On Doctors and Having the Courage to
Practice Independent Direct Care Medicine
Have The Courage To Be Direct.
Title of book, Anthony K. Tja, Harvard Business Review Press
I shall be
direct. I have just watched a 4 part
video recording the proceedings of an August 10 conference on direct pay
medicine. I recommend you view it too.
Dave
Racer, a St. Paul, Minnesota based publisher
who has written or published 8 books on health reform, organized the conference in conjunction with
the American Association of Physicians and Surgeons.
You can view
the 4-part video at You Tube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PiEE9AiusCQ or by going to aapsonline.org. The video features 14 physician speakers –
11 primary care physicians and 3 surgeons – who have plunged into independent
direct pay practices. These practices
also go by the names of concierge, direct, retainer, and cash only practices. These practices share one thing in common – they function
outside the realm of 3rd parties -
health plans, Medicare, and
Medicaid. These and other 3rd parties do not oversee or pay for physician services.
These things
struck me about the physician presenters
·
Courage
of converting to independent practice without 3rd party financial parachutes.
·
High
level of personal happiness.
·
Satisfaction
at spending more time with patients.
·
Feeling
of renewed closeness to patients.
·
Diversity
of approaches -some retainer, some not.
- Refuting of notion that doctors care only for the well-off.
·
Diversity
of patient populations – some insured, some not.
·
Lower
costs and more convenience for patients.
·
Simplicity
of business models
·
Smaller
staffs – many with only one assistant.
·
Skepticism
in efficacy of pay-for-performance, team care,
evidence-based care, affordable care, accountable care, and practice
guidelines.
·
Relief
at shedding the encumbrances, expenses, and hassles of 3rd party
oversight and payment.
·
Less
concern and worries about cash flow
·
Freedom
of using clinical judgment to serve patient rather than insurers.
None of
these things mean that direct pay independent practice is a wave of the future. These types of practices go against the grain
of Obamacare and managed care. But
these types of practices represent a belief among doctors that they should have
the freedom to practice what they were trained to do – evaluate and treat
patients - rather than to serve as representatives and intermediaries of 3rd party payers.
Tweet:
Independent direct pay practices
appeal to physicians because of more direct, more time, and personal
relationships with patients.
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