Archive for December, 2011
Saturday, December 31st, 2011
If you haven’t read parts 1 and 2 of this manifesto, please do so here and here before reading further.
How will bundled payments affect the incentives for each of the players in the medical market?
For patients, a change to bundled payments will probably have little effect upon monetary issues or fears. Demand for medical care will increase. With millions of additional patients being added to Medicaid roles, and with government “paying” the costs, there will still be little disincentive for patients to seek comprehensive care. In addition, patients who are forced to purchase insurance through health care reform will want to get something for their money.
Bundled services will obviously benefit the insurers. Otherwise there would be no incentive to move to such a model. For insurers, bundled payments will increase profits. Much of the uncertainty involving payments for medical care disappears with bundled payments. If a patient with a heart attack develops a complication requiring prolonged hospitalization, in the current system the insurers bear the costs of treating that complication. Switch to a bundled payment model and the providers bear the risk of medical complications or outlier patients. Whether a patient is in a hospital for six hours or six months, the payment to the hospital for one diagnosis will be the same. The theory is that the threat of paying for complications will “encourage” hospitals to take steps to avoid those complications. In other words, a threat of financial liability will improve the quality of care. Kind of like suing our way to better health care … and we all know how well that has worked. For now, the point is that bundled payments increase profits for insurers by decreasing uncertainty in the payments that must be made to providers. As providers decrease costs, then the insurers will gradually decrease the bundled payments while gradually increasing the premiums that every person in the United States will be required to pay under health care reform. Profits go up.
Demand for insurance will go up under health care reform because there is a mandate that everyone purchase insurance. Insurers will encourage people to buy into their plans. More subscribers plus relatively fixed costs equals more profits.
The financial risk that insurers fear in the current medical payment model is largely erased by a bundled payment model. While insurers may be forced to accept all patients – even those with pre-existing conditions – bundled payments diffuse the risk that the insurer must accept. Even though some patients may be hospitalized more often than others, the insurers know that they will only have to pay a fixed cost for the hospitalization.
There will also be a decrease in the legal risks to insurance companies with a bundled payment model. Insurers will be less liable for refusing care. They pay the providers one fee and the providers are then forced to decide what care is and is not “necessary.” Also look for our government to create additional legal protections for insurers as health care reform becomes implemented over the next few years.
Probably the largest effect of bundled payments will be felt by providers of medical care.
For providers, bundled payments will create an incentive to provide less care. Currently, extremely ill patients create profit through utilization of costly medical services. More services = more payments. When providers are paid one price for a given diagnosis, regardless of the severity of the illness, then the incentive will be to accept a large bundled payment and provide the least expensive medical care possible. This will happen in several ways.
First, providers will want to make patients look sicker so that the bundled payments will be larger. Bundled payments for a patient suffering from pneumonia will be much more than a bundled payment for a patient with a chest cold. Patients in respiratory failure will command an even higher bundled payment. Therefore, the incentive will be for providers to label patients with serious illnesses in order to receive higher bundled payments. Just like payments for catheter-related sepsis caused a significant decrease in the reported incidence of catheter-related sepsis (but an increase in other types of sepsis), increase in bundled payments for more serious illnesses will cause an increase in the reported incidence of serious illnesses. The problem is that those serious illnesses will get reported to the Medical Information Bureau and will follow a patient for the rest of the patient’s life.
Second, there will be less utilization of costly medical services. Look for invasive procedures to decrease. Providers will start pointing to medical studies saying that such procedures are not proven effective. Costly antibiotics and other costly medications will be off limits. Consultations will be less available.
Third, providers will begin avoiding patients who are more likely to suffer adverse consequences. Ideally, bundled payments will provide appropriate reimbursement for an “average” patient. Healthy patients will utilize less resources and therefore increase profitability for a given bundled payment. Young healthy patients who may need a day or two in the hospital for their pneumonia will be readily admitted as there will be a high likelihood of profitability with the ensuing bundled payment. Pneumonia patients with diabetes or with HIV who will likely need long admissions and expensive medications will become hot potatoes. Community hospitals will find reasons to transfer high utilizers to other facilities. Perhaps they need an endocrinology consultation. Perhaps they need an infectious disease specialist. Bundled payments will create an incentive to avoid treating obese patients, cancer patients, and other patients with chronic diseases. Financial solvency will be difficult to maintain with bundled payments and chronically or seriously ill patients.
Demand for services from providers will increase, since some patients will not be receiving the level of care to which they are currently accustomed. Patients may go from provider to provider trying to get the care that they desire.
I’m not sure how the fear issue will play out with medical providers. In the current system, fear is mitigated by providing more services. However, in a bundled payment system, providing more services will quickly erase profits and may lead to financial insolvency. How will medical providers adapt? My guess is that there will be less services and more studies and medical testimony showing why providing fewer services is within the standard of care. There will also be a backlash against hospitals if patients die because they didn’t receive what was retrospectively deemed to be “necessary” care. I also think that at some point there will be a revolt against regulatory agencies that create guidelines which increase expense without improving outcomes.
Bundled payments will also have several other effects:
First, the system will get gamed. Big time. If insurers are going to make a large bundled payment for a given diagnosis, expect more of those diagnoses to be made. Patients who previously were sent home with “walking pneumonia” will be admitted because admissions for “pneumonia” generate more money. The admission may only be “overnight,” but it will still generate that bundled payment. Outpatient diseases will suddenly require inpatient management – if that inpatient management is what generates the bundled payments.
Second, bundled payments will allow insurers to vilify medical providers. In the current system, insurers are the bad guys when they refuse to authorize or to pay for medical care. By bundling payments, insurers will be able to blame medical providers for not providing more services because those services are included in the bundled payment. Patients will then direct their anger toward providers when the patients don’t get the medical services that they want.
Finally, bundling payments will also cause fighting between providers. How do physician consultants get paid when the hospital receives the bundled payment for the patient’s illness? The pie is only so big and anyone that provides services is going to want a piece. Hospitals are already trying to minimize this problem by purchasing physician medical practices. When physicians are employees and paid by the hospitals, the hospitals get to keep the bundled payments. Otherwise, let the fights begin.
What happens if a patient goes to an emergency department with a pneumonia and needs to be transferred? Who gets the bundled payment? What if a patient is hospitalized for a hip fracture and then develops a pneumonia while in the hospital? Who gets the bundled payment? Will the payments be split? If so, how much? I posed these questions to a friend who works at CMS. Her response was that the providers would have to create agreements regarding payments for services. Of course, providing a prospective division of payments for every possible type of care would be impossible, so the providers will be left fighting over who gets what payments and how much. When providers fight with each other, nothing good happens. Divide and conquer.
Bundling payments will protect insurers, increase insurer profits, and decrease the willingness of providers to care for seriously ill patients. When the only variable for payments from insurers is how many times a diagnosis is made, the diagnoses will be made more frequently and will result in an increase in the number of “bundled” payments.
Bundling payments will also cause rifts between medical providers that will ultimately detract from the medical care provided to patients.
Stay tuned for Part 4 where I discuss solutions that will reduce costs.
Posted in Policy, Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
Friday, December 30th, 2011
Dear Diary
Well, it’s been over a week since I posted anything online. I think that’s a record for me. In fact, I haven’t been online that much at all since well before Christmas.
First, there was a miserable work week before Christmas. Almost 70 hours of work in 5 days. A lot of people were sick. Some people just want to come in and get “checked out” before the holidays. One lady with a cough and runny nose wanted me to give her antibiotics to guarantee that she wouldn’t get her unimmunized grandchildren sick when she saw them for Christmas. No guarantees, ma’am. Those children are at an increased risk of catching communicable diseases regardless of whether you get a ZeePack or not, so the only way I can guarantee that you don’t get them sick is to have you stay home for Christmas. Fortunately, they live out of town so my kids won’t have to sit next to them in school.
Another lady who felt weak for several weeks and wanted a clean bill of health before going on a holiday vacation instead got a diagnosis of severe anemia and lung cancer. “But I only smoked for about 10 years,” she said in disbelief. Throckmorton was right on.
Many family members brought in their elderly parents or grandparents saying that they “didn’t look right.” When we couldn’t find anything wrong with them, many times the family members got upset and wanted us to keep them overnight to watch them. Not sure what the overnight observation would accomplish, but not one of the families wanted to sign an advance beneficiary notice. I’m sure I’ll get nastygrams sent to Press Ganey about me because I was rude and unprofessional and incompetent for not admitting the patients. The good thing is that by the time the satisfaction surveys get sent to the patients, the family members will have left for the year.
After finishing my last shift, I drove home, took a nap for a few hours, then got back into the car and started a marathon road trip to visit the in-laws. Spent 14 hours in the truck on Christmas day and another 8 hours in the truck on the day after Christmas.
Stopped at restaurant in Tennessee and my youngest daughter kept asking “why does the waitress talk that way?”
Laying on a warm beach has a way of making a long trip worthwhile, though.
So we’re staying as guests in a retirement community for a week. It amazes me how priorities change once some people retire. You can’t get into any community without handing over ID and having someone at the gate confirm that someone in the community is expecting your visit. That’s more security than the emergency departments. There are landing lights leading you in the entrance to the security gate.
Once inside, some people honk at you if you drive too fast down the road. Others honk if you drive too slow down the road.
When going to work out in the workout center, it is a serious offense to use the center before 11AM if you don’t live in the community and don’t even think about letting a child do sit-ups in the corner of the room. And if you try to use the elliptical machine without writing your name on the dry-erase board – even if no one else is waiting to use the machines – a bunch of old men with New Youk accents yell at you and then argue back and forth about who gets what machine for the next 20 minutes until you end your workout by attrition.
When you go home to watch TV, you’re inundated with commercials from plaintiff attorneys who implore you to call them if you’ve taken acne medications or diabetes medications or if you’ve had cardiac bypass operations and you’ve suffered any complications. Same thing on the billboards. One more reason not to live in Florida.
Oh, and one other thing. We can get rid of mosquitoes using Raid. What the heck do you use to get rid of geckos – or “get-gos” as the people down here call them. And don’t say buy the insurance, either.
Annoying little buggers. They hide near the entrance to the buildings and then jump inside when you open the door.
Current thinking is to let them run around the house and starve to death. Personally, I don’t need a get-go climbing in my mouth when I’m sleeping or attacking me in the shower. And I don’t want a get-go corpse stinking up my suitcase. They can climb the walls, so catching them isn’t as easy as it seems. They’ll sit up near the ceiling and stare at you … until you come back with a broom and knock them to the floor. Finally caught one in a plastic container. Then I walked down the street and let him loose by the front door of one of the neighbors. Yeah, that’s right, Brooklyn. I saw you checking your mail after your argument over the machines in the workout center. Merry Christmas.
Then we get the text message.
We hired a college student to watch our home while we were gone. Good references. Cousin of a family friend. Seemed conscientious when we met him.
“Wild party at the WhiteCoat house tonight. Cars line the streets. Lights flashing on and off. Love, Mrs. Kravitz.” So I did what every respectable person whose house is being trashed would do. I called the police and made a complaint about the noise. Of course, I used Skype so my number couldn’t be traced.
Twenty minutes later, we get another text message. “Police at front door. People fleeing out back door. Cars on street vanishing.”
Called the next day and found out that there were “just a few people over watching a basketball game.” Oh, and by the way, the puppy knocked a barstool over in the basement and put a hole in the wall.
Last time we trust a family member of a friend.
OK diary. Just wanted you to know that I hadn’t vanished. Time to go to the workout center and listen to crotchety retirees yell at me.
Sunshine is a-wasting.
Posted in Random Thoughts | 10 Comments »
Tuesday, December 20th, 2011
When a young male patient has a urinary tract infection and difficulty urinating, usually a check for prostatitis is in order. Add prostate checks to the list of things where you can “expect it.”
When checking a patient for prostatitis, I will usually say something to the patient along the lines of
“When I press here [while pressing on the prostate] does it cause you to have more pain?”
Most of the time, patients are already screaming.
“Yeah, it hurts like hell. You done yet?”
-or-
“Owwwwwwwwww. Daaaaaaamn. Owwwwwwwwwww.”
Really want to skeeve your doctor out a little? When he asks you if pressing on your prostate hurts, tell him
“Actually, it feels kinda good.”
[shudder]
I’m considering empirical treatment for prostatitis from this day forward.
This and all posts about patients may be my experiences or may be submitted by readers for publication here. If you would like to have a patient story published on WhiteCoat’s Call Room, please e-mail me.
Posted in Patient Encounters | 11 Comments »
Monday, December 19th, 2011
VA hospital settles claim for $275,000 after leaving two “SmamWow” 14×11 sized towels in patient’s abdomen after surgery. Isn’t that some kind of “never event” according to … the agency that runs the VA hospitals?
In 2010, dental problems caused 115,000 emergency department visits in Florida alone. That’s about 0.1% of all the emergency department visits in the whole country.
Illinois psychiatric patient waiting in emergency department for 6 hours becomes agitated and combative prior to being transported to room. When restrained, becomes unresponsive and dies. Preliminary cause of death is “excited delirium.”
Money well spent? Medicare has forked over nearly a quarter BILLION dollars in the past 10 years for … external penis pumps. That doesn’t even include implantable devices or pills like Viagra.
As North Dakota oil industry booms, so does medical care. Doctor appointments are not available for several months, the wait time in the emergency department has doubled, orthopedic surgeries have tripled, oh yeah, and STDs have reached an all-time high as well.
When waitresses in the area make $100/hour including tips and nurses … don’t, one nurse also considers whether to stay in health care.
Good ruling or not? Ohio Supreme Court rules that medical malpractice claims must be supported by expert testimony before they can proceed to trial. Although the issue in the case was whether informed consent claims are considered medical malpractice claims for purposes of the law, were a lot of attorneys trying to win med mal trials without medical expert testimony before the ruling?
Patients gone wild? Texas man walks into emergency department, says that he’s “taken something” and then passes out. Then wakes up and begins fighting throwing punches. After staff undressed him and called the police, they found a bleeding chest wound as well.
New Zealand hospital says “enough is enough.” Patients who abuse medical staff will be prosecuted.
Visitors gone wild? Vancouver perv walks into patient room and sexually assaults patient waiting to be checked for pelvic pain. Later arrested and charged. Patient plans to sue hospital for letting the man walk through the emergency department.
Personally, I’ll take my chances with the nasal washes. Two Louisiana people die from amoebic meningoencephalitis after irrigating nasal cavities with Neti Pot.
Get your flu shot before its too late. Montreal Children’s Hospital has been seeing 80-90 additional patients each day due to influenza and other respiratory illnesses.
More Medicare patients are going in for their “free” annual physicals under new health care reform law. However, as Michael Cannon from the Cato Institute notes, there is no such thing as a “free” lunch. In other words, current taxpayers are picking up the tab for the “free” physicals.
I’d feel a little unsafe watching eight little same-aged kids running around the mall. Court rejects fertility doctor’s appeal to have his medical license reinstated. Doc who made “Octomom” famous loses license after medical board concluded that revocation of license was “necessary to protect the public.”
No, this isn’t a drive through emergency department. In a scene straight out of the first Terminator movie, an Australian teen drives his car straight through an emergency department wall, bursting a water main.
Spirited medical malpractice debate takes place over at Point of Law. Ted Frank hits a home run dispelling a visiting professor’s regurgitated trial lawyer claim that lack of the threat of medical malpractice makes sloppy doctors.
“Professor Svorny’s students are not allowed to sue her for any alleged educational malpractice, another cap of zero. I trust that Svorny’s lack of incentives created by liability do not reduce her efforts in teaching ….”
Illinois hospital/surgeon settle malpractice case for $17.5 million after patient suffers multi-system organ failure and other complications after hernia surgery.
Posted in Healthcare Update | 4 Comments »
Sunday, December 18th, 2011
One of our neighbors with nothing better to do left a note taped to our front door chastising us because the lights on our trees lining the road we live on weren’t lit when he happened to walk by our house. The thing is that we usually have the trees lit, but we just happened to use the extension cord to power the air pump to pump up a flat tire that afternoon and forgot to re-attach the power cord to the tree lights.
I have a pretty good idea of who it was, and I was going to write “your perineum” after the first line and stick it in his mailbox, but that wouldn’t be in keeping with the Christmas spirit, would it?
Ho ho ho.

Posted in Random Thoughts | 7 Comments »
Friday, December 16th, 2011
If you haven’t read Part 1 of this post, please do so. In that part, I try to explain the main drivers of cost in our health care system.
Now that everyone has a basic grasp of the drivers of cost in our health care system, I want to try to show how the proposed changes to the system will have little effect on lowering cost in the system.
Through the Affordable Care Act, government is now moving towards “bundled payments” as a means to reduce health care costs. In the current system, providers receive separate reimbursements for each of the multiple services a person may receive during a specific illness or injury. For example, a patient with chest pain may have an EKG. The hospital gets paid for doing the EKG. The cardiologist gets paid for interpreting the EKG. The emergency physician gets paid for acting on the results of the EKG. If the patient is later admitted, the hospital gets paid for the use of the hospital bed and gets paid separately for the medications the patient receives or for the machines that the patient uses. Doctors get paid separately for visiting the patient in the hospital.
Bundling would add up all the payments for a given medical event and lump them into one. Instead of the government making separate payments to the hospitals, physicians, and other providers, the government pays the hospital one fee for everything and lets the hospital divide payments.
Bundled payments are touted as a means to improve quality and reduce mistakes.
CMS considers Bundled Payments for Care Improvement.
Ezekiel Emanuel in the New York Times “Opinionator” blog says that, as a means to “save real money and improve care,” we should embrace bundling and eliminate fee-for-service.
A New York Times editorial also noted how “most [unnamed] experts agree” that the solution to spiraling fee-for-service costs is to pay providers “fixed sums” to manage a patient’s care and then decide which services are truly necessary.
Mayo Clinic President Denis Cortese was quoted as saying that bundled payment plans prompt hospitals to deliver the best possible care:
“Once you have a bundled payment, the delivery system can really do anything they want because the money’s on the table,” Cortese said. “But the incentive is to get it right the first time. If there’s a failure, you have to redo it on your nickel.”
A 2009 USA Today article noted that not only is the government advocating bundling of services, but it is also paying patients to go to hospitals that accept bundled payments. One 79 year old patient on a fixed income said that the government bribe, er, um “incentive payment” helped to “seal the deal” for her because the $271 check she received from the government for going to the hospital would come in handy for “helping get my car fixed.” I think that it is good that the federal government acknowledges it is appropriate to provide “incentive payments” to encourage patients to go to certain hospitals. Wait. Isn’t that illegal? Oh well. You call it a bribe, they call it a tax refund. Have to look at that in another post some day.
Before getting into medical payment models, I want people to think about how bundling would affect us in the real world if we implemented it outside of health care.
Imagine that you were going to receive a bundled payment of $100 for ten pieces of winter clothing. What would you do? I know that I would go to my closet and find the 10 cheapest pieces of clothing there. Some of the gloves with holes in them, a ratty old scarf, maybe an unmatched boot. I wouldn’t even think about giving up a wool coat or a leather coat. If I could find 10 pieces of clothing that cost less than $100, I’d complete the deal. If you only had high-quality or expensive clothing in the closet, you’d probably pass because you’d lose money.
Point #1 is that sellers of bundled goods or services have an incentive to cut costs in order to make a profit. Those cuts must be either to the quantity of services or to the quality of services. There’s no other variable to change.
Next example. Imagine going into a supermarket to purchase a bundle of 3 pounds of bananas for $1. If you are a purchaser of bundled services, you want the best product that your money can buy. Wouldn’t you pull off all the bruised bananas and toss them back onto the table? After all, why should you pay good money for something you aren’t going to be able to eat? No one wants damaged bananas. When enough damaged bananas have accumulated on the table, then the grocer collects them all and dumps them in the garbage.
Point #2 is that consumers of a bundled services want the best quality for their money.
We’re already seeing a conflict arise from bundled payments. But I’m not done yet.
Another example. Suppose that a group of five people was going to receive a payment totaling $100 for 10 items of their winter clothing. How would that affect the goods being supplied and the payment being made? No one would want to contribute expensive items, so it is likely that every person would contribute the lowest quality clothing that they had available. After ten items had been contributed, then the five people would begin to argue about payments. The arguments would center around the relative value of the items they contributed because each person wants the maximum “cut” of that $100. Gloves should only count as one item – that person should get half as much. Wool gloves are worth more than a yarn hat – that person should get less. No one really uses scarves any more – that person should get less.
Point #3 is that there is no simple way to bundle payments to multiple entities for the same services. Doing so will always create arguments over how that payment is divided.
One last example. Suppose that you were purchasing three pounds of bananas, but those bananas were in a black bag and you could neither see the bananas nor could you remove the bruised bananas. You had to accept the bundle sight unseen. Would you still make the purchase? Maybe some shoppers would try it. If they had a good experience, they might purchase more. Other shoppers would be upset because they lost money on a bag of bananas that were in really bad shape. But, at most, they would be out a buck.
Now imagine that the grocery store wanted you to accept bundling of all your produce in a dark bag, sight unseen, in one payment of $100 for the whole year. Would you do it? Some people might. Many people probably wouldn’t. Then the grocery store would entice people into the program. We’ll only charge you $50 per year. Isn’t that a great deal?
Once enough people accepted that model, then the grocery store might go to an exclusive bundling model where they didn’t sell produce any other way. Then the grocery store might expand that model to grains and then to beverages and then to dairy products.
Once the grocery store had achieved a relative monopoly, it could then make significant modifications to the consumers of the bundled products. This year, they’re increasing the price to $150 for bundled produce.
Some people might go other places to buy produce.
If not enough people paid the higher prices for produce, then the grocery store could create a law, er um rule, making produce purchase mandatory as a condition of purchasing other groceries. For example, if consumers don’t purchase bundled produce, they can’t purchase bundled meat or bundled dairy products, either.
The idea here is to get a large market share to adopt a payment model and then once that model has reached a “critical mass”, then turn around and use the widespread acceptance of that model to the disadvantage of the market.
A similar analogy might be a corporation’s abuse of a salaried employee. A company might agree to pay an employee a set salary for performing a set of specifically delineated services. After the relationship is established, the company wants to save money, so the company makes cuts to the staffing. The remaining workers now have to perform the services the fired employees were performing, but have to perform those tasks for the same salary. Then the company fires more employees and widens the scope of the services that are required in order to keep the same salary. Finally, in order to cut even more costs, the company decreases the salary, but increases the scope of services that are needed to earn that salary. By this time, there are so few employers left that the company is able to impose an economic hammer on the workers. Either you accept our policies or chances are that you won’t have any employment at all.
Oh, and if you don’t perform your services flawlessly, you might be sued for millions of dollars.
Although I have honed in specifically on how bundling can be misused, Point #4 is that widespread policies in either a monopoly or a monopsony tend to benefit only the monopoly or the monopsony. Those policies tend not to benefit the people who provide services on behalf of the monopoly/monopsony, or those who use the services provided.
Well, I had hoped to finish this topic with two posts, but it looks like there will have to be a third focusing on how bundling will affect medical costs.
Again, comments are encouraged. If I’m missing something or have misrepresented something, let me know.
Posted in Medicare, Policy | 18 Comments »
Wednesday, December 14th, 2011
I read this story about how transgender patients are upset because they are addressed incorrectly when they seek medical care. Because of this, some people are demanding sensitivity training for medical personnel and are alleging that “transphobia” must be occurring.
“Transphobia”?
Sorry, but I think that the whole transgender rights thing is going a little far when transgender people are offended because medical staff need to appropriately identify them before they receive medical care.
The article states that
“We tell them, hey, if a trans person comes in with a stomach ailment or a broken ankle there’s no need to go on a tangent about what different types of surgeries they may have had.”
Yeah. Good advice. Knowing that a man has ovaries would have no impact on my differential diagnosis of abdominal pain. None at all.
If a woman was taken for prostate surgery because medical staff didn’t want “offend” her by asking her whether or not the “MALE” designation on her ID bracelet was incorrect, you know these same people alleging “transphobia” would be demanding that all the providers’ licenses get revoked.
Don’t want to be embarrassed? Go to the hospital desk ahead of time and explain the situation or call the hospital ahead of time and discuss it with the administrator. Don’t get upset because someone is trying to properly identify you, then scream discrimination when none exists. Make it easy on us and we’ll usually try to make it easy on you.
If you act unreasonably, you’re probably going to end up offended, but it won’t be because of your current or desired gender.
Posted in Medical Topics, News Commentary | 32 Comments »
Tuesday, December 13th, 2011
Based on your feedback, at least a couple of you like hearing about my dysfunctional family more than I thought.
If you’re not in that group, prepare yourselves for a boring read. Last year, I had a story about Christmas Eve that I never published. Here it is.
Around every Christmas, I get letters to Santa from some of the less fortunate kids in our area and get clothes and gifts for the kids. I hadn’t told anyone about it until last year when I wanted my oldest daughter to help me. She declined. I made her promise to keep what I was doing a secret.
This year, I told her that she was doing this with me whether she wanted to or not. She then pitched a fit and told Mrs. WhiteCoat that I was going to endanger her life by bringing presents into the inner city where we’ll get mugged or shot when they see our car drive by. So I had to pretend I wasn’t doing anything of the sort. Once my wife left, older daughter WhiteCoat got a scowl for breaking her promise.
Christmas Eve rolled around and I spent most of the day running errands and doing a little bit of shopping. When I got home, the house was a mess, the dishes in the sink were overflowing, and the kids were sitting on the couch watching TV and arguing.
“Can we clean up around here maybe?”
No answer.
“Um, helloooo. Can someone help pick up around here and maybe start with the dishes?”
Phineas and Ferb resonated in the background. No one moved. I went and turned off the television and began pointing at the bodies scattered about the couch.
“YOU! Pick up the floor. YOU! Stack the presents under the tree. YOU! Dishes!”
Oldest daughter WhiteCoat whined. “I didn’t make any of the dishes dirty. Why do I have to do them?”
“MOVE IT!”
Then younger daughter WhiteCoat mumbled “You’re meeeean” under her breath.
That’s it.
I went into my office and closed the door. I went on the computer and looked up the addresses of homeless shelters in our area. I found one about 25 miles away that was just for women and children. I called to see if they accepted gifts. Not only did they accept gifts, they had about 20 kids who didn’t have much. They were planning to have dinner in about an hour, then they would open what presents were available afterward. Perfect timing.
I went back in the living room. “Pick up those presents and put them on the kitchen table.” They all suddenly became quite animated and began cleaning the room.
“Presents. Table. Now.” I repeated.
“Why?” young daughter WhiteCoat asked.
“You’ll see.”
We took some of their presents, added a few toys from our basement that had never been taken out of their packaging, and loaded them in our truck. Then we drove to the store and bought some more toys to make sure that there would be enough for everyone. We turned on the highway toward the city.
During the drive, everyone was quiet. Andy Williams belted out “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” over the radio. I remembered galloping in a circle with my brothers and sister to that song in our living room when I was a kid. I got half a grin as I watched wind blow snow across the road in front of us.
“Where are we going?” young daughter WhiteCoat asked sheepishly.
“You’ll see.”
We turned in the parking lot of the homeless shelter. The entire block was fenced in. A gate swung open and allowed us entrance to the parking lot. The building was old, but not decrepit. In front of one entrance, a couple of men were unloading a washing machine from a moving truck.
The kids still had no idea where we were or what we were doing.
“Get the presents and bring them inside.” I told them.
“Where are we?” Oldest daughter asked.
“Let’s move it.”
A man unlocked an outside door and directed us through a hallway into a large room. There were rows of plastic tables covered in paper tablecloths. An elderly man sat at a chair on a small stage playing a guitar and singing Christmas music. About 40 people listened to him play as they ate dinner.
The cafeteria was clean and fairly modern. Families ate from plastic trays and drank soda poured from 2 liter bottles into paper cups. When they were finished eating, they put their trays on a shelf by the kitchen.
“We’ll wait until after everyone is finished so that the kids finish their dinner,” one staff member stated.
We sat there watching everyone eat. I leaned over to oldest daughter and whispered “Pretty cool, huh? They don’t ever have to do dishes at all. They just put the cups in the garbage and leave the trays on the shelf.”
She didn’t respond.
I nudged her. “Pretty cool, huh?”
Still no answer.
“Want me to see if you can stay here for the rest of Christmas break?”
She wouldn’t even look at me. I got up and began to walk toward one of the staff. Oldest daughter grabbed my coat sleeve. Tears welled up in her eyes.
“Stop it, dad. Just stop it.”
Then I went to Junior WhiteCoat and younger daughter.
“Kind of neat how no one has to pick up after themselves here, isn’t it?”
Neither one answered me.
“The gifts they receive tonight may be the only gifts they get for Christmas.”
They looked at each other and seemed eager to pass out the presents after hearing that.
Youngest daughter had a Barbie present that she was holding behind her back. “I want to keep this one,” she said.
“Just think of how happy it will make some other little girl who doesn’t have any Barbie dolls,” I told her.
When the children began wandering over to us, she pulled a three year old girl aside and told her “I have a special present for you.”
We passed out most of the presents. We gave the rest to the lady running the shelter to give to other kids who might not have been at the dinner.
The truck was quiet on the way home. But the kids had smiles on their faces and seemed quite content listening to the Christmas music. I hoped that they had learned something.
I had a lot of fun watching the kids open presents on Christmas morning. Junior got his XBox 360 with Kinect. He almost wet himself when he opened it. As they ripped through the presents, it seemed like our visit to the homeless shelter was a lot longer than 12 hours ago. I hugged and kissed everyone and then left for work. Yup. People get sick on Christmas, too and someone has to be there to take care of them.
When I arrived home from work Christmas night, wrapping paper was still on the floor and the sink was full of dishes. The TV blasted in the background.
I just can’t win.
Posted in Random Thoughts | 10 Comments »
Monday, December 12th, 2011
Had intended to finish the second half of the bundled payment post, but in my other job, I had a somewhat unexpected … umm … need that had to be filled Friday through tomorrow. Because of that, I haven’t been online very much.
Got a posts lined up to auto-publish, but may not be online again for a little while.
Thanks for the patience.
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, December 8th, 2011
Probably one of the largest pending changes in health care is payment reform.
Right now, payment for medical services is essentially a fee for service model. Patients (or their insurers) are generally charged for the services utilized. If a patient goes to hospital for chest pain, and a physician evaluates the patient, either the patient or the patient’s insurer pays the physician for those services. If the physician orders an EKG and lab tests, either the patient or the patient’s insurer pays the hospital for the EKG and lab tests. If the patient is admitted to the hospital, the hospital gets paid a given fee for the admission. It goes on and on.
The feds want to reduce costs by changing the payment model for medical care to a “bundled” approach. I don’t think it’s going to work. Bundling won’t change the behaviors necessary to save money. This will be a two part post on why. This part will discuss incentives and how they drive utilization of health care. Next part will apply those concepts to bundled health care.
Why is our current system going bankrupt? It is all about incentives. There are three main concepts driving health care costs: profit, demand for services, and fear. Before we can see the effects of a policy change on health care costs, we need to understand how these concepts drive the actions of the major players in the health care market.
For Providers, the incentive is currently to provide more services.
- Demand for services is created by illness. When ill, patients often demand as many medical services as the providers are willing to provide. Patients may seek alternative providers if their demands are not met. There is little incentive to provide less care with increased demand.
- Profit is created by providing services. In a fee for service environment, the more services that are provided, the more that the providers are paid. If patients want the testing or services, more often than not, they get the testing or services. Unhappy patients tend not to come back. No patients = no income.
- The most pervasive fear for providers is fear of liability – either legal or professional. This fear is often mitigated by providing more services. Increased testing decreases the fear of liability because if there is a bad patient outcome, the provider can point to all the testing and argue that they should not be liable because “we did everything we could.” It is uncommon for a provider to suffer adverse consequences for performing too much testing. Fear of liability may lead to extremely expensive and questionably beneficial medical care.
Hospitals also fear regulatory sanctions. It is comical to watch hospital administrators scurry about when there is a JCAHO survey. Poor performance on a JCAHO survey threatens a hospital’s Medicare reimbursement.
For Insurers, there is an incentive to increase customers who pay into the system, but who do not take money out of the system.
- Demand for services is still created by illness, but as demand for services goes up, insurer profits go down (or, in the case of government insurance, debts increase).
- Insurers profit by having healthy and wealthy subscribers. Healthy subscribers pay into the system, but don’t take as much out of the system. Insurers can increase profits by raising insurance premiums, but must be careful when setting prices. If premiums are raised too high, healthy insurers may drop their coverage because they perceive too much of a disconnect between the premiums that they are paying and the services that they are utilizing. In that case, the profits from increased premiums may be diminished because the insurer has fewer subscribers and proportionately more “unhealthy” insureds who utilize more services that the insurer must pay for. Insurers increase their subscribers by contracting with employers to provide services to employees. If an employer chooses a specific insurance company, it would be a huge financial burden for an employee to try to go with another company not offered by the employer. There are even tax disincentives from purchasing your own insurance instead of using your employer’s insurance.
Insurer profits also increase when insurers deny care. Insurers have an incentive to deny claims to subscribers or to create roadblocks to providing care (also known as “pre-authorization”) in order to discourage people from taking money out of the system. A patient’s MRI doesn’t meet medical necessity — the insurer refuses to pay for it. Expensive cancer treatment is “experimental” — the insurer refuses to pay for it. Patients need an expensive medication? The physician has to call and pre-authorize the medication — which is uncompensated time spent away from caring for patients. However, too many inappropriate refusals may cause the insurance company to get a bad reputation with its insureds and may cause further attrition – or may cause a corporation to drop its affiliation with the insurer. Underwriters make a determination whether the risks of denying care are worth the potential financial benefit
Finally, insurers increase profits by paying less to providers. Providers need patients in order to make money. If insurers have control over a large proportion of a market’s patient population, then providers may be financially forced to contract with the insurer on the insurer’s terms so that the provider has access to the insurer’s patient base. Sometimes the providers have unconscionable contract terms to which providers will not agree. For example, Medicaid pays such little money that many providers will not accept patients who have Medicaid. The government gets around this conundrum by creating laws that force certain providers to provide care to Medicaid patients and by giving states funding to provide care to Medicaid patients.
Some private insurers also create unconscionable terms in their contracts in order to increase profits. In our area several companies have a reputation for low reimbursements and long reimbursement delays. Therefore, many providers simply refuse to contract with those companies. Think about it. Would you work for an employer who paid less than minimum wage and who didn’t give you your paycheck for 120 days? But insurers that cut corners then market lower cost products to employers who purchase their product to save money. Then the employees get “insurance,” but that “insurance” has less options and less physicians than other insurance plans.
For the most part, providers can still care for patients under private insurance plans, but patients must pay proportionately more for “out-of-network” physician services. In other words, if an insurer is only willing to pay a physician $20 for an office visit costing $150, the patient may being billed for the $130 balance. This is so-called “balance billing.” When patients pay a substantial amount of money in insurance premiums, they become upset by having to pay more than a small co-pay for provider services. Private insurers then blame “greedy” providers for charging too much and have successfully lobbied many state legislatures into making balance billing illegal and forcing some providers to accept whatever amount of money the insurance company chooses to pay. In other words, states such as California make it so that if an insurance company wants to compensate a physician 10 cents for providing medical care to a patient, the physician has to take the 10 cents and cannot bill the patients for the difference.
Medicare has also outlawed balance billing. Providers either agree to what Medicare pays for services or they don’t accept Medicare patients. Because of Medicare’s large patient base, it has considerable influence over medical providers. All patients over age 65 are eligible for Medicare. Because these patients typically are high utilizers of medical care, a hospital’s refusal to accept Medicare could threaten the hospital’s financial viability. Medicare knows this and it creates arcane rules that enable it to refuse payment or diminish payment to providers if the rules are not followed. For example, failing to note that a patient is a smoker may cause a provider’s payment to be diminished by up to 40% per patient. Hospitals have “chart police” who are hired solely to make sure that providers properly document everything that Medicare wants us to document.
- Insurers fear financial risk. If a patient has a history of a potentially costly medical problem, an insurer will not contract with that unhealthy patients. Try getting a private insurance policy if you have a history of diabetes or cancer. Fear therefore diminishes the availability of care to patients who need it most.
Insurers also fear legal liability. In many cases an insurer can be successfully sued for refusing to pay for medically necessary services. To mitigate this risk, a law called ERISA was created that minimizes insurer liability for refusing payment for services when those payments are for an employee-sponsored health plan. ERISA doesn’t apply to private insurance plans, so insurers have less fear of employed patients than they do of private patients.
For Patients, there are mixed incentives, depending on their insurance status and ability to pay for care.
Well-insured patients or patients on government insurance have an incentive to demand comprehensive medical care. If they are paying large insurance premiums, if they can afford to pay out of pocket, or if someone else is paying for the cost, why shouldn’t everyone have the latest and greatest testing, medications, and treatments?
In addition, patients with government insurance have no disincentive to seek medical care for trivial complaints or for secondary gain (such as narcotic prescriptions or work notes). With no financial risk involved in seeking medical care, the only disincentive for those with government insurance is time spent obtaining the medical care. The only time a monetary disincentive comes into play is when government insured patients seek care from a provider who does not take their insurance or when a government insured patient is prescribed a medication that is not on the government’s formulary.
Monetary issues aren’t a much of a concern for well-insured patients. If there is no out of pocket cost, very few patients even question how useful a test is or how much the test costs.
Patient fears drive increased utilization. Perhaps a relative just had a stroke or died from cancer. If an insurance company is picking up the tab, fear may cause the patient to demand that those same diseases be ruled out or that low-yield testing be performed, or that a family member be inappropriately admitted to the hospital.
Patients who pay out of pocket or who have high insurance deductibles have an incentive to obtain the minimum necessary care. Medical care is extremely costly and medical costs are behind a large proportion of bankruptcies in this country. Those who pay face value for their medical services avoid any services that aren’t essential – sometimes to the point of letting a treatable disease become worse or even become untreatable. To illustrate, consider a patient with good private insurance who has a $3000 deductible. Before the deductible is met, testing is kept to a minimum. Providers may have some difficulty obtaining co-pays or other payments. Toward the end of the year, when deductibles are met, there is a rush to have testing and procedures performed before the end of the year and the onset of a new deductible. Another example might be a patient who requests a questionably necessary service or test. If a patient or family member is given an Advance Beneficiary Notice to sign, acknowledging that they may personally be responsible for payment if the government does not pay, a large proportion of patients decide to forego the service or test.
Monetary concerns are a large disincentive to patients who pay out of pocket. Medication prescriptions may not be filled if they are too expensive. If pre-authorization for testing is needed, patients often forego the testing if pre-authorization cannot be obtained. Often patients become angry at physicians because they are not able to obtain pre-authorization so that the patient does not have to pay for the test.
Fears of monetary outlay serve as a disincentive to care for patients who pay out of pocket.
That’s it. I think that these are the main market forces at work in determining the cost of medical care. The examples certainly aren’t exhaustive. I’m interested in seeing comments on what other forces people think may contribute to medical costs.
The second part of this post will use the above concepts to show how the current proposed payment reforms will have little effect on controlling costs.
Posted in Access to Care, Insurance, Medicare, Policy | 15 Comments »
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Addressing Transgender Patients
Wednesday, December 14th, 2011I read this story about how transgender patients are upset because they are addressed incorrectly when they seek medical care. Because of this, some people are demanding sensitivity training for medical personnel and are alleging that “transphobia” must be occurring.
“Transphobia”?
Sorry, but I think that the whole transgender rights thing is going a little far when transgender people are offended because medical staff need to appropriately identify them before they receive medical care.
The article states that
Yeah. Good advice. Knowing that a man has ovaries would have no impact on my differential diagnosis of abdominal pain. None at all.
If a woman was taken for prostate surgery because medical staff didn’t want “offend” her by asking her whether or not the “MALE” designation on her ID bracelet was incorrect, you know these same people alleging “transphobia” would be demanding that all the providers’ licenses get revoked.
Don’t want to be embarrassed? Go to the hospital desk ahead of time and explain the situation or call the hospital ahead of time and discuss it with the administrator. Don’t get upset because someone is trying to properly identify you, then scream discrimination when none exists. Make it easy on us and we’ll usually try to make it easy on you.
If you act unreasonably, you’re probably going to end up offended, but it won’t be because of your current or desired gender.
Posted in Medical Topics, News Commentary | 32 Comments »