What Government Does Better: Health Care
Howard A. Green, MD, FACP, FAAD, FACMS
You’ll listen
to me because I’m your doctor. I only have your health interests in
mind.. I have written this article without ‘prior authorization’ from
any insurance companies.
There are some intuitively obvious services that the government runs
more productively and efficiently than private for-profit enterprises.
For example, our armed forces and GI’s conquer and hold and protect
territory more effectively and at a fraction of cost of private
militias such as Blackwater USA and the Crescent Security Corporations.
In addition, the government rules and regulations which our
governments’ military adhere to insure an ethical cohesive fighting
force compared to the unregulated for-profit corporate armies. Our GI
soldiers assigned to kitchen duty prepare and cook meals at a fraction
of the cost of identically prepared meals from the private for-profit
logistics divisions of the Halliburton or Kellog Brown and Root
Corporations. Government regulated public education in America such as
the undergraduate and college systems of the City of New York and other
large metropolises have for over a century produced more CEO's,
doctors, lawyers, accountants, engineers, chemists, poets, philosophers
and military officers than any private school system, and at a fraction
of the cost compared to all the private schools in the country
combined. Take away the government grants, government tax breaks, and
government sponsored free overseas labor from Americas top private
Colleges and their classrooms and graduate programs would most likely
shut down, no matter how large their private endowments. The government
run and regulated public school systems of Israel, India and China are
churning out competent engineers, scientists and entrepreneurs at a
quality and rate much greater than that of any collection of private
schools in any country in the world. These non-American people, highly
educated by their government run school systems, have formed a new
collective worldwide labor arbitrage system which is fueling the
productivity of intercontinental private business. The Marshall Plan,
Interstate Highways, Space Program, Peace Corps, and the GI Bill all
demonstrate successful government run bureaucracies of their time.
In a similar fashion, our mammoth government-run health insurance
company (Medicare) operates at a fraction of the cost of private
insurance corporations such as Aetna, Cigna, United, Blue Shield Blue
Cross, Kaiser Permanente and Humana. Medicare, the government health
insurance for the elderly uses only 1-2% of your dollar to achieve
rates of morbidity (sickness) and mortality (death) among their
patients which are identical to those of the private health insurance
corporations. However, private insurance corporate bureaucracies
inefficiently siphon $350 billion per year, or 20-25% of your hard
earned dollars away from doctors, hospitals and patient care into the
pockets of their executives, administrative employees, shareholders and
politicians. The recent stock option fraud perpetrated by the CEO of
United Health Care demonstrates the negligent disdain the private
insurance corporations have for physicians, hospitals, health care
workers and patients. Since their founding 40 years ago, private health
maintenance insurance corporations have failed to deliver what their
business plans always promise; lower rates of morbidity and mortality
associated with low costs to the patients. These insurance companies
are financially profitable for their shareholders and executives, but
medically bankrupt for their patients. Without their own massive
government subsidies, government protection from malpractice lawsuits,
and a government ban on collective bargaining by physicians the private
health insurance corporate bureaucracies of Aetna, Cigna, United and
Humana, and hundreds of other smaller health insurance companies of the
health insurance industry would undoubted fail to exist. Most elderly
people who call themselves Republicans, and conservative physicians in
this Country have recognized the efficacy of our government regulated
Medicare health insurance corporation and have enrolled themselves and
utilized this Government run health insurance company for their own
medical needs (despite the shrill cries of socialized medicine from
their leaders). 40 years ago we heard these same shrill cries from
organized medicine and Republicans concerning the establishment of
Medicare. After accepting hundreds of billions of dollars in Medicare
Insurance payments over the ensuing 4 decades, one can only wonder why
conservative physicians still rally like Quixote against this
government run insurance product.
The following 9 steps will simply suggest how, without the
inefficiencies and burden to productivity of private insurance
corporations, we can deliver efficient and effective comprehensive
health care with great savings and no sacrifice of jobs. In fact, we
may be able to decrease morbidity and mortality in this Country with
one coordinated system which cares for all Americans, and concurrently
analyzes optimal diagnoses and treatment modalities through its
integrated computerized billing system. The savings incurred insuring
all Americans through the more efficient Medicare system will benefit
all citizens of our Country.
9 Steps to Comprehensive Quality Health Care in America
1) Shut down the private health insurance corporations.
2) Enroll all Americans (including Veterans) and the 40 million
uninsured citizens into the Medicare Health Insurance Corporation.
Since the current functioning Medicare Insurance Company is already
accepted by almost all physicians, Hospitals and clinics in the
Country, hardly any infrastructure investments on the health care
delivery end will be necessary. Have all private businesses pay a
Medicare premium for their employees instead of private health
insurance premiums. Let employees as well as businesses contribute a
fixed premium amount based on their age up until 65 for their Medicare
services and drugs. Freeze current premiums for all Americans over 65
and adjust in the future according to the cost of living index. These
premiums paid by businesses to Medicare for their employees should be
less than that paid to current private insurance companies because of
the lower overhead costs of the Medicare Corporation.
3) Hire the now unemployed former private health insurance corporate
bureaucrats to actually deliver and not inhibit health care by working
in hospitals, doctors’ offices, clinics and nursing homes around our
Country. Demographically, the percentage of elderly Americans is
rapidly increasing. With every American now insured through Universal
Medicare Insurance, real health care workers will be in desperate need.
For the first time in the brief but bloody history of managed care,
these former private insurance corporation employees will actually
touch and improve care for patients by working in physical therapy,
nursing, home health care and other ancillary patient care capacities.
4) Obtain by eminent domain (for the public good) the best of the
intellectual property protected computer codes which the closed private
insurance businesses previously used to monitor patient care and
doctors utilization and performance. Private health insurance companies
have used these computer programs exclusively for the purpose of
strong-arming their contracted health care providers into doing less
for their patients and increasing the premium costs for sicker patients
in order to achieve higher corporate profits. Medicare on the other
hand can use these same computer programs for the common good; to
monitor, collect data and eventually improve the efficacy of diagnoses
and the treatment of diseases and medical outcomes every time a doctor
submits a bill. For example, wouldn't it be nice to know as a medical
consumer (patient) which oncology groups in Boston, New York or Houston
have the highest cure rates for stage III breast cancer or Stage II
prostate cancer? All those numbers currently exist in cancer registries
nation wide and just need to be collected and honestly disseminated.
Currently, instead of solid medical data which delineates morbidity and
mortality and performance, the medical consumer when choosing an
oncologist must rely on word of mouth, physician referrals or
advertisements in the local papers which show photographs of smiling
doctors in white coats who claim to be the ‘best’ doctors in town. In
addition to garnering invaluable instantaneous epidemiologic data on
diagnoses and treatment of diseases based on severity and other
variables, a strong Medicare based utilization review computer code
would also allow Medicare to monitor doctors and hospitals who abuse a
fee-for-service billing system. Any physician, institution or service
found to abuse the Medicare fee for service billing system after proper
review and appeal should be dealt with severely through stiff penalties
and loss of their Universal Medicare provider contract.
5) Freeze Medicare physician, hospital and ancillary services
reimbursements at current 2007-2008 levels. Adjust reimbursements for
future services yearly by Cost of Living increases, or in the event of
a deflationary economy a decreases in doctor and hospital payments. Ask
any physician and they'll tell you they would accept current
reimbursement rates with COLA over the current mysterious illogical fee
adjustment system of Medicare, or the physician population density
reimbursement formula used by most private insurance corporations. Two
tiered medical systems separating the “haves and have not’s” of society
have and will always exist. Therefore, we must allow physicians to
practice medicine without enrolling in or accepting the Universal
Medicare reimbursement. With private medical insurance no longer
available, and no performance based evidence for improved morbidity and
mortality among their private for-pay patients, these extraordinarily
expensive private ‘VIP’ practices will be limited.
6) Allow Medicare, much like the current Veterans Administration System
and every private health insurance company and government health care
system around the world, to bid on medications from pharmaceutical
corporations for its Medicare drug formulary. Every physician
recognizes that we don’t need a choice of a dozen redundant drugs in
each pharmaceutical category. For example, we need only 2-3 statins for
cholesterol, a handful of antibiotics for infections, 2 beta blockers
for hypertension, and a few pain killers. Once the Government bids on
pharmaceuticals for the Medicare Corporation formulary, macro economics
will force prices to massively decrease to levels identical to that
which all the other people of the world outside of America are paying
for the same medicines. Since it has not effectively decreased
morbidity or mortality in this Country, and only wastes money, we
should also prohibit pharmaceutical companies and their workers from
contributing to political campaigns or buying commercials on the public
airways. We need to also prohibit the current practice whereby your
local pharmacy and pharmacist sells your private medical diagnoses and
your doctors private prescribing drug information to pharmaceutical
companies so the pharmaceutical companies in-turn can directly
pressure-market physicians. Prohibit pharmaceutical companies from
contributing to organized medicine societies, colleges or associations
because the doctors can’t rely on soft bribes or free lunches to
prescribe what’s best for their patients. Prevent pharmaceutical
representatives from visiting doctors’ offices or hospital pharmacies
directly. Allow delivery of Medicare formulary approved sample
medications for patients to physicians’ offices via post office mail
only. Allow pharmaceutical companies to market products to physicians
only via peer reviewed publications delivered by email or snail mail.
7) With the savings incurred from closing the private insurance
corporations and paying less for drugs, have the American government
fully fund the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National
Cancer Institute (NCI) and Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR)
programs. Emphasis should be placed on basic bench research carried out
at not-for-profit American Institutions which employ or utilize a
majority of American Citizens in their laboratories and clinics. Too
often American Universities rely on free overseas labor to conduct
bench research. Clinical trials should emphasize new drugs and devices
which have promise to significantly decrease morbidity and mortality
for any disease, including orphan diseases. Since a large percentage of
private funding for drug and device studies will originate in the
expanding financial liquidity and innovations and patients of the
emerging developing world, we should allow the FDA to utilize research
data obtained by reproduced laboratory and clinical studies performed
overseas as well as in this Country.
Corruption of honest academics should be curtailed. Force all
investigators to release reproduced publicly funded scientific data for
all scientists to review on the internet via the Freedom of Information
act (The Senator Shelby Amendment). Prohibit rights of first refusal on
scientific data for private companies performing research in non-for
profit institutions which receive public funding. Any rights to profits
obtained from intellectual property and patents invented with combined
funding from government and private sources should be split fairly
among the contributing government institutions and any other private
corporations funding the research, as well as with the individual
inventor. Prevent organized medicine societies, associations or
colleges from contributing to political campaigns since campaign
donations have no relevance for physician performance or patient
morbidity or mortality.
8) Offer physicians the same legal protection from malpractice lawsuits
which have been established for commercial health insurance
corporations during the last 3 decades.
9) The quality of current medical records software lags two decades
behind business software. Therefore, we need to fund and challenge
America’s best software corporations to finally develop standardized
electronic medical records software for use in doctors’ offices and
hospitals in order to increase the efficiency and productivity of
physician charting, billing and prescribing. We should use the
integrated medical records system to instantaneously and confidentially
gather important epidemiologic data on physicians’ performance, patient
diseases, and treatments. With new potent viruses and unsophisticated
biomedical and nuclear warfare on the horizon, this system will be
absolutely necessary for rapid National Security responses. Protect
patient confidentiality at all costs to prevent the commercialization
and abuse of patient data like that which the pharmacies trade today.
Lastly, some argue that Universal Government run health care in America
will result in delays in diagnosis and treatment similar to those
experienced in Britain and Canada. One can not simply compare the
massive extremely functional Medicare insurance corporation based
infrastructure which seamlessly delivers health care to tens of
millions of people yearly in the USA to the government run westernized
health care systems of Canada and Britain, France, Switzerland,
Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Israel. America, for the last 40 years,
thanks to the government run health insurance corporation-Medicare, has
built an incredibly dense and fluid public insurance system involving
almost all doctors’ offices, hospitals, clinics and ancillary services.
The Medicare system dwarfs in breadth and actual practitioners and
efficacy the lesser insurance systems established in all other
countries. The billing and reimbursement bureaucracy for health care
providers contracted with Medicare Insurance is already relatively
streamlined and efficiently centralized in America thanks to 40 years
of physician, hospitals and government cooperation.
We all know that the medically bankrupt private health insurance
corporations and medical malpractice lawsuit threats have caused many
disheartened physicians to quit practicing or downsize their practices
in America. A continuation and technological upgrading of our most fair
Universal Medicare based health insurance Corporation based on the
concepts outlined above would undoubtedly motivate those
disenfranchised physicians to return to the profession and bright
younger physicians to invigorate the field. If patients, physicians and
the Medicare Corporation continue to work together, without the
deleterious interference of private for-profit health insurance
corporations, malpractice threats and overt pharmaceutical marketing,
the future for American health care will be healthy indeed.. A
continuation of the status-quo mixture of a government subsidized
private health maintenance insurance industry operating parallel to and
within Medicare is wasteful, and will continue to provide no potential
future health improvements for America.