Family Medicine
Posted Jul 18, 2009 at 3:08 PM
Some thoughts/responses to the community:
I realize I'm swimming against a strong current, but I think it's critical for other voices to be heard.
I enjoyed the Peter Singer article in the New York Time, 7/15/09: Why We Must Ration Health Care—thanks for the recommendation, drapp1952. Trijcpg—you may want to take a look, as it challenges the basic premise of the WSJ article from 7/9/09 (the WSJ article argues against rationing).
Many argue against NP/physician extenders having the same value as physicians and some including suvarov worry about the enormous med school tuition. I agree, when medical school costs well over $200K, and you pay PCPs ½ to ¼ of their physician "colleagues," there should be no surprise when med. students opt against primary care. The solution? Government subsidized medical school, residency, and fellowships and leveling the salary playing field between types of physicians. As auburngal points out though, not all docs are created equal, and we should be able to discern who are "the best." So, within fields there has to be a way to reward quality, and I believe different specialty organizations should make recs on this, be it polyp detection rate for GI, percent of DM patients having A1C's done within a certain time frame and BP control for primary care, mammo/pap percentages, complications among surgeons, etc.
JA1930 points out that outpatient primary care docs don't get paid enough, which I agree with, but he believes that their salaries should not be increased at the expense of specialists. I disagree. Primary care physicians aren't starving and neither are specialists. But, we can't afford to pay everyone specialist salaries and so the playing field needs to be leveled. Discrepancies in reimbursements are basically arbitrary anyway, and favor procedure and surgery driven fields, negotiated unfairly against PCPs, in the 1960s. I'm willing to bet that if you were to let the public in on medicines dirty little secret, that many specialist make $300-500K while many primary care docs make 1/3 of that, they would have very little sympathy for this argument. JA1930 fears that if we lower specialist salaries, no one will match in GI, cards, and ortho. Yeah. I lay awake at night with the same fear. The fear should be that most primary care will be done by NPs and PAs, who have less training and expertise (this is what really worries me) and FMGs, who lack cultural awareness, which is not insignificant, but otherwise do good jobs from my experience. I also have to disagree with JA1930 about the UK, Canada, and many other industrialized nations. They do have equal or better outcomes for all of their citizens, and their citizens are happier than ours in terms of their health systems (75% v 50%--see NY Times, Peter Singer article, 7/15/09). And, most importantly, they don't kick a quarter of their citizens to the side of the road.
sailingdad made many good points about the demise of primary care. Also, he pointed out that the medical community does not speak with one voice, which is clearly true. I hope his diagnosis of the "terminal" condition of primary care is wrong and that we do get together with one voice to speak out against the enormous profits of insurance companies and Pharma, that come at the expense of health care for all..
tnkaiser believes that if we embrace a single payer system, our entire economy would embrace socialism. Single payer systems cost half as much and cover all citizens, with better health outcomes. It's not a single payer national system that will break our economy, but the current free-for-all money grab that is costing 18% of the economy and growing and which causes more individual bankruptcies than any other cause not to mention a huge burden on our nations small and large businesses, who try to give their employees insurance, but are hampered by the unreasonable expense.
Drdawgfan says that "single payer systems work for the young and the healthy, they never have to use the services." Actually this statement applies better to the current insurance systems, with their prior authorizations and rejection of those with pre-existing conditions.
xrayangiodoc --wow, a specialist and a radiologist at that who supports a single payer system! Glad to have you on board.
merthin said, "If you think dealing with multiple insurance companies is a hassle, wait until you only have to deal with the government." As a primary care doc, I would welcome a single payer system which is electronic and streamlined, covers everyone, would have one type of paperwork and I would know exactly what I have to do to get reimbursed. This system would place more emphasis on prevention than on procedures, and would thus level the playing field among physicians. Optimally it would include tort reform as well. It would not be without its problems, but beats the monstrous, untenable system we have now.