually touch every stone. I have concluded that “speed lookers’ ” comprehension is better that slow lookers.

My conclusions from CES:

1. It looks like all 80 of the tablets exhibited are me too’s.

2. LED TV’s are getting bigger and bigger and thinner and thinner.

3. 3D TV is going to continue to have problems.

4. Internet video streaming of TV shows and movies is going to take over.

5. I wish I had invested in Netflix.

6. Cable companies must start to reinventing themselves.

7. Google is going to take over the world.

8. Microsoft will have to figure out a different business plan.

Dinner was at Nobu. I am not a big sushi fan. I am afraid of raw fish. However, this was a sushi orgy. I was sitting next to Brad. He taught me how to enjoy sushi. Actually, the sushi was great. As an additional benefit, I have not yet developed liver fluke.

My trip to Las Vegas proved to be a great learning experience. Brad, thank you for hanging out with me. Thank you for providing the opportunity for me to meet some very exciting people.

I love you.

Dad

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

  • Jaiden Gump

    Jaiden Gump

    Im grateful for the blog article.Really thank you! Want more.

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

State Medicaid Coverage -A Cash Cow For The Healthcare Insurance Industry

Stanley Feld M.D., FACP,MACE

 

The healthcare insurance industry is preparing to capitalize on a $40 billion opportunity to run Medicaid plans for states when President Obama’s healthcare reform act adds 16 million people to the Medicaid roles in 2014.

Do the math. $40,000,000,000 divided by 16,000,000 people is a net profit of $2,500 per patient after expenses.

“Medicaid, the state and federal program for the poor, has become a growth area for big insurers.”

Citigroup research group estimates that presently the overall healthcare insurance industry’s net profit is about $56.5 billion per year. The addition of 16 million enrollees will add $40 billion dollars in net profit to the healthcare insurance industry’s bottom line.

The positioning of both major healthcare insurance companies and smaller companies has been proceeding quietly, as they want to stay below the radar of public detection.

California will have 2 million new enrollees. Texas will have 1.9 million enrollees.

The healthcare insurance industry is preparing bids to provide administrative services for each state’s Medicaid program. Most states are experiencing budget crises and find it is cheaper to outsource the administrative services of their Medicaid programs.

The healthcare insurance industry manage coverage of 70% of Medicaid enrollees, or 33.4 million people, up from 56% in 1999, according to Sanford C. Bernstein.”

States let contracts lasting five years. The states want to contract with vendors now so they do not experience disruptions in 2014 when the Medicaid expansion occurs.

The healthcare insurance companies are trying to customize their plans to win their bids.

Medicaid is one of health insurers’ few bright spots, as their margins are pressed by regulatory crackdowns on premiums in their traditional policies. Gail Boudreaux, UnitedHealth’s executive vice president, told investors last month that: "The Medicaid space is a significant long-term growth opportunity for us. It’s a big market that’s getting even bigger." UnitedHealth pegs the value of new bids or expansions over the next three years at $40 billion.”

Many healthcare insurance companies are jumping in to capture the Medicaid business. UnitedHealth and WellPoint(Blue Cross/Blue Shield) are at the head of the class. Smaller companies such as Amerigroup, Centene and Molina claim their specialized focus gives them an advantage over the larger companies.

"Understanding the state as a customer is quite different than understanding what GE or IBM want as a purchaser," said John Littel, Amerigroup’s executive vice president of external relations.”

President Obama did not think out his plans for Medicaid very well. His healthcare reform act has done nothing to repair the problems in the Medicaid insurance system. In fact, the funding demanded of the states has resulted in a decrease in funding of vital safety net city and county hospitals.

What remains is an expansion of a system that has failed to provide adequate care over the last 40 years. The defective design of the Medicaid system is responsible for its failure. It makes no sense that by expanding the program by 16 million uninsured people it will produce a successful program. Expanding a failed system will not solve our universal healthcare goals. It will only expand our federal and state deficits and provide more profit for the healthcare insurance industry.

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

  • blade

    I intended to send you a tiny remark to finally thank you so much as before for your personal marvelous tricks you have provided in this article. This has been so extremely generous of people like you giving unreservedly exactly what many of us might have distributed as an electronic book to earn some dough for themselves, even more so now that you could have done it if you wanted. The solutions additionally served to become a fantastic way to realize that most people have the same keenness similar to mine to understand more pertaining to this problem. I’m certain there are many more pleasurable times ahead for individuals who looked over your website.

  • dog treadmill fast

    I do not even know how I ended up here, but I thought this post was good. I do not know who you are but definitely you are going to a famous blogger if you are not already 😉 Cheers!

  • •••
  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

Rationed Care: It Is Here Already

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

Rationing of healthcare and restricting access to medical care is here already. It is here even before President Obama’s healthcare reform act goes into full effect. It has resulted from decreasing reimbursement for Medicare services and terrible reimbursement for Medicaid services.

President Obama plans to expand Medicaid to provide services to the uninsured. The states cannot afford to pay for Medicaid at present levels. Adding 32 million people to its roles will lead to a further decrease in reimbursement and further delays in access to care.

Presently, there are not enough physicians accepting Medicaid to take care of the Medicaid patients. When physicians accept Medicaid patients they use physician extenders to help take care of the increased volume necessary to survive the decreased reimbursement. It also raises a government red flag. The result is investigating those physicians for fraudulent billings. This discourages more physicians from taking care of the Medicaid patients.

America is progressing at an unprecedented rate toward increased rationing and decreased access to medical care. I imagine President Obama’s plans to replace physicians with lower levels of “healthcare providers.”

It would be very easy to fix the healthcare system using appropriate measures. I do not think that repairing the existing healthcare system is President Obama’s goal. His goal is to make the entire population dependent on the central government.

It will not work. Wealthy people will always be able to buy most of the medical care they would need. If we stay on the current course, everyone else will experience long lines, decreased access to care and rationing of care.

President Obama, through regulations could try to mandate that all physicians see all patients as a condition for renewal of their medical license.

This would represent government control over individual rights and freedom of choice. It would be unconstitutional.

“The underlying problem is that doctors are reimbursed at different rates, depending on whether they see a patient with private insurance, Medicare or Medicaid. As demand increases relative to supply, many doctors are likely to turn away patients whose coverage would pay the lower rates.”

Medicaid reimbursement is 40-80% of the reimbursement rate of Medicare. Private insurance is higher than Medicare. The preference for patient load is obvious private insurance patients first, then Medicare and finally Medicaid. Physicians are not accepting Medicaid patients and are starting to close their practices to Medicare patients.

President Obama’s new health care legislation is likely to speed this process. Under the new law, tens of millions of additional Americans will receive coverage through Medicaid or private insurance. This will intensify the lack of access to medical care. We have seen it in Massachusetts after the state passed its healthcare reform bill. (Romneycare)

“Ideally, higher demand for medical care would prompt increases in supply, which in turn would lower prices and expand access. But the health care sector does not always work this way.”

Physicians are highly regulated and in that manner restricted in supply. The Association of American Medical Colleges estimates that the United States could face a shortage of 150,000 doctors in the next 15 years.

President Obama probably figures he will add to the supply with substitute physicians. The problem is when people are sick they want a physician.

President Obama’s healthcare law will result in promoting individual private insurance coverage. The plan going to offer subsidies to many individuals that could not afford or obtain private insurance previously.

An unintended consequence is that his healthcare reform act will create incentives for employers to discontinue providing employees’ insurance coverage. Employers’ will pay the modest penalty which will force employees to buy healthcare insurance from federally subsidized healthcare insurance exchanges.

Employees will pay for the healthcare insurance with after tax dollars at a reduced rate. It will reduce consumer spending for other things. The government subsidy will strain the federal health budget even further. The winners will be the healthcare insurance industry and employers. The losers will be consumers and the government.

The American system of federalism, with its checks and balances and slow policy evolution, has many strengths, but it has also helped create this crazy quilt of health care reimbursement rates. The more demand-side pressure is placed on medical supply, the more Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements rates will determine who and what is rationed.

Singapore’s healthcare system is a sort of ideal medical savings account. The government requires workers to save 10 percent of their income for medical care. Consumers pay for medical care from those savings. The government pays for any of the expenses beyond those savings. The Singapore healthcare system has had success in controlling costs and access to care.

Singapore’s healthcare system is a consumer driven system. Consumers become responsible for their care and have incentives to save money for their medical care. The ideal medical savings account system is a cleaner system.

The real issue is there are many things that can be done to the healthcare system to align incentives, decrease abuses and reduce costs.

President Obama’s healthcare reform act is not doing any of them. He is going to make things worse. A healthcare system must be created that will be driven by consumers. We must give consumers incentives to control their health and healthcare dollars.

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

  • Gavanw

    Great analysis, and I was not aware of Singapore’s system until now. Unfortunately, most people are idealists and don’t care to explore the technicalities of government-run healthcare. Hopefully the realty sinks in sooner rather than later.

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

It Is All About Trust And Respect

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

President Obama removed the provision in his healthcare reform bill last year dealing with reimbursing physicians for end of life counseling. There was great citizen uproar about this provision. It was viewed by many as a first step toward rationing of medical care.

When a proposal to encourage end-of-life planning touched off a political storm over “death panels,” Democrats dropped it from legislation to overhaul the health care system.”

Sarah Palin call the provision the creation of “death panels.” A government “panel of experts” would decide whether Medicare would pay for treatment of patients deemed hopeless. The panel of experts would decide regardless of the patient’s wishes.

Sarah Palin’s term was criticized as “sensationalistic.” The criticism is correct. However, in a sound bite society you have to use effective sound bites to get attention. The eliminated provision illustrates the truth about a world of finite resources and infinite entitlements.

Entitlements are ever expanding as our population expands. The government cannot afford expanding our entitlement programs. Yet President Obama’s healthcare reform act is going to expand the Medicare and Medicaid entitlements to cover 32 million uninsured.

One way out is to decrease benefits. This is the administration’s plan.

Another way out of the mess is to attack the root of the problems. America could create a consumer driven healthcare model. America could also develop of system of logical tort reform. Government could subsidize those consumers that qualify for subsidies. Consumers should own their healthcare dollars as outlined in the ideal medical savings account.

I have objected to President Obama’s healthcare reform act. It puts all the power of medical decision making in the hands of the executive branch. HMS and CMS create rules and regulations without congressional oversight. The most recent revelation portends provisions to come.

President Obama’s administration has achieved the same end of life goal by regulations produced by Dr. Donald Berwick chief of CMS, starting Jan. 1.

“At a stroke, Medicare chief Donald Berwick has revived the "death panel" debate from two summers ago.”

Medicare will enact the same policy removed from the bill through the power of regulation. Congress has had no input. This is the first step in a never ending series of future steps President Obama will take to control our freedom to make healthcare choices. The regulations seem benign on the surface.

“The office of Oregon Democrat Earl Blumenauer, the author of the original rider who then lobbied Medicare to cover the service, sent an email to supporters cheering this "victory" but asked that they not tell anyone for fear of perpetuating "the ‘death panel’ myth." The email added that "Thus far, it seems that no press or blogs have discovered it, but we will be keeping a close watch."

President Obama has used a number of trick plays on congress and Americans to further his agenda. One trick President Obama pulled was his appointment of Dr. Berwick during congressional recess without congressional hearing after withholding the request for congressional hearings for 3 months.

Dr. Berwick now slips through a regulation about reimbursement that Congress explicitly rejected. Unfortunately for Dr. Berwick an email was leaked illustrating scheming with his political patrons to duck any public scrutiny.

“Expect many more such nontransparent improvisations under the vast powers ObamaCare handed the executive branch.”

An administrative representative immediately stepped in and declared the rule-making is not coercive. He claimed the rule gives seniors more autonomy, not less.

The facts are that if the medical experts in Congress haven’t decided that some treatment or service is worthy of the fee schedule, then the program won’t pay for it even if it is in the best interests of patients.”

The two most expensive occurrences are the birth of premature infants and the last 30 days of life. As a society, we will have to learn how to deal with these facts. Society must be innovative in dealing with these tragedies to the satisfaction of all. As a society, we also have to conquer obesity and the onset and management of chronic diseases.

Unfortunately, President Obama’s methodology is wrong. He has demonstrated an arrogance and disrespect for the American people. The American people now understand his methodology. They have experienced his multiple trick plays and have lost trust in him and his administration. There is a perception that he disrespects the will of the people he has been elected to serve. President Obama will not achieve his goals as long as the perception exists.

The Democratic Party has experienced this mistrust during the midterm elections. Nonetheless, President Obama and the Democratic Party continued to show their disrespect for the will of the American people during the lame duck congressional session.

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

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

Are Physicians Are The Cause Of The Dysfunctional Healthcare System?

 

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP, MACE

I wish all my readers a Happy and Healthy New Year!

I would like to thank everyone for continuing to read my blog.

Hopefully, healthcare will become more affordable, easier to access, and not be rationed in the years to come.

I do not think these goals will be reached with President Obama’s healthcare reform act. I think his healthcare reform act will make good medical care more unaffordable and less available.

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

I should like to react to Dr. Lucas Restrepo’s article on Kevin MD’s website. Kevin Pho M.D. does a wonderful job presenting all sides of the healthcare reform issue.

Dr.Restrepo’s article entitled “Progressive Commercialization of American Medicine” misses the causes responsible for the dysfunction of the healthcare system.

I am a retired clinical endocrinologist without a billfold interest in the practice of medicine. I am the founder of a Clinical Endocrinology practice started in 1970. I was the first practicing Clinical Endocrinologist in a free standing private practice in Dallas, Texas. At that time few people knew what a Clinical Endocrinologist was or did.

I started my Clinical Endocrinology practice without knowing anything about business. I was not taught anything about the business of clinical practice in my training at academic institutions.

I had to learn about the business of clinical practice in order to survive and feed my family. I had to teach myself the value of my intellectual property.

Dr. Restrepo is a neurologist at the UCLA Medical Center (Los Angeles, California) and the Barrow Neurological Institute (Phoenix, Arizona). It sound like he is a full time salaried physician. He does not have a need to understand the business of clinical practice. He also does not have to understand the potential value of his intellectual property. If he does not perform satisfactorily for UCLA’s administration he will be terminated.

Dr. Restrepo starts his article by quoting Sir William Osler:

Medicine, wrote William Osler, is “a calling, not a business.” Patients are not clients, nor physicians businessmen. People do not spend over a decade studying medicine ―living years in poverty or overburdened with debt― merely hoping to get rich. While it is perfectly legitimate to expect a salary that enables a dignified living and financial stability, any medical student who dreams a life of luxury is misguided.”

What is the definition of a dignified living and financial stability versus a life of luxury? Dr. Restrepo leaves the definitions undefined.

I think the definition of a dignified living and financial stability would include the freedom to make medical practice decisions, the freedom to define one’s working conditions and determine one’s time off. It should not include being forced by regulation to accept administrators’ working conditions. Physicians should not be indentured servants.

The fundamental principles sould advocate the primacy of patient welfare, that altruism is the catalyst of the physician–patient relationship, and that “market forces, societal pressures, and administrative exigencies must not compromise this principle.”

Dr. Restrepo implies that physicians’ decrease in their Oslerian moral fabric is the cause of the dysfunctional health care system.

Physicians’ reimbursement accounts for only ten percent of our excessive healthcare costs.

What are the costs generated by the parasites of the healthcare system such as hospital administrators, healthcare insurance executives, pharmaceutical companies and their executives, lawyers, government bureaucrats and lobbyists?

What about the million dollar plus salaries of hospital administrators?

What about the multi-millions to billion dollar salaries of healthcare insurance company executives?

What about the multiple billion dollars a year spent by lobbyist to influence congressional healthcare policy decisions?

What about the $100 to $750 billion dollars spent yearly for defensive medicine and malpractice claims?

These people consume most of the healthcare dollars.

“If health care is deemed a right of every citizen (or more aptly, of every human being), it naturally follows that a legitimate government should protect fully the rights of its citizens and guests (invited and uninvited). “Medicare for all” is the logical and just solution to the argument, but this has not become law. Instead, we have the PPACA, which is a reasonable step forward.

It is easy to blame physicians’ greed for the ills in the healthcare care system. Physicians are an easy target. Remember, when one is sick one needs a good physician to deliver high quality care. One does not need a hospital administrator, a healthcare insurance company executive or a lawyer.

It is easy to say Medicare for all. However the government cannot afford the present Medicare costs because of its outsourcing of the administration services of Medicare and Medicaid to the healthcare insurance industry. The cost of Medicare is not cheap.

Physicians are a small cost to the dysfunctional healthcare system. Most patients and physicians do not understand this reality.

Government takeover of the healthcare system will make access to medical care and affordability of medical care worse. Government should be concentrating on the real problems causing the dysfunction of the healthcare system.

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

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

President Obama, Here We Go!

 

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

State constitutions require states to have a balanced budget. Most states have accumulated large budget deficits.

When President Obama promises to redistribute wealth he means it. His plans are to take federal money and bail out states. He has already bailed out Massachusetts. He gave the state $8 billion dollars for its healthcare plan.

California is on the verge of bankruptcy. California has not shown an intention to become fiscally responsible. I assume California is certain President Obama will bail it out. However, President Obama has a little problem. The U.S. has a large budget deficit. The new congress will be in no mood to fund the state deficits. The U.S. is going to have difficulty attracting creditors unless it becomes fiscally responsible.

Medicaid expenses are a big burden on the states. In some states’ Medicaid consumes 40% of their budget. States cannot become fiscally responsible while carrying their Medicaid burden.

President Obama plans to put 60% of the uninsured citizens into state Medicaid programs. At the same time, he is decreasing state allocated funds for Medicaid. The math makes no sense.

Last week Arizona’s Medicaid stopped paying for transplants. Some states have cut Medicaid payments to doctors, paid bills late and trimmed benefits such as insulin pumps, obesity surgery and hospice care. In California, dentists pull teeth that could be saved because Medicaid doesn’t pay for root canals.

President Obama’s healthcare reform plan is causing a rationing of medical care even before it goes into effect.

Across the country, state lawmakers have taken harsh actions to try to rein in the budget-busting costs of the health care program that serves 58 million poor and disabled Americans.”

“Some states face multibillion-dollar deficits. Federal stimulus money for Medicaid is soon to evaporate. And Medicaid enrollment has never been higher because of job losses.”

Medicaid has become a monster and is eating up the budget in many states.

“In Illinois, Medicaid sucks up more money than elementary, secondary and higher education combined”.

President Obama’s economic stimulus package increased the federal share of Medicaid money temporarily. The economic stimulus money runs out at the end of June 2011. The federal government will go back to paying half the costs of Medical instead of the 60 to 70 percent it pays with the economic stimulus money.

At the same time President Obama’s healthcare reform law requires states not to change the rules on who’s eligible to receive Medicaid. States can no longer act independently to determine Medicaid’s eligibility requirements.

President Obama’s healthcare reform act has created rules such as these. These rules are part of the reason states are suing the federal government. The states claim President Obama’s healthcare reform act is an infringement on states’ rights. This infringement on states’ rights has broader implications of the power of the federal government over the states. This was not the intent of the constitution.

This week President Obama’s healthcare reform act had experienced a judicial setback. A Virginia judge declared the healthcare reform act unconstitutional.

Hopefully the new congress will be as aggressive as the States have been in order to protect individual freedoms and the rights of states as intended by the constitution.

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

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.

Permalink:

Inside Baseball?

Stanley Feld M.D.,FACP,MACE

Last week a reader made this comment.

Stanley:
I have been reading your columns for many weeks.
The information you provide is mostly inside baseball for the medical community.  How about some focus on the patients?

I disagree. I am trying to help patients and physicians understand that President Obama’s healthcare reform act will be a disaster for patients and patient care. His goal is to destroy the present healthcare system and replace it with a government run single party payer system. He realizes he cannot do it in one step.

He has previously said he prefers a single party payer system but he does not have the votes for a single party payer system.

President Obama’s goal is to set up an irrevocable infrastructure for the healthcare system that will control patient choice. It will extinguish patients’ freedom to choose their doctors and their care despite his public pronouncements.

By eliminating patients’ ability to control their healthcare dollars, President Obama is going to limit access to care and ration care as well. The new infrastructure will eliminate end of life decision making by patients.

His goal is to force patients to be totally dependent on government deciding their healthcare needs. He is determined to control their healthcare dollars. He will waste taxpayers’ dollars on a government bureaucracy that is inefficient and ineffective as he tries to redistribute wealth.

After President Obama’s healthcare reform plan fails, the next step is the public option. The government is not going to close more than two hundred new agencies and start over.

The public option will not be successful. The government will then move to a single party payer system.

President Obama has stated he would protect consumers from the big bad healthcare insurance industry. Yet new regulations, by his ever increasing bureaucracy, have been written. The new regulations will provide the healthcare insurance industry with a guarantee of more customers plus the ability to pile bogus expenses into the benefit expense column.

The healthcare insurance industry will be able to deduct these expenses as benefit expenses and comply with the 80% Medical Loss requirement. The result is less money available for direct medical care.

Medicare and Medicaid are bankrupt. President Obama is not eliminating the profit the healthcare insurance industry makes on Medicare or Medicaid.

How is he going to make universal Medicare and Medicaid solvent by expanding the entitlement to the entire population?

If he keeps reducing physician reimbursement, he will drive the work force out of the system. If a physician refers a patient to a home healthcare agency, the value of the home healthcare nurse visit is at least 3 times the value of a physician visit. The rules are stupid.

Home healthcare is important. Inefficiency in the bureaucracy makes home healthcare unaffordable. It will be rationed in the future.

Rather that fixing the bureaucratic inefficiency which adds no value to direct patient care, President Obama is going to limit access to the care.

A huge problem in patient inability to get efficient care is the problem of defensive medicine and the lack of malpractice reform. President Obama completely ignores this $750 billion dollar a year problem

President Obama is setting up a system that will commoditize medical care. He is destroying the patient physician relationship so essential to good medical outcomes

He is also imposing a mandate requiring consumers to buy healthcare insurance. I believe the mandate is unconstitutional as do at least 30 state attorney generals.

President Obama is not developing an infrastructure to encourage patients to be responsible for their health or healthcare dollars. He is developing an infrastructure making patients dependent on government for medical care.

The only way to decrease the onset of chronic disease is to make it stylish to avoid chronic disease. This can be achieved by effective public awareness initiatives.

President Obama is not providing financial incentives for physicians to create chronic disease management systems to decrease the onset of complications of chronic diseases. The treatment of the complications of chronic disease is 80% of direct medical care costs.

I have tried to point out all the moves President Obama has made toward destroying the healthcare system. The healthcare system will fail. When it does the new healthcare system will subject patients to less than ideal medical care.

Patients/consumers understand all these tricks. President Obama is not adding value to the medical care system

My comments are Inside Baseball comments for both consumers and the medical community. These comments are not available through the traditional media. Physicians and consumers must become aware of what is going on.

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

  • Thanks for leaving a comment, please keep it clean. HTML allowed is strong, code and a href.