Where Does Medicine Go From Here?

In my most recent post “The Last To Know” http://www.spiritofhealthcare.com/?p=246 I pointed out how both the general public and the medical profession are being controlled by a growing government healthcare system that robs both parties of their freedoms to use their own judgment and to determine their own fate. To suggest that this is basically an addiction may have seemed a bit extreme to some, but I believe its true nonetheless. Addiction is defined as “a strong and harmful need to regularly have something or do something.” It doesn’t have to be a drug. How about being addicted to a regular, all be it declining, government or insurance paycheck?

Physicians have traditionally been fairly well compensated for their efforts and thus have enjoyed many of the comforts of modern life. Most would agree that this is the result of years of hard work, perseverance, intellect and dedication. In general these are also traits along with professional integrity, which have raised physicians to a position of relative prominence and trust within our society. But in recent years that social position and economic security have begun to decline as healthcare services have come to be characterized as a basic human right. This philosophy is the direct result of various third parties becoming interposed between the patient and their physician for the sole purpose of guaranteeing payment.

Whether the payer is Blue Cross, Aetna, or the government, the impact is the same; the third party ends up influencing medical decision making, ultimately to their own ends. About 9 years ago I made the conscious, all be it impulsive decision to resign from every private insurance contract. I believed then, and still believe today, that these contracts with their pre-authorizations and denials of payment were inappropriately influencing a wide variety of medical decisions. Plus, under these contracts I had no say in determining what the actual value of my services should be. I was essentially an employee of the insurance companies since they were the ones who paid me, according to their fee schedules. So I quit, and boy did everything change. I was suddenly “Out of Network,” the equivalent of a medical “Scarlet Letter.”

Almost immediately most of my referring physicians quit sending me patients. I had worked with many of them for 20 years or more. In many cases I‘d provided surgical care for their family members and even the docs themselves. When I asked them why they stopped sending patients my way the answer was “You don’t take insurance.” I tried to explain, “I still file claims for patients, I’m just not bound by the insurance companies’ fee schedule, which means I have the freedom to individually contract with each patient.” This concept seemed beyond the grasp of many who somehow believed it inappropriate for a physician to actually bill the patient directly. Others offered words of encouragement with statements like, “I wish I could do that, but my practice is different.”

Perhaps the most enlightening moment of my professional career occurred a few weeks after dropping off the insurance roles. I had two separate patients call and tell me they wanted to come to me for their elective surgery but they said they “couldn’t.” I assumed it was because they couldn’t afford to pay me. When I explained that I’d be willing to work with them on my fee they both issued the same rather startling statement, “My insurance company won’t let me come to you.” What? That’s right! Since I wasn’t willing to play by the companies’ rules, they were going to do whatever they could to ensure that their policyholders didn’t become my patients, even if they had “out of network” benefits. I wondered, was this some form of coercion to force me back into the fold or was it just a prudent business practice? Either way, it was clear that they controlled the patients and if I wasn’t willing to play by their rules I would have a tough time seeing enough patients to maintain a viable practice.

One afternoon as I was rearranging my office I happened upon my framed copy of the Fellowship Pledge of the American College of Surgeons; something I had recited many years before upon induction into the college. As I read it again I was struck by the third paragraph, which began, “Upon my honor I hereby declare that I will not practice fee-splitting.” Obviously, this was written nearly a century ago by the founders of the college as they formalized the basic principles of conduct and ethics they wanted their Fellows to abide by. Splitting one’s fee with another doctor in order to secure a referral was considered unethical, so the college included specific language in this pledge, emphasizing that such behavior would not be condoned. As I pondered this idea, it occurred to me that the reason I was no longer seeing insured patients had nothing to do with my skills, bedside manner, reputation, availability or even my fees. It was because I had the audacity to tell insurance companies that I was no longer willing to “split my fees” with them.

In 1913 the leaders of the surgical profession considered fee splitting to be unethical, but is it really still an issue of ethics today? If not, why not? Over the last few years I’ve asked many of my colleagues that question, and I typically get a nod of agreement, or some actually say, “You’re right, but that’s just the way the system is today.” Perhaps this is in part because for decades our leadership has spent most of its time and efforts lobbying our government for more crumbs from their healthcare budget. (Payments to physicians account for only about 12% of Medicare payments) What they should be demanding is a return of the basic American freedom that would allow all physicians to determine their own fees for the services they provide. Instead, our organizations, led by the American Medical Association, have actively participated in the actual creation of the current payment system based on fixed fees, which are solely determined by the government based upon its willingness to allocate resources. No other component of our economy, and no other individual professionals are subject to this level of government control, so its not surprising that the best and the brightest of our nations youth are choosing careers other than medicine.

Perhaps organized medicine may have finally begun to challenge the status quo. At the annual meeting of the AMA in June of 2010, a resolution was passed by an overwhelming margin calling on the AMA to write its own legislation that would allow for physicians and patients to privately and individually contract for healthcare services within the Medicare program, without penalty to either party. The result is the “Medicare Patient Empowerment Act,” a bill, which is currently under consideration in both the US House of Representatives and the Senate. I’m not sure whether the delegates who voted to have the AMA take this unprecedented action actually recognized it or not, but to me what they were saying is that the key to the patient/physician relationship, traditionally the core of our American healthcare system, lies in the ability of both parties to deal fairly and honestly with each other without being inappropriately influenced by any third party.

Whether it’s Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance, all third parties have successfully interposed themselves between patient and physician, and over time physicians have become economically addicted to that system despite the massive regulations and impersonal controls they impose. While many are now crying out for “the right to privately contract” with their Medicare patients, and justifiably so, very few have actually seized that opportunity with their non-Medicare patients, even though to do so is perfectly legal. It seems that perceived economic security is indeed a strong opiate. Perhaps all physicians, as well as all our professional organizations, should step back from the pursuit of better contracts and more secure government payments, and reevaluate our true roles within the healthcare system. In doing so, one basic question must be asked – does contracting with third party payers, including government programs, actually constitute a compromise of our professional ethics?

 

 

 

The opinions expressed herein are my own and do not necessarily reflect or represent the policies or opinions of any medical organization or group.

Check out my web site at www.robertsewellmd.com

9 thoughts on “Where Does Medicine Go From Here?

  1. Very well said! I’m confused about something…physicians already have the ability to “opt-out” of Medicare and establish a private contract with patients. Why are physicians crying out for that right when they already have it? Maybe I missed something, so I figured I would ask. I have written about this topic from my viewpoint as a physical therapist. According to the way the law was written, PT’s and Chiropractors are the only profession singled out as being unable to “opt-out” of Medicare. This has made a huge impact on my ability to see patients in private practice. I run a small cash based practice – my patients pay up front and we submit to their insurance companies so that they receive reimbursement. We do not participate with any insurance company, including Medicare. This works out quite well, except that I am prevented by law from ever treating Medicare patients because I cannot accept cash payment. I have to turn these patients away, even though I provide services that few others in my area provide. It is difficult to tell a patient who is in pain that I cannot take them as a patient, because the government will not allow them to choose their provider or spend their hard-earned money in the way they best see fit. Perhaps if more healthcare providers did what we are doing, things would change!
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    Ann

    • Thanks for your comment. You are correct, technically physicians have the right to opt out and enter into private contracts with willing patients. There are basically three reasons why most physicians don’t exercise that option.
      1. To opt out requires the doc to be totally out of Medicare for ALL patients, and remain out for two years. This restriction means many patients would simply not have access to an opted out physician, even if the doc was willing to offer a service for whatever Medicare would allow.
      2. Many physicians are concerned that if they opt out they will be perceived as being more about the money than anything else. This perception, although untrue and unfair, is one that most physicians want to avoid at all cost, even to the point of taking a loss. In fact, it is that dedication to the patient that the government is counting on to ensure that Medicare patients will have access to care no matter how low they cut payments.
      3. Most physicians realize that if they opt out, their patients must bear the entire cost of their services. Medicare pays nothing to either the physician or the patient if the doc has opted out. This is patently unfair to every patient, but it occurs as a result of the physician’s action.
      The whole idea of the Medicare Patient Empowerment Act is to allow patients and physicians to independently and individually decide on a fair fee and how it is settled. Medicare should at least reimburse the patient what they would pay a participating physician. This would resolve all three of these issues. However, this bill will obviously be opposed by all those who wish to maintain their control of what should be a very personal patient/physician relationship.

  2. I had a patient call and ask if he was allowed to pay for the treatment he wanted. He thought he was not allowed to pay for healthcare, and that providers can only be paid by 3rd parties. He thought his insurance company was his provider and that we work for them. If you notice, to most people “health care” and “health insurance” mean the same thing. I’m hoping that changes.

  3. Pingback: Health Insurance and How it’s Poisoning Health Care | Renegade Wellness

  4. All I see hear is the truth. All patients and physicians should or could agree with this if they had their eyes open and or a back bone. The third parties are going to goad us as long as we allow it. LL

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