Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Hospital
Malfeesance – Fees for Services, Fees for Items, Fees for Facilities, Fees for Physicians
I
like to be in America!
OK
by me in America!
Ev’rything
free in America!
For
a small fee in America!
Stephen
Sondheim(born 1930), West Side Story
Steven Brill made quite a splash when, in a 2400 word article in the February 20 issue of Time, the most lengthy in the history of the
magazine. Brill accused hospital executives
of ripping off Americans.
How? By
using a billing mechanism known as
chargemaster accounts to charge exorbitant fees for everything from use of
hospital rooms, to operating rooms, to recovery rooms, to ICU rooms to Tylenol to cotton balls to band aids. The proble? Chargemaster accounts are so complex,
convoluted, and arcane that nobody seems capable of figuring them out or
unraveling them.
Alleged fee abuse may
even more complicated than that with hospitals hiring physicians in record
numbers and then upping the physicians
fees and charging “facility fees” for use of operating rooms and other
specialized facilities using physician services. As employees of the hospital, physicians no longer have any choice for setting their fees or controlling
facility fees.
Yet it is easy to understand why hospitals impose these various fees. Hospital occupancies are dropping; Obamacare cuts $256 billion out of Medicare
funding for hospitals over the next decade; hospitals are required to care of all comers even if they can’t
pay; and hospital executives are not
hired to lose money. It’s hard to
criticize hospitals for trying to make up for the loss of income.
Small wonder that hospital inpatient fees are up
sharply. Once cannot blame physicians. As John Commins points out in a March 20 Healthleaders Media article:
“Hospitals look at themselves as healthcare companies and there
are a bunch of reasons why they are aligning with physicians. And it is not
just their desire to do so. Physicians are also facing this new market where
they are being asked to do more with less with regards to capital investment
and health information technology and developing a quality infrastructure
platform and malpractice and other typical costs that make it difficult for
them to continue to practice in that two- or three-doctor practice."
Brian Klepper, an independent health
care analyst, gives another reason
. He followed the Brill piecein the March 22 issue of The Health Care Blog “Why
Only Business Can Save America from Health Care, ” with this commentary:
“Why haven’t America’s business leaders united to be a
counterweight to the health care industry’s massive influence? After all, only
one group is larger and more influential than the health care industry, and
that’s everyone else.
Part of the answer lies in the health care industry’s
masterful divide-and-conquer tactics. Every community’s most prosperous and
influential business leaders sit on local health company boards. No Chamber of
Commerce will organize efforts that oppose the egregious practices of its
largest members, the health plans and hospitals. Business health coalitions
that welcome drug and device firm subsidies are loathe to mount efforts that
might offend their benefactors.
So far, business has not displayed much appetite for
galvanizing on this issue. But the fact remains that, unless the business
community and its champions come together, health care will almost certainly
continue to have its way with Congress and the national largess, planting the
seeds of financial instability and undermining the nation’s future.”
True enough, but the answer may also
be deeper than that. To coin a phrase
from James Carville, who said, “It’s the economy, Stupid!” ’It’s structural and cultural, Stupid!”
We live in a capitalistic society
where individual fees for individual acts are expected and the norm. For
hospitals, these fees are for service lines,
such as orthopedics, general surgery,
cancer and imaging; and for individual items charged to patients; and for individual
facility use – operating rooms, recovery rooms, private rooms, and ICU rooms.
Individual fees are built into American culture and
business structure., and rest on the premise that people can be trusted to
do the right thing or they will cease to be a competitive force. Obamacare proposes to change all of this by
converting fees-for-individual things into
bundled and capitated fees for all
illness categories, episodes of
care, types of patients classified by
payer, such as Medicare. Hence, the
Accountable Care Organization. For cancer
care, for example, Ezekiel Emanuel,
MD, Obama’s former chief medical advisor
and now vice provost of the University of Pennsylvania, says one way to do this
is:
Over the next few years, a payment system needs to move away
from fee-for-service to a system of bundled payments, in which doctors are paid
one fee for all the treatments needed in care for the patient.(“A Plan to Fix Cancer Care, “ New York Times, March 24, 2013).
Lots of luck, Ezekial. Changing the fundamental structure of health
care economics will not be easy. Why?
Because of the immense variations in individual doctors, individual hospitals, and individual
patients. I suppose one can minimize these individual variations by
consolidating everything into one big bundle and using reinsurance to compensate
for variations. But it won’t be
easy. There will be economic losers, who
will hire lobbyists to minimize the damage and protect the entrenched
self-interests in the hospital and the surrounding communities.
To conclude.
Do not equate hospital fees with malfeesance,
With societal, business & hospital malfeasance.
Fees are part of our capitalistic U.S. culture,
Individual fees is
part of our infrastructure.
One could charge bundled fees.
For all procedures and diseases.
But that will take radical restructuring
And societal and business destructuring.
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