Fee-for-Service Not Responsible for Health Cost
Inflation
I like to
be in America!
O.K. by me
in America!
Ev’rything
free in America
For a
small fee in America!
Stephen Sondheim (born
1930), America (1959). Song in West Side
Story
March 28, 2012 - I agree with the sentiments expressed in the
following blog, written by Greg Scandlen for John Goodman’s Health Policy Blog, dated
March 28, 2012. As an aside, In my opinion, Accountable Care Organizations
are an elaborate and expensive way
around a problem that may not exist in the first place., but which has been
created by a 3rd party payment system that creates a false illusion - that health care is free or virtually free.
Health Savings Accounts with high deductibles sensitizing patients to true
costs of care is an around the problem.
Is
Fee-For-Service the Problem?
Almost everyone involved in health
care will tell you that the greatest problem in our system is that we pay on a
fee-for-service basis. Almost everyone is wrong.
The logic is obvious – paying a fee for a service encourages
providers to get more fees by providing more services. Ergo, we consume too
much and spend too much. Ipso facto, getting rid of fee-for-service would
result in fewer services and less spending. Case closed.
Well, maybe not.
In fact, almost everything we do in the course of our
economic lives, we do on a fee-for-service basis. When we go to the movies, get
our oil changed, have our roof replaced, buy a computer, get a haircut, hire a
baby sitter, buy a steak dinner, get someone to do our taxes or defend us in a
suit, we do it on a fee-for-service basis. None of it is particularly
inflationary.
Yes, the providers of these services would like to sell us
more units of service. But we have good reason to resist – we don’t want to
waste our money on services we don’t need.
What is unique about health care is not fee-for-service, but
third-party payment. Only in health care is there someone else picking up the
tab for our spending.
If we applied the same third-party payment technique to any
other segment of the economy we would get the exact same inflationary spiral we
see in health care. I buy donuts from time-to-time. If those donuts were free
at the point of purchase, I would buy (and eat) a whole lot more than I do
today. The stereotype of cops eating donuts came about because the donut shops
gave them away to the cops for free.
When I was working as a state-level lobbyist for the Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association, I would attend meetings of the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), the National Governors
Association (NGA), the National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL) and a
bunch of other organizations. These groups typically held their meetings in the
ritziest hotel in Kansas City, New Orleans, San Diego, Boston or some other
place that was easy to get to.
Never, not once, did I ever inquire what the room would cost
when I checked in. Why should I? Blue Cross was paying for it. The cost made no
difference to me whatsoever. Some years later when I went into business for
myself and tried to attend the same meetings at my own expense, I became very
interested in the cost of the rooms. Most of the time, I would stay at a cheap
motel on the edge of town and drive to the meetings.
Ah, but health care is different, you might say. Yes it is.
It is different because of third-party payment and for no other reason. The
other reasons usually given are easily rebutted –
- Information
asymmetry (the providers know more than the patients). Of course, but that
is also true of, say, criminal law or engineering.
- Health
care is essential to life. But it is far less essential than food or
housing, which do not require third-party payment.
- Patients
are too fearful to make rational decisions. More fearful than if I were
arrested and locked up at Riker’s Island?
·
Health care is complicated. As
complicated as an iPad? I don’t think so.
Efforts to move away from fee-for-services or to control it
never work very well. Witness capitation under managed care, or the RBRVS
system of paying physicians under Medicare. Medicare’s system of price controls
leads to absurd complexity yet does not reward physicians for the things that
are most important to patients, such as kindness, patience, communication
ability, friendliness – the qualities that humanize the medical transaction and
that would be rewarded in any other segment of the economy not dominated by
bloodless third-party payers.
It is about to get worse with the advent of the ICD-10
codebook. This will offer 140,000 separate billing codes, according to The Wall Street Journal, including “codes
for injuries in opera houses, art galleries, squash courts, and nine locations
in and around a mobile home, from the bathroom to the bedroom.”
It is not fee-for-service that is the problem, but the
burden third-party payers put on patients and providers alike, without adding
any value whatsoever.
Tweet: The problem
behind health care inflation is not fee-for-service charged by avaricious
practitioners but third party payers who create the illusion that health care
is free.
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