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"Your Liberty is Our Interest"

July 26, 2004

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Doctor Fix-It

  by Lady Liberty

 

            This past week, I had surgery. Although the surgery itself went smoothly and

  my recovery is proceeding apace (thanks for asking!), events leading up to the

  actual operation weren't nearly so easily managed.

 

            My particular problem wasn't life threatening, but it was serious enough that

  it cost significant dollars to fix and required advance approval from my health

  insurance carrier before I could go ahead. So I got all of the required paperwork

  together, and sent it along with the recommendations of both my doctor and my

  chosen surgeon for review and approval. The review process was to take six to

  eight weeks. How long did it actually take? Well, I first submitted paperwork

  in early October of 2003. I had surgery in July of 2004. You do the math.

           

            It's easy to get mad at the insurance company in situations like this. After

  all, I did everything I was told to do and had ample evidence to back up my

  request. Yet I still ended up having to wait months before I could have my problem

  taken care of. Exorbitant insurance premiums should have, at the very least,

  ensured I got the attention I deserved from the carrier! But insurance companies

  are inundated with requests for unnecessary procedures ranging from medical

  tests to surgeries, and they're as careful as they can be not to spend one nickel

  beyond their contractual liability. Actually, they're sometimes careful not

  to spend one nickel even within their contractual liabilities, and typically

  demand a good deal of paperwork before they finally pay providers their due.

           

            Why is it that insurance companies have become so difficult to deal with? Well,

  it's probably in part those unnecessary procedures I mentioned. At one time,

  hysterectomies were a very common operation. Now they're done on a far less

  frequent basis. That's not just because of the advances of modern medicine,

  but rather due to the fact that some doctors' solution to virtually every female

  problem was once to recommend she have a hysterectomy. Today, antibiotics are

  prescribed far too frequently and often for conditions antibiotics can't affect.

  But in the matter of hysterectomies some years ago, and antibiotics now, doctors

  are capitulating to patient demands on the premise that the hysterectomy or

  the antibiotics won't hurt the patient, and it will shut them up (this was before

  we really knew much about the dangers of hormone replacement therapy, of course,

  or began seeing bacteria that had evolved into antibiotic resistant strains

  due to the overuse of antibiotics).

 

            So how come doctors give in to patient demands, despite the fact they're often

  not especially good medicine, or order myriad tests not all of which may be

  necessary? Well, the technical term for it is CYA (I trust most of you know

  what that means). Doctors are highly educated, and the vast majority

  of them are quite competent. But that doesn't mean that even the best of them

  doesn't occasionally make a mistake, and in medicine, mistakes can be extremely

  injurious or even fatal. When that happens, doctors are typically sued which

  in turn necessitates an expensive legal defense. And the potential for that

  situation is what makes doctors order every possible test just in case the one

  they miss is the one that would catch the one-in-a-million problem of a particular

  patient. It also, of course, does a nice job of CYA when the worst happens because

  no one can say, “Well, why didn't you perform the XYZ test?”; or “Shouldn't

  you have considered the Alpha Beta procedure?”

 

            Of course, a similar though less deadly argument can also be used to explain

  exactly why it is that medical providers' bills even for the most necessary

  of procedures are often so high by the time insurance companies get them. That's

  due to the fact that insurance companies typically only pay a certain percentage

  of even covered procedures, most reimbursements of which are not at a realistic

  level (the “usual and customary” charge described in many policies

  is frequently neither usual nor customary unless you happen to live in Appalachia

  in 1963). So in order to recoup their own costs as well as to pay high malpractice

  premiums, keep qualified staff, and incidentally make a living themselves, doctors

  and hospitals charge as much as they can for anything and everything they can.

  Aspirin at $3 each? I've seen similar on my own previous hospital bills. In

  fact, a small sample-size box of Kleenex once showed up as a $5 fee on a bill,

  as did a $25 charge for a plastic cup. Obviously, insurance disallows most of

  such charges, but does pay some of it. Since some is better than none, doctors

  and hospitals have absolutely no incentive to charge more realistic fees or

  to eliminate some charges all together especially when they're desperately trying

  to make up for the legitimate fees that have been denied or at least cut drastically.

 

            Some instances of high charges would be far less problematic if so many doctors

  weren't so afraid of being sued. But they are, and they have every right to

  be. The blame for that falls squarely at the feet of the average litigious

  American. In a country where people sue because they burn their tongue on Burger

  King tea, or because they break their leg falling through a skylight during

  a night time robbery attempt (both those suits are, lest you wonder, real),

  doctors are prime targets. In fact, many obstetricians don't deliver babies

  any more because parents are strongly inclined to sue the doctor if anything

  goes wrong whether the doctor had anything to do with the infant's problem or

  not.

 

            Sky high malpractice insurance premiums alone (it seems a good time to point

  out that only about 5% of medical professionals cause about 80% of malpractice

  claims, but that all doctors must bear the penalty for those few) mean that

  office visits can't be $10 or a basket of eggs any more. After all, somebody's

  got to pony up for premiums that can be upwards of a quarter million dollars

  a year! And that somebody is us. And since most of us can't afford high medical

  bills on our own, the majority of us have insurance.  And our insurance is billed

  high dollar figures it pays little of because doctors are probably padding their

  bills, which means doctors raise their fees still higher and so on, ad infinitum.

  Exasperated by this vicious circle, more than a few doctors have decided they're

  not going to wait for malpractice reform (they also say that Medicare reform

  is another issue that very much needs to be addressed, by the way) and they're

  http://www.washtimes.com/business/20030831-102451-9582r.htm retiring

  or going into other careers, leaving more than a few regions of the country

  facing significant shortages of medical care providers.

 

            There are some who believe that the best “fix” for the medical system

  in America is to nationalize it. Let the federal government take charge, and

  prices for drugs and treatments will go down; every American will have insurance

  (government sponsored insurance, of course), and all will be right with the

  world. This solution is, of course, demonstrably a bigger problem than the problems

  we've got now. Under socialized medicine, the program quickly goes broke if

  it doesn't draw a line between which procedures are covered and which are not.

  And then, in the most discriminatory way imaginable, the rich will get better

  care than the middle class, who will in their turn be bankrupted by taxes to

  pay for care for the poor who, despite somebody else footing the bill, won't

  get the level of care they deserve, either. In addition, without significant

  financial incentives, drug companies won't work as hard to develop new drug

  therapies; researchers won't have the wherewithal to study as many medical problems

  deserving of study; doctors won't develop high end - and expensive - techniques

  that will save previously doomed patients; and so on. Lots of countries in the

  world have such socialized medical care. That's how we can know for certain

  such a plan won't work. And the final straw against nationalized health care

  is this: guess where the rich people in those countries come for treatment?

 

            But there is, without a doubt, a Catch 22 that must be broken. Doctors charge

  more than they need to because insurance companies reimburse less than they

  should; insurance companies reimburse less than they should because hospitals

  pad their bills; and insurance companies and medical providers alike live in

  fear of medical malpractice awards that juries have handed out to the tune of

  multi-million dollar settlements. What to do, what to do?

 

            One of the first things that must be “fixed” is the tort system. It's ironic that, even as I was undergoing surgery, the Senate http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/politics/2668373 couldn't stop arguing about legislation that would have provided the bare beginnings of some reform in that it would have placed some limitations on class action lawsuits. Eventually, if it were ever to actually happen, real tort reform could reduce malpractice premiums to realistic levels, and damage awards to figures based on the grievousness of injury rather than the capriciousness of a jury (perhaps we should also demand that doctors see their Sixth Amendment  rights honored, and let their cases actually be judged by a jury of their legitimate peers - good doctors aren't any more fond of bad doctors than you and I are,

  but they have the added ability to actually understand all of the testimony

  in such cases).

 

            Another thing that will have to be “fixed” is the burdensome regulatory

  system in this county. New drugs and therapies are approved in Europe much more

  quickly than they are here. The substantial time and myriad hoops drug companies

  or researchers must jump through to get past the FDA is a very significant expense

  that must somehow be recouped, and can really only be paid for via high charges

  for the finally approved drug or service (and don't forget that all of those

  unapproved things cost money, too, which can only be recovered by charging even

  higher prices for those that do get approval).

 

            The bottom line is that getting rid of the regulatory snare that's got the

  medical industry in a stranglehold would mean that there's nothing about medicine

  that the free market couldn't handle (with the possible exception of hospital

  food). In much the same way the free market has already given America such top

  notch medical facilities, it would also ensure we'd have relatively reasonably

  priced - and working - drugs and therapies; that insurance premiums would be

  more realistic and competitive because procedure charges would be more realistic

  and competitive; and that providers would face malpractice sanctions - professional,

  financial, and/or criminal - only if they actually committed malpractice.

 

            My own surgeon was extremely competent. The anesthesiologist was not only good at what he did, but could probably have a second career as a stand-up comic

if he really wanted to. The nursing staff in the recovery room, both before and after my operation, was both cheerful and professional. And nobody, not even for a moment, patronized me (something that I personally am far more likely to try to sue over than anything trivial like an infection or a misplaced surgical sponge). Each and every one of those that cared for me deserves the money that he or she is paid for the job (actually, they probably deserve more because the truth is that I'm a lousy patient). Thanks, guys!

 

            It is unfortunate that the money they get will be so much less than the fee

  they'll have to charge, and that I and my insurance company are probably going

  to battle back and forth more than once just to get the financial end of things

  settled. It could just be the pain pills talking, but I'm convinced that we

  can do better. The sad part is that I'd have to be seriously under the influence

  to think that very many politicians are presently inclined to do what's necessary

  to try.

 

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