Political
Partisanship and Physician Leadership
The
partisan, when he is engaged in a dispute, cares nothing about the rights of
the question, but is anxious to convince his hearers of his own assertions.
Plato (c.426-348 B.C), Dialogues
There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.
John Adams (1735-1826), Second President of the United States
Leadership
and learning are indispensable to one another.
John
F. Kennedy (1917-1963), Remarks prepared for delivered at the Trade Mart in
Dallas, November 22, 1963
December
20, 2012 - Physician leaders are slowly learning to deal
with political partisanship. This is
apparent in dealing with Obamacare, passed in March 2010, by a Democratic
Congress without a single Republican vote, an unprecedented political act for a
law affecting every American in a country governed by two political
parties. In effect, this power grab of
the health system, which has never been
popular with the American people, poisoned the political well and deepened the
political divide between Democrats and Republicans.
The partisan composition of Congress, Governorships,
and the Presidency is now.
·
U.S. Senate – 53 Democrats, 45
Republicans, 1 Independents
·
U.S. House of Representatives – 199 Democrats,
234 Republicans
·
Governors, 20 Democrats, 30 Republicans
·
Presidency (popular vote)m 50.6% Obama,
47.8% Romney
Obamacare is now in the process of being
implemented. A Democratic President and
Senate iare in control, but are blocked by a Republican House and Republican
Governors, most of whom do not approve of Obamacare and make its implementation
difficult because of budgetary overruns and fear of loss of state sovereignty.
Surveys indicate physicians disapprove of Obamacare by about 2:1 to 3:1
margins, and polls of the public reflect a 60% disapproval. Yet physicians depend on Medicare for their
levels of reimbursement, and government this year will spend 50% of total
health care dollars.
In this partisan environment,
physicians, who generally prefer a competitive market environment to
government control, feel powerless and
demoralized to change things, as
reflected in a recent Physician Foundation survey of 630,000 physicians.
Furthermore, the AMA, which backed Obamacare,
has lost much of its credibility among physicians. Only 15% of
physicians now belong to the AMA.
American physicians feel leaderless.
This is aggravated by the fact that the Obama administration tends to dismiss
physician suggestions for reform – HSAs, market competition, tort reform – with
a wave of the federal wand, and a curt dismissal of teh opposition. .
Exit polls after the November election compound the
sense physician helplessness. The polls clearly indicate the public
expects government, not market competition, to “fix"health care its high health costs, limited access, and runaway
entitlement costs.
This is evident in
these poll numbers of voters about National Health Policy issues (“Implications
of the 2012 Election – The Voters’ Perspective,” New England Journal of
Medicine, December 20. 2012)
·
What should happen to the 2012 Health
Law?
Obama voters, expand 49%, repeal 2%
Romney voters, expand 3%m repeal
48%
·
Favor government efforts to make sure
most Americans receive care.
Obama voters, 92%
Romney votes,33%
·
Favor government fixing the health
system.
Obama voters, 85%
Romney votes, 53%
·
Medicare should continue as is.
Obama voters, 83%
Romney voters, 43%
·
Medicaid should continue as it, with feds
and states jointly paying
Obama voters, 78%
Romney voters, 30%
·
The government should increase
regulations on insurance companies doctors, and hospitals to control costs
Obama voters, 41%
Romney voters, 20%
·
Government should make large cuts in
Medicare to cut federal budget deficit
Obama voters, 57% oppose
Romney voters, 41% oppose
·
Government should make large cuts in
Medicaid to cut budget deficits
Obama voters, 77% oppose
Romney voters, 56% oppose
·
Raise taxes on those making$250,000 to
raise revenue
Obama voters, 88%
Romney voters 35%
These partisan differences create
problems for physician leaders, for the differences make it difficult to change
the political dynamics. If you advocate
market-driven changes or changes favoring the”rich” (many physicians make over
$250,000), you are perceived to be a Republican partisan, acting against the
best interests of the old and the poor and the sick.
Consequently, physician leaders are
often split or muted in their health
reform views. Not all. Dr. Donald
Palmisano, a widely respected physician leader and author of “On Leadership,” feels physicians should take a courageous and
bold stand by advocating free enterprise, entrepreneurship, and patient choice
over government control.
Yet the political
odds seem stacked against physician autonomy. In a Wall Street Journal
interview yesterday “Cleveland Clinic Diagnoses Health-Care Act, “ Delos “Toby”
Cosgrove, MD, a heart surgeon and Cleveland Clinic CEO concludes of Obamacare, “it’s going to be a faster move
towards one payer. Increasingly people think that in 10 years you’re going to
have 75% of the health-care costs paid by the federal government.”
I hope not. This week Wall Street analysts predicted a
20% to 30% increase in health care premiums and costs because of
Obamacare. I’m afraid we’ll see more of
the same cost escalation in Obama’s second term.
The American creed is: One, the majority rules, Two; equality opporunity but not equal results for all.
The questions are - Does the majority rule for you? Or does it rule to make itself bigger and more powerful? Does it provide equal health care opportunies for all, or just for these it favors?
Tweet: For controlling health costs, Obamacare may be the problem and not the solution, but voters remain unconvinced of this reality.
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