Health Care Do Over
I’ve been reading Maggie Mahar’s Money-Driven Medicine and wow–if you need any more evidence that our health care system is a mess of perverse incentives and profit drive, Mahar will give it to you, plain and simple. The book makes a fantastic case from both economic as well as social justice and ethical viewpoints.
Several really important concepts that she nails, which may just have to become their own posts:
- We spend almost twice as much per person on healthcare in the US than in other countries, but we clearly aren’t getting a system that’s twice as good, if better at all.
- Economic theory demands that in order for a consumer to make a purchasing decision, he or she must have information about the good or service and its value. “This is what makes the purchase of health care so different from any other purchase: it is a transaction based on trust.” This speaks greatly to our duty and professionalism as physicians.
- “Insurance companies possess neither the expertise nor the standing to set the nation’s health care priorities.”
- Medical ethicist Daniel Callahan: “The market is far better at meeting immediate short term private interests than long-term collective needs.”
- Economic theory often doesn’t apply to the health care industry. Hospital mergers, one would expect, should reduce the cost of business through economies of scale. Instead, they often lead to duplication. Hospitals merge to improve their bargaining power with insurers, not to reduce costs or save money.
- More care is not necessarily better care.
Another concept I’ve materialized myself, as the saying goes:
If you’re a Democrat when you’re young, and a Republican once you get a mortgage, then you’re for private health insurance when you’re well, and you’re for health care reform when you’ve developed chronic disease.
Nice post! Money is not the cure.
Knowing that we spend 25 percent more on health care in the U.S. than the NEXT leading country, yet we do not make the top forty in life expectancy should leave us enraged and looking for answers.
Perhaps we do not need to reinvent the wheel however. In parts of Europe, western and alternative medicine are interwoven and prevention is foremost. In the U.S., physicians are paid to spend an hour counseling a patient diagnosed with a disease, such as cancer, but there is no reimbursement for prevention (primary prevention that is, things such as mammograms are secondary prevention).
To quote Dean Ormish, “I don’t understand why asking people to eat a well-balanced vegetarian diet is considered drastic, while it is medically conservative to cut people open.”
Lynne Eldridge M.D.
Author, “Avoiding Cancer One Day At A Time”
http://www.avoidcancernow.com
When we start comparing the life expectancies between the USA and Europe, we need to look at lifestyles along with health care dollars spent. Our (americans) poor diets, high stress, and lack of exercise are obvious reasons we have decreased lifespans. Maybe our increased spending is increasing the life expectancy to 75. If we were to receive the socialized health care of Europe, we might be dying at 60.