Thursday, March 28, 2013
The
Dysfunctional Relationship between Government and Doctors
The
element of a plan, law, strategy, or system that fails to perform as expected
and disrupts or threatens to disrupt some or all of the other elements.
Definition
of Dysfunctional
To say that Obamacare is dysfunctional as we move
towards full implementation in 2014
is an understatement. Yesterday’s announcement by the Society of
Auditors that Obamacare would raise overall costs by 32% by 2017 underscores
the dysfunctionality.
Nowhere is this dysfunction more evident than in the
relationship of the Obama administration and physicians. A headline in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal “Warning Over Doctor-Run Groups” is an
example. The article warns of physician
groups owned by orthopedic and spine surgeons that serve as intermediaries between medical
device manufacturers and hospitals. The
Inspector General calls these groups “inherently suspect” and warns they “pose
dangers to public safety.”
This is not the first time a government agency has
gone up against physicians. It did so
when Congress shut down fthe building of future physician-owned hospitals. It does so when it prints 1600 pages of more regulations and piles them
upon an already over-regulated health care industry. It does so when it threatens to imprison
doctors or suspend their licenses if they do not follow Medicare compliance
rules to the letter. It does so when it forbids doctors from privately contracting
with patients. It does so when it
requires doctors to prescribe electronically and to install expensive
electronic health systems at a loss with no hope for a return on investment. It does so when it ascribes tremendous
increases in cost of care (now 18% of
GDP) to fee-for-service medicine by accusing physicians of greedily increasing their incomes based on volume rather
than quality. It does do when it funds
Obamacare partly by systematically reducing physician incomes at every turn
over the next decade.
What are the results of this dysfunctional
relationship?
A White Paper published by an advisory panel of the
Physicians Foundation “Health Reform and the Decline of Physician Private
Practice” sums it up nicely.
·
“Reform will drastically increase
physician legal compliance obligations and potential liability under federal
fraud and abuse statues.”
·
“Most physicians will be compelled to consolidate
with other practitioners, become hospital employees, or align with large
hospitals and health systems for capital, administrative and technical
resources.”
·
"Reform will exacerbate physician shortages,
creating access issues for many patients.”
Government is looking for a villain outside of
government, and they have found it in physicians. “Trust, but verify", Ronald Reagan’s old
saying for dealing with the evil empire has become “Distrust, but deny and comply.”
This may be a winning strategy but it has one glaring problem: Patients
trust their physicians more than government.
Tweet: A
dysfunctional relationship exists between government and physicians who
distrust each other’s motives.
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