“Understanding
Why Patients Of Low Socioeconomic Status Prefer Hospitals Over Ambulatory Care”[1],
by Shreya Kangovi and her colleagues in the July, 2013 issue of Health Affairs, tries to help us answer
that question in order, presumably, to help re-design ambulatory care in order
to change that preference. A general assumption of health policy is that use of
hospital emergency rooms for “routine care” is expensive, inappropriate,
provides worse patient outcomes, distracts emergency room staff from caring for
the true emergencies that they are presumably there for, and is a significant
cause of the overall high health care spending in the US. Although the whole
article is available on-line only to Health
Affairs subscribers, a summary
is presented on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RJWF) website, because Dr.
Kangovi was an RJWF Clinical Scholar.
The authors conducted a qualitative study interviewing 64
people who frequently used the emergency room as their source of medical care,
using trained community members to engender greater trust on the part of the
patients, mostly lower income African-Americans, to conduct the interviews, in
two hospitals in the Philadelphia area. “Study respondents (both the insured and
uninsured) explained that they consciously chose the ER because the care was
cheaper, the quality of care was seemingly better, transportation options were
more readily accessible, and, in some cases, the hospital offered more respite
than a physician’s office.”
These findings should be surprising to many students of
public policy, but they were the legitimate perspectives of the people who were
using these services, those Kangovi correctly notes, whose “…voices are seldom heard in policy discussions.” Understanding their concerns is critical, not
because they are always “right”, or represent everyone, but because those
concerns reflect their experiences, and the degree to which our current
strategies are not working, and the degree to which our future strategies are
unlikely to work if they do not take into consideration these issues. Three
themes generated by the researchers, with supporting quotes from the folks who
were interviewed:
- Convenience. “You must call on the same day to
set up a [primary] care appointment … whenever they can fit you in.” This
open-access scheduling resulted in people taking days off from work and
still being unable to see a doctor. It also made it impossible for many to
access transportation covered by Medicaid because the transport
arrangements had to made 72 hours in advance. Late hospital hours also made
care more available.
- Cost. “I don’t have a co-pay in the ER,
but my primary [physician] may send me to two or three specialists and
sometimes there is a co-pay for them. Plus there’s time off from work to
go to several appointments.”
- Quality. “The [primary care doctor] never
treated me or my husband aggressively to get blood pressure under control.
I went to the hospital and they had it under control in four days. The
[physician] had three years.”
Any health care provider who has worked in an ER or in
ambulatory care can validate these concerns, and also respond to them. The most
obvious is Cost. Obviously care in an
ER is not free; indeed the cost is a major driver of efforts to get people to not use it. But the patient, at the time
of service, doesn’t have to put down cash, put down a co-payment, put down real
money now. There will be a bill, but that will be something that goes on their
(likely existing and mounting) debt burden.
Convenience is, perhaps,
a poor choice of words; it suggests something purely volitional, as if people
were choosing to have their hair done during the day rather than go to the
doctor. Convenience in the way that a middle class person understands it is not
what these folks are talking about. They may not have a car or a family member
with one (or perhaps it is being used by a family member to get to work),
public transportation may be unavailable, unreliable or inaccessible to them
given their medical problems, and if they have jobs, they are often not those
that just allow you to take a sick day to go to the doctor, but mean they lose
pay. Despite efforts to have “extended hours”, most ambulatory care offices are
open mainly during regular business hours, during the day weekdays, when the
folks who work there want to work, not when it is necessarily most “convenient”
for patients. Let’s get this straight, it is not “convenient” to wait 6 hours
in an ER to be seen; if this is better than the alternative, the alternative is
seriously flawed!
Quality is another
issue, and the quotation chosen is very open to criticism. The hospital had 4
days of complete control of the person’s life, giving them their medicines and
minimizing any external issues, while the doctor had 3 years in which the
person was responsible for taking their medicine, choosing their diet, and
deciding where to rank health among the many competing priorities in their
lives. As any of us who have worked in medicine know, the control that was achieved
in the hospital may well evaporate once someone is back in their regular
environment.
Really, this is largely an issue of money, of resources. The
authors emphasize that not all the patients were uninsured, but those who had
insurance almost all had Medicaid. Not only is Medicaid not equivalent to private
insurance (it pays less and lots of doctors do not take it) but it is only
available to really poor people. People who are poor enough to have Medicaid have
all those issues listed above under “Convenience” and “Cost” that go beyond the
direct cost of medical care, but inform every decision that they make in their
lives.
Policy is made, in almost every area, by the “haves”, those
with money and political power. At the rawest, it is a blatant example of
“let’s do for us, and screw those without power”, as for example the farm bill
that cuts food stamps for the neediest while continuing support for giant
agribusiness (well discussed by Paul Krugman in
“Hunger
Games, USA”, NY Times July , 2013[2]).
More subtly, and with much less intentionality, not to mention hostility, it is
made from the perspective of people who have a lot, who cannot even imagine the
lives, decisions, and trade-offs made every day by “have-nots”. The “haves” may
identify a lot that is wrong with the health care system, but they do not even
think of things like not having transportation, or not being able to take off
from work to go to clinics open during working hours, or not having childcare.
They are not mean people, but they do not see.
In her comments, Kangovi looks at plans to develop
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). “Our
findings suggest that these efforts could backfire by making hospitals even
more attractive to these patients. We also debunk the notion that people from
these groups abuse the emergency room for no reason and need to be taught how
to use it properly.” The real issue
is that there are not the financial incentives to provide high-quality care
that is accessible in terms of both cost and the other obstacles people face
(e.g., transportation, childcare, office hours). The financial incentives are
to try to avoid these patients all together, keep them out of the ER, keep them
out of your office; to develop “Patient-Centered Medical Homes” that are
centered around the kinds of patients you want to have, and not those you would
rather not have show up (and go to the ER!).
We need a system that, first of all, ensures that taking
care of everyone is (at least financially) desirable. That means a system in
which everyone has the same insurance coverage (a single-payer system), and one
that is designed to pay more when providing care for people with greater needs,
both medical and social. We need a wrap-around system that enables the most
needy to have access to the transportation, childcare and other issues that
they need to be able to utilize their medical coverage, and to the education,
jobs, food, and housing that they need to be able to have a reasonable chance
at health. We don’t need a patchwork system of “good ideas” that do not, in
themselves or together, create a real safety net for people.
If we have one that is so full of holes that gaming it for profit is
the main activity of hospitals, doctors, and other providers, we have no reason
to be critical of the least powerful finding the ways around it that work best
for them.
[1]
Kangovi S, et al., “Understanding Why Patients Of Low Socioeconomic Status
Prefer Hospitals Over Ambulatory Care” , Health
Aff July 2013 vol. 32 no. 7
1196-1203; doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2012.0825
[2]
Krugman indicates the logic “…goes
something like this: ‘You’re personally free to help the poor. But the
government has no right to take people’s money’ — frequently, at this point,
they add the words ‘at the point of a gun” — “and force them to give it to the
poor.’ It is, however, apparently
perfectly O.K. to take people’s money at the point of a gun and force them to
give it to agribusinesses and the wealthy.”
Another clear example of why we really need to hear the voices of people who are the target of our research if we are at all serious about improving service quality, improving outcomes and perhaps cutting the costs.
ReplyDeleteThe idea that the system has too many loopholes and every one is doing what's best for themselves economically is worth thinking about.
ReplyDeleteI just will never agree with single payer system. If you want loopholes, that is the best way to ensure it. You can also ensure that it will be nearly impossible to fix anything if the system drifts in the wrong direction over many years. By the way, our highly efficient government would be making all the decisions, which means including Republicans.
As for Rick's thought that seeing an MD is frequently useless, it would follow that we can't pretend what we MDs do it useful. I would guess it's worth about $300 total to communicate to some loser (with shoulder pain) that they are wasting their time and they can take 4 steps to make it better (wait, take motrin, stretch, stop complaining). it's really a huge triage question. See a good diagnostician, avoid the surgeon, avoid the ER, avoid the 20 PT visits, avoid the rheumatologist who will order 50 blood tests, probably avoid the neuro EMG too. What economic system can capitalize on satisfying this complainer and collecting the fee at a profit? Not this one.
You actually need a sophisticated triage service.
Thank you for your work. I am a civilian in these matters. All I know is that my 61 year old brother, the hardest working person I have ever known, has been through an extended period of off and on employment in construction. Recently, he had an emergency hospitalization. He has insurance, but it only covered $13,000 of the $18,000 bill for an overnight stay. Diagnosis allergic reaction to cat fur and possible congestive heart failure. After reading some of your blog, I have a little more faith in good possibilities.
ReplyDelete