When recently scheduling a procedure with a physician, he just shook his head and told me how lucky I was to have retired, and how difficult the practice of medicine is now. Before the outpatient procedure, he had wanted me to get a consultation from a physician in another specialty, but it turned out that that group no longer saw outpatients but only did hospital consultations because they no longer had the capacity. From his perspective, the problem is lack of people, especially doctors and nurses.
But there are other big reasons, which I have discussed in previous blog posts. There are different aspects to them, but they essentially boil down to the transformation of American healthcare into another profit-driven industry. My doctor, and the doctors he wanted to consult, and the nurses and other staff with whom they work, are all interested in providing high-quality and effective care to people. The corporations for which they work (or are forced to work with, such as hospitals) are interested in making money.
This transformation, like most, is incomplete, but it seems
to have passed an inflection point from which, if something major is not done, there
is no turning back. The changes have been in process for a long time,
documented in books such as the Health Policy Advisory Center (HealthPAC)’s
1971 “The American Health Empire” (Barbara Ehrenreich and others), and Paul Starr’s
“The Social Transformation of American Medicine” published in 1982. They
document the change from a cottage industry of independent doctors to one dominated
by large institutional players. In the 1980s, Physicians for
a National Health Program (PHNP) was created with the goal of, if not reversing
this trend, at least harnessing the system to serve all of our people through
the creation of a centrally-financed single-payer health insurance system.
While every other wealthy (and many non-wealthy) countries in the world have
such coverage, the US is the outlier. PNHP has advocated for decades for a coverage
system more like that of Canada, where provincially-run financing plans cover
everyone under a set of rules set by the federal government.
At that time, and today, a huge part of the problem was, and is health insurance companies. They are the obvious predators, drawing profit from ‘managing’, which often means restricting, your access to health care. Insurance in general makes money when it takes in more than it pays out, and as customers we “win” when we lose. That is, we collect when we have a car accident, or our house catches fire, or we die. We bet against ourselves, and hope we will not need the insurance. But health care is different, because we want to receive it. To be paid by insurance may have made sense in the early days, when it covered the hopefully-unneeded hospitalization or surgery (“major medical”, it was called) and we paid doctors out of our pockets or in chickens. But it makes no sense for routine and necessary health care.
The other big abuser back then was pharmaceutical companies,
which made even more than insurance companies, marking up prices to whatever
the market would bear, no matter how many people were left out and could not afford
them. Sadly, the news is not that the character, behavior or profit taking by
insurance or pharmaceutical companies has improved; now they are both even
worse! What is sad, and terrible, is that the actual health care providers have
become more predatory, and more often owned and controlled by companies whose
primary business is making money, and only incidentally providing health care. I
have written about this sort of abuse by hospitals and corporate-controlled
physician groups, and it has just scratched the surface.
Recently, the Kaiser Family Foundation Health News reported on ‘Sick Profit: Investigating Private Equity’s Stealthy Takeover of Health Care Across Cities and Specialties’, exposing once again the way in which for-profit companies, and increasingly private equity, have bought up healthcare practices and limited access or worse in the name of making money. The article leads with the story of a 2-year old child in Yuma, AZ who died of complications of anesthesia while receiving extensive dental work that, his parents say in a lawsuit, was unnecessary (it almost certain was). They charge that the dentists were pressured by the private equity firm that owns the practice to do the maximum number of procedures on children with Medicaid to maximize revenue and profit. But that is just the lede; the article documents the increasing frequency of practices owned by for-profit companies abusing and sometimes killing people, either by over or under treatment. Which one depends on which will make the most money, not on whether folks need medical care or not.
Killing children in pursuit of profit is something most of
us would frown upon, but while all practices owned by private equity or other
profit-making entities may not behave so badly, it would be a mistake to call
those that do “bad actors” and excuse the others. It is the entire concept that
YOUR health should be a source of profit, and be attractive to the venture
capitalists investing in these practices because they can make so much money.
The money, whether paid by you directly, or indirectly through your insurance
premiums, or by the government through your taxes, should be going toward your
healthcare, not their private jets.
This practice complements the impending takeover of Medicare by for-profit Medicare “Advantage"”plans, and private-equity controlled ACO/REACH plans, just recently reported on in the New York Times, “Corporate Giants Buy Up Primary Care Practices at Rapid Pace”. The article begins by noting the shortage of primary care doctors, and that it is getting worse (also something I have written about often) because they get little respect and less money (than other specialists). It would be nice to think that this evidence of the impact of family doctors and other primary care clinicians on patients was a sign of respect, but it is just a sign of greed, especially through the programs that privatize your Medicare. This represents a huge potential profit center for these companies. “That’s the big pot of money everyone is aiming at.” Yup. It’s $400 billion!
This is why most of us who are paying attention agree that we now need to go much farther than simply national universal health insurance. While that is important and good, it could end up being another vehicle for profit-taking; remember the Yuma dentists were ripping off Medicaid, a government funded program. Thus, only a truly non-profit (unlike the ostensibly “not-for-profit” hospital sector than emulates for-profit competitors to maximize revenue) is acceptable. Steffi Woolhandler and David Himmelstein, founders of PNHP, call for such a national health service in a recent interview in Jacobin, and it makes sense.
The justification cited by these companies for their rapacity
is that they increase efficiency. This is of course, BS. Efficiency in generation
of more money for them, perhaps, by cutting back the number of doctors, nurses,
and other staff, overworking those who remain, and making them all, along with
their patients, miserable. That is not efficiency in production of healthcare,
and is certainly not efficacy.
Doctors and nurses are being “sped up” as if they were on an assembly line, and are burning out and leaving in droves. The people who are the “products” are getting 7 minute visits, don’t have time to even talk about their problems not to mention get adequately treated. It is bad for everyone but those few earning the profit.
The Times article says “The companies say these new
arrangements will bring better, more coordinated care for patients, but some
experts warn the consolidation will lead to higher prices and systems driven by
the quest for profits, not patients’ welfare.” Yup. That’s what they say. Not
to put too fine a point on it, it is a self-serving lie.
We need one system, well-funded, to handle all of our needs, generously paid for without a cent going to private profit.
Excellent review of the terrible state of corporatization of healthcare. In addition to a national health system, we need the ability for people to develop small independent practices that deliver care to neighborhoods and communities. Nothing was wrong with the old days except the payment system. Young doctors would love it, so would patients. I also as you have mentioned, primary care must be paid for in a different way with capitation and support for practices. It’s not just a National health system international system that pays people the right way.
ReplyDeleteThis has gone on so long and is getting progressively worse such that it is long past time that we need to listen to you and those you cite and act upon those facts now. We need to adopt national policies that prioritize care for patients rather than for more profits for billionaires. A well designed national insurance program such as a single payer system would certainly move us in the right direction, but the problem is that our delay has necessitated that we now must also do something about ownership of the health care delivery system. It needs to be shifted to the community - from the titans of Wall Street to the citizens of Main Street. We need to do that now. The longer we wait, the worse it will be for those who matter: the patients.
ReplyDeleteJust the other day a low income senior patient of mine informed me that her insurance company was paying her $150 per NP visit to the home. She still thought of me as her primary care physician as we had built up a trusting relationship over the past 15 years. I wondered who had been refilling her medications as it had been over a year since I last saw her despite our attempts to reschedule. She and I are confused as to whether or not she should continue to see me. Shouldn't this sort of patient poaching and double dipping be illegal?
ReplyDeleteYes. It appears to be illegal and legal due to the economy of politics. The down grade is that some doctors/physicians promote these tactics by fomenting NPs to be the substitutes of the "other physicians": Entering the backdoor of Medicine without the long hours of training. "The Radiology technician becomes the Radiologist in his absence". As the technical nurse is blindly thinks (lacking the acquired critical thinking of long-term training) he/she can be the doctor in charge.
DeleteAn excellent view of our collapsing world of primary care due to the drive for profits. My sense of the deeper roots of this national US medical disaster is the overwhelming role of debt, not of patients, but of healthcare providing entities. This debt is partly related to the purchase of providers and facilities by private equity. Equity is of course not related to equality, but rather to invested funds. These secretive firms gather capital from others such as retirement funds, and then expect those entities which they purchase to pay high interest. This frequently leads to bankruptcy, but immediately drives the need to drive down costs at the detriment of health outcomes. Debt seems to drive the need for higher 'efficiencies,'and perpetuates itself.
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