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Some Health Reform Questions for The President

By Ken Terry | Sep 8, 2009

In David Brooks‘ op-ed column in The New York Times last Friday, he pointed out that, by telling people they could keep their current insurance plan, President Obama–and candidate Obama during the election campaign–had unintentionally pulled the rug out from under healthcare reform. While reassuring people who are worried about losing what they have, Brooks said,

“Obama’s promise has sent the reform effort off the rails. It meant that efforts to expand coverage marched ahead, but efforts to fundamentally reform the system got watered down. Instead of true reform, we got a series of bills that essentially cement the present system in place. The proposals do not fundamentally challenge the fee-for-service system. They don’t make Americans more accountable for their own health care spending. They don’t reduce costs. They just add more people into the mess we’ve got.”

I don’t always agree with Brooks, but this time he got it exactly right. If all Obama does in his upcoming address to Congress is tell the public that he’s determined to achieve universal coverage and cut costs, we’re in a lot of trouble–and so is the President. Because if he lets Congress keep going in its current direction, the reform bill it produces will essentially be the status quo as far as the industry is concerned. While an individual mandate to buy insurance will increase the financial burden on consumers, the legislation will contain little or no cost control measures.

We need some new ideas, and we need them fast. Brooks praises a recent Brookings Institution report that makes several concrete proposals to cut spending growth, as well as the Wyden-Bennett bill that has been languishing since the election. The Brookings paper was written by a bipartisan group of health-policy experts, and Wyden-Bennett, according to the CBO, would achieve universal coverage without increasing the deficit. There are many other good ideas waiting in the wings, among which is the modest proposal I made in my own book, Rx For Healthcare Reform.

While I won’t bore you with the details of that plan, I do have a few questions that I’d like to ask President Obama:

  • Do you still believe that employers above a certain size should pay their fair share of healthcare costs?
  • If individuals were required to buy insurance, and the government subsidized only those whose incomes fell below 300 percent of the federal poverty level, as the Senate Finance Committee suggests, is it reasonable to expect those with incomes from 300 to 400 percent of the FPL to spend up to 13 percent of their income on health insurance?
  • Would this approach lead to millions of people buying skimpy plans and having little access to care?
  • Should every middling town in the United States have multiple MRI, CT and PET scanners, or should we limit the availability of these profit-producing machines to keep down costs, as they do in Canada?
  • Should we restore the regional health planning agencies that were launched in the ‘70s to prevent hospitals and physician entrepreneurs from building unneeded facilities that generate more business, whether or not it contributes to the health of patients?
  • If we pursue payment reform to eliminate perverse provider incentives, should we start with Medicare or do we have to include the entire system to make it work?
  • Assuming that you and your allies in Congress have the guts to take on the healthcare industry, a lot of jobs would be eliminated, generating massive public opposition. Should we gradually phase in structural reform and if so, should we combine it with industrial policies that would generate new jobs to replace those that are lost?

These are just a few of the issues that need to be considered in healthcare reform that is worthy of the name. Anything less is just tinkering at the margins, and we can’t afford that now.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    Coach-Lee-428

    09/09/09 | Report as spam

    Personal Responsibility in Health Care Reform

    Where is personal responsibility in any of these reforms solutions?

    Are we rewarding bad behavior (unhealthy behavior) and having others to pay for it?

    People appear to be once again seeking a magic quick fix even if it is 1,000 pages and quite convoluted in that only attorneys may understand it.

    There are several factors I have not truly heard discussed beginning with the cost and truly helping our citizens to be healthier before they seek medical attention.

    What I am hearing is reactive solutions instead of proactive ones based upon dubious statistics. As the old expression goes, figures do not lie, but liars figure.

    Again, look to the federal government and how public educations costs have quadrupled since 1959 (inflation adjusted). Are our results 4 times better? No, in many cases they are actually worse.

  •  
    2

    verycold

    09/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    The pain has just begun. Wait until all the baby boomers start filing into those doctor's offices and hospitals. Worse yet, how about the nursing home fiasco that is looming. Who is going to pay that steep price for so many with nowhere to go?

    I keep saying that health care cannot be managed with any insurance plan. The word "insurance" with regards to health care is flawed. Insurance is an instrument that is protection only and hopefully never to be used. Health insurance is like getting a paid check card with no limits. There is no incentive to be prudent by the patient. People want to live the life they want no matter who has to pay for it. I can remember when many procedures were not covered by insurance plans. Today procedures keep getting added and thus the cost of that policy continues to rise.

    Let's go back to my personal experience back in 1973 when I was no insured. I had a baby without insurance. My husband and I were at poverty level. We were kids. I wasn't worried about that fact knowing we would claw our way out of the hole we dug which we certainly did. We did that by not increasing our debt load and just paying down our bills and starting over. Big deal. Back in 1973 my doctor charged 200 to deliver my baby. I didn't have that money and so he waived his fee. The hospital bill as I recall was over a 1,000 dollars and they too waived a portion of the bill. My pedatrician and doctor lived well as I recall. They didn't live crazy fancy like is seen today, but well. The hospital was a small rural one with rooms that held multiple patients. Everybody was very helpful.

    Look where we are today just 30 some years later. What is the cost to have a baby? How much debt is our nation in now? How many people live debt free? The average cc debt is over 9,000 and rising. I remember when car payments would not extend past 3 years.

    We are headed in the wrong direction. STOP IN THE NAME OF SANITY and slow this health care process down and make root cause changes that actually bring down costs and stop the bleed.

  •  
    3

    slccom

    09/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    An unadressed issue is the obscene cost of becoming a physician. In 1973, doctors did not incur $200,000 + in costs becoming a physician. If we "control costs" on the backs of the physicians, believe me, the best and brightest will head in other, more financially reasonable directions. Then the whole issue of health care costs will be nicely resolved: there will be so few physicians that the few who remain will move into plumbing and auto repair because of the overwork and lack of danger of killing people due to fatigue.

  •  
    4

    Coach-Lee-428

    09/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Then someone needs to talk to the AMA because they have not built a new medical university in the last 50 years. When people make such a high financial commitment for a profession, this speaks something to their dedication.

    Who in their right mind enters a profession somewhere between $150,000 to $200,000 in debt knowing that you must pay at least $100,000 or more in annual malpractice premiums, be required to take patients, receive anywhere from 50 cents to 75 cents on the dollar for your billed time from insurance reimbursement based upon an existing Medicare reimbursement rates and then have potentially some bureaucrat without a medical degree tell you how to treat a patient?

    Why not address the bigger cost currently on the backs of the physicians that being malpractice insurance? This alone creates in excess of $200 billion annually if not more in defensive medicine health care costs and limits access not to mention how that increases overall health care costs and access?

    Another tort reform issue to be addressed is the ability to independently sue the hospital or the doctor and also allow you to sue the lawyer who brought a bad lawsuit to court. Right now if a doctor is fatigued because of an error on the part of the hospital such as losing a X-ray before surgery and that person is rescheduled from being #1 on the day's surgical list to being #5, you must sue the doctor even though it was not the doctor's fault. This happened to my mother-in-law so I do know from what I speak.

    With many hospitals having to defend malpractice claims of which many do not result in any monetary awards, this also adds to health care costs.

    My question is why does there appear to be a tone from sclcom isolating physicians and describing uncaring while that same tone is not applied to lawyers? Between the two, I prefer a doctor to a lawyer any day of the week. Possibly we should make being a lawyer even more expensive than being a doctor and we could have them missing up our plumbing with the same ineptitude that they have done to our lives through their legistlative ineptitude?

  •  
    5

    slccom

    09/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    I have no idea where you think there is "uncaring." Quite the contrary. I think that people who are willing to give up 10-20 years of their lives to become physicians and super specialists should be treasured and nurtured, not punished.

    I would love to see the cost of law school quintuple myself. And a truckload of those "practicing" now belong in jail.

    The number of physicians is NOT limited by the AMA.

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-03-02-doctor-shortage_x.htm

    "Congress controls the supply of physicians by how much federal funding it provides for medical residencies ? the graduate training required of all doctors."

    "In 1997, to save money and prevent a doctor glut, Congress capped the number of residents that Medicare will pay for at about 80,000 a year. Another 20,000 residents are financed by the Veterans Administration and Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor. Teaching hospitals pay for a small number of residents without government assistance."

    I'm sorry about your mother-in-law. The suit should have been against the hospital, not the doctor. But this is a direct result of the insufficient number of physicians.

    Write your elected officials!

  •  
    6

    dkberry

    09/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Love the idea of being able to suit lawyers who assist in the promotion of flawed lawsuits.

    Congress via CMS w/AMA help is responsible for killing primary care. AMA's 23-physician RVS Update Committee (RUC) made up of 18 subspecialty reps and only 5 primary care reps vote to decide whether reimbursement should emphasize the primary care end of the healthcare spectrum or the high end high cost subspecialty end. Figure out how the voting works out.

    Which association has more money to lobby Congress? Orthopedic surgeons and radiologists... or family medicine physicians?

    Administration continues to fail to understand the health care system ... including who takes out tonsils. If the President sends Peter Orszag and Ezekiel Emanuel out to explain how the President's health care reform will work I want a ticket for the front row! Will be great to watch.

  •  
    7

    krisn

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    I just saw an amazing documentary called Money- Driven
    Medicine. It talks about a lot of the issues you all have been
    discussing on here. What I found to be the most scary is the
    fact that, medical students are being forced to choose wisely
    about which area of practice they join. Depending on the field
    of medicine they choose, their school loans might not be able
    to be paid back. I guess that is why we are seeing less and
    less primary care doctors in practice. This documentary also
    shows how ignorant congress is when they say that America
    has the best health care system in the world. Everything in the
    documentary that follows these rants, proves other wise. I
    think everyone should see Money- Driven Medicine and see for
    themselves the hair raising issues about health care reform. I
    got to see the documentary for free at http://money driven
    medicine.org/watch in. Have a box of tissues handy!

  •  
    8

    Coach-Lee-428

    10/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    One final question - where in the U.S. Constitution do you have the right to legislate this issue? Nowhere! Of course for an Constitutionalist expert who believes that the Bill of Rights are Negative Rights (meaning they restrict the government and that was the idea from the Founding Fathers) why should I be surprised.

  •  
    9

    verycold

    10/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Who would want to be a primary care physician today? I live in a college town with two huge medical facilities. The family doctors live fine, but not high end, but the specialists live like Kings. I mean the difference is staggering.

    If there were more doctors and they had to fight a bit more for patients, the price of services might trend downwards.

    For the past several years there has been a huge push to have procedures done as preventative believing catching the problem first will save money later down the road. After one of those procedures for my husband this year, I spoke to the doctor about the stats. My husband had no medical problems that required this procedure except that his family doctor felt his age was a factor. So for many thousands of dollars he had this procedure done. The doctor told me that he was happy to report that very few of the patients have any problems that require further medical care. So really he is catching "nothing" early. While I understand the theory behind all these preventative procedures, I am not so sure it is fiscally prudent to do all these procedures without at least some none medical problem or genetic history. I mean pretty soon the "aged" population will need to go in weekly for some sort of test that could show some potential problem which might be caught early. I know my cancer was found very early, before my screening age became a factor. I was just lucky really. An odd set of circumstances made it possible.

    I think if we just focused on 3 of the top health issues and how to prevent or contain them we would drastically reduce health care costs. We should have a lively debate about those health conditions and instead of punishing people figure out ways to encourage people to live a better life. That would need to start when kids enter school. That would need to start in school cafeterias which as I recall were awful.

  •  
    10

    Coach-Lee-428

    10/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Very Cold - What you appear to be describing is preventative medicine that impacts health care by at least $200 billion annually and some researches suggest this figure is very conservative.

    When you look at Medicare reimbursement rate of around 60%, it makes more sense to specialize given the majority of the costs are the same except for malpractice insurance.

    Agree it is time to look at behaviors and stop rewarding unhealthy behaviors by punishing those who live a more healthy lifestyle. I was just in Washington, D.C. and was surprised by the absence of heavy or fat people compared to Chicago, IL.

    We must leave the Agrian behaviors of the past and adopt new eating and exercise behaviors reflective of today's lifestyles.

  •  
    11

    verycold

    10/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Your last sentence is key to the problem here in the US. People are unaware that they are virtually doing little exercise during the day. Certainly nothing meaningful. I still live on a farm and I still do farm chores every day. I still ride horses every day. When I managed a barn a few years ago, I did 10x what I am doing today even though for my advanced age I am doing way more than anybody my age. When I was doing all that labor intensive work, I was a rail. I ate non-stop to just keep weight on. I can't eat anywhere near what I did 8 years ago.

    One of the big problems is that many Americans don't prepare meals at home anymore. Often the portion size at restaurants is far too big for the average person. I know people bring home some of their meal, but I am sure they still eat more than they should at that dinner meal. On top of that the food at many restaurants is prepared elsewhere with a lot of preservatives etc. added. For the most part it is just fattening food that is being served. It wouldn't be so bad except as you pointed out customers no longer live an Agrarian lifestyle and thus the pounds add up.

    The really sad part of this health care debate is that so many answers are at the tip of our fingers and yet the WH has chosen to re-invent the wheel. We know with a heavy heart that the government will further mess up the system to the point that those currently covered under an insurance plan, will see their coverage diminish and it will cost more to provide for those that can't afford any coverage. People might say that is only fair for those that can afford to pay for those that cannot afford, but when already 43 percent of working Americans don't pay federal taxes, up from about 20 percent back in the 80s, it won't be long that everybody will be living a much lesser quality of life. There simply is not enough money to go around for everybody when everybody is not contributing.

  •  
    12

    Coach-Lee-428

    10/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some Health Reform Questions for The President

    Agree with you and envy you riding horses on a daily basis. I used to ride and show Arabians. Life has taken a different path now, but once a horse person always a horse person.

    As we discussed previously, entitlement mentality is alive and thriving in the U.S. Only until recently have people begun to understand the consequences of this belief.

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