BLOGGING FOR HEALTHCARE REFORM

And maybe more...

Deaths from Uninsured or Underinsured 2

How You Can Show Your Support

ATTEND AN AUGUST EVENT If you see healthcare reform as an important issue, perhaps the most important issue in decades, you may be getting frustrated and wondering how you can make your views known. One way is to contact your lawmakers (see sidebar). Another is to attend an event. Opponents of healthcare reform are organizing to show up at town hall meetings all over the country, and where they are in the minority, they sit in strategic spots in the audience and interrupt the speaker. They've already caught the attention of the media. Free speech is fine, but we can't allow a minority of shouters to monopolize the debate. Go to the above site and commit to attending one event in the month of August.

Blogging About Healthcare and maybe more...

How does that ad go? "This isn't a liberal or conservative issue, it's a human issue." They're talking about the environment, but it could apply to healthcare reform as well, at least in the US. That's not altruism for the 48 million and counting uninsured. It's good old American "what's in it for me" thinking for both the uninsured and the currently insured who could find themselves uninsured at any moment.

Even if you've already taken sides on healthcare reform––especially if you have––I urge you to read these posts and simply consider these points. I have a writing blog and a book review blog, and I swore I'd never add my voice to the cacophony of angry voices blogging on politics. Only there are so many people adding their voices who don't have a clue what they are talking about, that I figured my more than 10 years experience working in benefits––most of it looking for ways to contain costs without cutting benefits––might actually add something to the conversation (if you can call it that).

I promise not to make statements I can't back up with experience or research. In return I ask that you approach my posts with an open mind, and when you comment, which I hope you will, make the comments civil so that they invite further discussion. Also, please comment on this blog rather than dragging the discussion to your own blogs, so that we can all take part.

I'm open to guest posts on either side, so long as they are well-informed and cite sources. Contact me

Monday, August 17, 2009

Healthcare Cost Containment: A Short History Part II-It's the Consumer

Part II in my series on the villains of Heathcare Cost Containment. Part I was about the doctors.


By the early 1980s we were into the Reagan era––the era of individual responsibility. Just as the poor were responsible for being poor and needing only to be kicked off Welfare to end poverty for good, so healthcare consumers were seen as responsible for rising costs. Spoiled by employer-paid healthcare they had no notion of the expenses employers racked up on their behalf. Force them to shoulder a share of the costs and they'd pretty quickly turn into savvy consumers shopping for the best deal.

Accordingly we (yes, I cringe to admit, I was in on the design of such a plan) increased deductibles, though only to about $150, and by then that would be met with just a couple of doctor visits. A few employers required employees to pay a small part of their premiums each month. We also instituted some changes in plan design. Just like now, it seemed a good idea to focus more on prevention, so plans began covering routine medical exams and vaccines at 100%. Prior to that, believe it or not, some plans didn't cover routine physicals at all. We also covered second opinions with regard to surgeries at 100% and a third opinion if someone wanted "the best out of three." The idea was not to deny necessary surgeries but cut down on unnecessary and/or over-performed surgeries. Notice, this was an incentive, not a requirement and the anecdotal evidence at least is that it never caught on. Few patients wanted to go up against their doctors in asking for a second opinion, and when they did, physicians rarely broke ranks, so insurers ended up paying twice for the same prognosis and paying for the surgery anyway. There were also minor incentives for more out-patient procedures.

Just like now there was a great hue and cry against these changes as consumers and their physicians predicted people dying in the streets. Seems people are always more concerned about being under-treated than over-treated. This was also when the HMO offering became a popular option, though only as a second choice. More on HMOs and Managed Care in another post.

Yet again, the measures taken had little if any effect on containing costs. However, the possibly unintended consequence of causing consumers to participate more in healthcare choices, along with some studies being publicized in the press, was that patients began eying their doctors' decisions with a bit more skepticism. Maybe that young mom didn't need the hysterectomy that sent her hormones into a nosedive and deprived her of a third child. Maybe little Joey didn't really require that scary tonsillectomy. And then there were those disquieting rumors of doctors making mistakes––big mistakes––that cost lives and were swept under the rug like recent stories of pedophile priests.

Popular culture often provides a good indicator of political trends. Like Denzel Washington battling the evil insurance companies a couple of decades later in John Q. , the feel-good movie of 1982 was The Verdict in which down-and-out lawyer Paul Newman redeems himself with an early malpractice suit against a physician who, through routine error, sent a young woman into a permanent coma, financially ruined her next of kin, and caused a competent nurse to lose the job she loved because she knew too much. The climax that brings to mind the movie Babe, had audiences cheering as the jury foreman asks if it's possible to award more damages than the original suit requested. Don't believe me? Rent it.

Today many think the easiest and best way to solve our healthcare woes is tort reform. Would you say we Americans are a fickle lot?

2 comments:

CashewElliott/John said...

Tort reform is a cop out. I'm not saying I am against it - I'm not. You'll never find me suing a doctor for punitive damages unless he was maliciously, I mean, like cruelly negligent.

What amazes me is how quickly all the conservatives around me encouraged me to go after the kid who caused my motorcycle accident. When they asked why not, I told them because he was apologetic, friendly, and cooperative. That's all it takes. I got my bills paid for, and the inside of my thigh itches a tiny bit, perhaps permanently, perhaps from the major bruising I got from my handle bars. I'd prefer this over sending a 24 year old kid into a couple hundred thousand dollars of debt.

If life in the US wasn't such that it takes a lottery to break out of one's social class, perhaps so many would not see tort lawsuits as such an attractive way to go. If I were a lower class person, fearing that I risk ending up in the street some day, and then my wife died in a slightly negligible hospital act, I'd be interested in suing for more. As a middle class person (I'm against starving students qualifying themselves outside their parent's social class, because the difference between a middle class starving student and a lower class starving student is not income, it's the ability to text their mom and have money transfered into their bank account I'll pay you back! ) I feel a greater sense of safety in the world. I see myself as not quite as much at risk of ending up on the street. So a lawsuit of mine is going to be for the amount of my expenses and lost time, not punitive damages.

But, the idea of tort reform is nothing more than another manipulation of unreasonable people. Unreasonable people dislike lawyers anyway. Lawyers are somehow less honest than businessmen (who are hard working, salt of the earth type).

Unknown said...

My next post on cost containment is gonna be about why tort reform is putting the cart before the horse. I just can't get around to it because every day something else gets me mad. Did you happen to see Bill Moyers on Friday?