Health
Reform Detour Signs
Detour,
there's a muddy road ahead, detour
Paid no mind to what it said
Detour, oh these bitter things I find,
Should have read
That detour sign
Paid no mind to what it said
Detour, oh these bitter things I find,
Should have read
That detour sign
Lyrics
to 1945 Song, “Detour There’s a Muddy Road Ahead”
Detour signs dot the road to health reform.
·
The Obama administration is posting many of
these with its growing list of waivers,
exemptions, delays, and postponements of employer mandates, and even the individual
mandates for those with “hardships.”
·
The Republicans are unifying behind an
alternative health plan featuring tax credits, enlargement of risk pools,
expansion of health savings accounts,
transfer of Medicaid management to the states, and malpractice reform.
·
Physicians are detouring around traditional
practices by becoming hospital
employees, becoming leaders in large integrated health
systems, and developing new practice
models.
Lately, I’ve been
focusing on these new practice models by interviewing physician entrepreneurs who are shaping these
new models.
The new models include:
·
Specialty-led organizations that perform procedures
– cataract centers, endoscopy centers, imaging
centers, orthopedic centers, heart centers,
non-invasive cancer centers.
Some of these centers, like the
Oklahoma Surgery Center in Oklahoma City,
take this alternative a step further – by posting their prices for
everybody to see – and encouraging employers to send patients to the center
rather to local hospitals.
·
Primary care- led organization who are creating
new business models based on variations
of traditional practices. Some of
these new models are hybrids – combinations of traditional practices accepting
3rd party insurance with a superimposed practice layer willing to accept direct cash payments. Other models are totally insurance free, and depend on monthly or annual retainers, in
exchange for quick access, unlimited
time spent with patients, and free or deeply discounted lab tests, physicals,
minor surgeries, and medications.
Most of these physician models involve new relationships with patients, employers, and health plans are designed to
lower overall costs, including insurance costs. In essence these new models “unbundle” or “divorce” primary care from
insurance-based care that involve hospitalization, expensive surgeries, end-of-live care, or other forms of catastrophic, palliative,
or chronic care.
No comments:
Post a Comment