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Herbert Rubin M.D. apparently did not enjoy Jane Sarahson Kahn’s piece last week reporting the results of the recent Annals of Internal Medicine study examining physician attitudes towards national health insurance.  Here is his email to us, edited slightly for length:

"In the free market where I practice, I have no need for wonks, insurance weenies or regulators. It’s me and my patients. I give them what they want, they give me what I want. No intermediaries or academics needed. Thats how every other good or service is sold and bought. No need for those who fancy themselves more clever than the market.Most overeducated experts are risibly obtuse. The diagnosis is the lack of a free market … The cure is the collapse of the current doomed non-system and the irrelevant band-aids proposed, and return of buyers and sellers with no self-interested intermediaries. The more wonks tinker, the better I like it. If single payer comes, I increase my fees, and laugh."  

The Changing of the Guard

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For the past 30 years, the U.S. health care system has been powered by baby boomer physicians, many of whom are now considering retirement at a younger age than prior generations due to burnout, deteriorating practice economics, and disillusionment with the logistical challenges of practice. I don’t believe that a majority of these physicians will cease to work in the near future; rather, they will find new roles inside and outside the health system that are more satisfying and less stressful.

As these busy physicians retire, often on very short notice, their patients are cascading down onto a new generation of physicians–a large number of whom are women–with fundamentally different goals, work styles, and values. This new generation has already gravitated toward medical specialties that mesh better with family and work-life balance priorities, and they evince a desire to practice medicine 40 hours a week or less. They are also much less ideological than their elders about medical practice and its prerogatives and less likely to remain in the same community for their entire practice.

It is hard to argue with younger physicians’ desires for a more balanced life. After observing the wreckage that 24/7 medical practice has left among their elders–divorces, intra-professional conflict, disability due to stress, even suicides–younger physicians are entirely justified in wanting to organize their lives differently.

However, this generational changing of the guard in medicine is wreaking havoc on hospital-physician relationships and may herald a crisis of access, particularly for primary care physicians and rural specialists, as baby boomers begin to enroll in Medicare starting in 2011.

Here are some of the likely outcomes of this generational transition:

1. Surge in physician employment. We can expect a sharp rise in the number of physicians employed by hospitals. Unlike multi-specialty physicians groups, many of which are thinly capitalized, hospitals have enjoyed five years of record profits and have the financial resources to absorb the economic losses associated with starting up and sustaining medical practices. They also have the capital resources and IT infrastructure to facilitate the digital conversion of a medical practice. In rural areas, the hospital will likely become, by default, the employer of last resort for a majority of the community’s physicians.

The current generation of hospital executives is wary and uncomfortable about assuming a larger role in organizing medical practices in their communities. This is due to the large economic losses, political disputes, and poor relationships engendered by their last foray into physician employment in the 1990s. Many hospital CEOs acknowledge that they failed to add value to the practices they acquired during that period. The result of these concerns will be far fewer practice buyouts than we saw in the 1990s, as well as less generous compensation packages focused better on clinical productivity.

Hospital executives are unlikely to pursue physician employment to increase profits or obtain health plan contracts (two strategies that had limited success in the 1990s). Extending the hospital’s imperial dominion into the physician sphere is not what this new wave of “integration” will be about. Rather, hospital involvement in physician practice operations will be, in most places, an exercise in damage control and loss avoidance. Transparency, wide consultation in the broader physician community, and guidance from statesmen in that community are all essential to navigating the potential landmines in this delicate process.

2. Fewer hospital-dependent physician practices. We can expect a more definitive separation of hospital-dependent and hospital-independent practitioners in adult services, with hospital-based services increasingly provided by hospitalists and intensivists. Many younger physicians who have ambulatory practices are turning away from the hospital and searching for new ways of interacting with colleagues, including online (as evidenced by the explosive growth of Sermo, the physicians-only online community).

I believe this tilt away from hospital-centered practice accounts for the declining rate of growth in hospital admissions over the past four years and the surprisingly rapid acceptance of hospitalists and intensivists in many communities. Practicing physicians in many areas have asked, even pleaded with, hospitals to staff up to manage their hospitalized patients. The shift to intensivists is happening a lot slower than the shift to hospitalists, but is driven by the same factors. While the hospital’s economic gains from this shift have proven elusive, markedly improved quality of care and reduced malpractice risk provide ample justification.

An important political consequence of this movement is that the hospital’s medical staff will represent a shrinking percentage of the total physician community, and the hospital’s real power, its power to convene the community’s physicians, will diminish. Creating online clinical communities through clinical IT, digitizing billing and collections, and collaborating to improve clinical quality under pay-for-performance plans present new opportunities for the hospital to add value for physicians who do not directly admit patients.

3. Conflict over call coverage. We can expect intensified conflict with private physicians over the hospital’s 24-hour mission and service obligation, specifically providing physician coverage after hours and on weekends. Younger physicians have shown decreased willingness to trade their personal time to cover hospital call in exchange for hospital admitting privileges as their elders did. Those admitting privileges are either less essential or completely unnecessary in an increasingly ambulatory practice environment. The present solution is for hospitals to pay stipends to independent practitioners for call coverage or to contract with single specialty groups large enough to rotate call internally.

As fewer physicians depend on the hospital for practice income, however, this arrangement will probably give way, in larger hospitals at least, to hospital employment of general surgeons, cardiologists, and others to cover the evening and weekend service demands created by emergency surgery and cardiac intervention. This transition is also politically perilous and fraught with the potential for conflict. However, hospital spending on stipends has soared, and continued rapid growth in these expenses appears unsustainable. Shifting to employment or economically accountable contract relationships will eventually replace most stipend arrangements.

4. Widening physician shortages. Unless there are major changes in how primary care physicians are paid, particularly by Medicare, we can expect a growing shortage of primary care physicians. Some rapidly growing sunbelt communities are already experiencing this problem. Surveys suggest that close to 30% of Medicare beneficiaries experience difficulty in finding new physicians, and this number will increase as baby boomer physicians retire in the next decade. Reforming and substantially increasing physician payment for primary care services, through the “medical home” or other models, is essential to avoiding a catastrophic shortage of physicians over the next two decades.

Regardless of what Washington policymakers do about reforming payment, primary care practitioners must also develop a new operational model, which hospitals can help “midwife.” Information technology must play a major role in this transition, with larger amounts of non-clinical or minimally-clinical interactions with patients either automated, through voice response technology, handled online through e-mail exchanges (e.g. prescription renewals, office visit follow-up), or supported by nursing personnel (who will also be in scarce supply). Finally, movement to end-to-end electronic adjudication and payment of medical claims will be vital to reducing practice overhead, a process which Medicare could markedly accelerate if the program’s managers made the right policy choices.

There is a wide gap between policymaker perceptions of physician need and those that are increasingly apparent in many communities. Hospitals are going to play a major role in filling the widening gap in physician coverage in their communities. They will also have to advocate more aggressively in Washington and with private health plans for physician payment reform. With a larger stake in the physician enterprise, that advocacy will make greater economic as well as political sense. The changing of the guard in medicine will widen the hospital’s role in the larger medical community, even as it is exposed to new economic and political challenges.

Jeff Goldsmith is President of Health Futures, Inc. and Associate Professor of Public Health Sciences at the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Long Baby Boom which will be published in May, 2008 by Johns Hopkins University Press.

As I Was Saying…

As can be read in my response to Jane’s touting the wonderful results of the non-study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine recently (and well noted by the much maligned on THCB, but usually correct Greg Scandlen), the media will attempt to skew reporting in favor of nationalized, government-run, bureaucrat-controlled, special interest-driven, health care.

To wit, the April 09,2008, release from Rasmussen : headline: 29% Favor National Health Insurance Overseen by Federal Government.

Guess how many opposed? 39%

Should the headline have been 39% Opposed to National Health Insurance?

Let’s look at the ‘topline’ data : The most interesting: 46% believe quality would DECREASE under a national health insurance system. Should that have been the headline instead? A quick note on literature, for those who have read my comment to Jane here A difference here is that Rasmussen does not purport to be scientific literature— it is clearly a poll… and though they interview 1000 adults, they could be wrong (though the 15% uninsured reflects national average- just one of many possible factors, so it does not make this poll ‘correct’).” Have we clearly ‘crossed the tipping point’ against a nationalized, government-run, bureaucrat-controlled, special interest- driven, health care system, Jane?

John McCain: Never a Day Without Government Health Insurance

Oie_399px_john_mccain_mackinac_islaPresumptive Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) emphasizes freedom, personal choice
and responsibility when promoting his plan to reform Americas health care system. Hes not calling for an incremental approach but "nothing short of a complete reform of the culture of our health system and the way we pay for it will suffice."

This post isn’t a play-by-play of McCain’s health care proposal.

Visit his Web site to read those talking points. Or read Bob Laszewski’s detailed analysis on THCB.

This is an examination of his biography to point out that the man who wants to reduce state-regulated health insurance and hard-won consumer protections has never spent a day of his life outside the cozy blankets of publicy-sponsored government health coverage.

Continue reading…

When You Go to an ER and There’s No One There to Take Care of You

Recently, I’ve been reading less-well known health care blogs—and finding some provocative stories.

Below, Edwin Leap–who is a physician and a blogger–tells a story about trying to find a specialist for a very sick child in the middle of the night.

Let me preface Dr. Leap’s story by explaining that, in the past, specialists who had “privileges” at a hospital (to treat patients there and to use the hospital’s very expensive equipment and operating rooms) were routinely “on call” to treat emergency patients. But these days, more and more entrepreneurial doctors are refusing to fulfill what was once seen as a traditional duty—unless they are paid.

In Money-Driven Medicine, I quote the chief operating officer of a rural community hospital who recalls a conversation with a young doctor who walked into his office and informed him that he would no longer be willing to be on call for the ER. When the doctor had signed on with the hospital, he, like all of the other physicians, had agreed to be available to treat ER patients one week a month. Typically that might mean coming into the ER two or three times during that week. But now, he explained, he wanted to spend more time at home with his children. He was not willing to continue answering the calls unless the hospital would pay him $80,000 a year.Continue reading…

Health 2.0 Unconference NL

The first European Health 2.0 Unconference is happening this Saturday in Amsterdam, and we have a location folks! We’ll be brainstorming, cloudtagging, liveblogging and all that jazz. What is our (Dutch) definition of Health 2.0? Come, define, share at the first Health 2.0 Unconference in Europe. The Health 2.0 Unconference NL has 4 amazing sponsors and a great crowd of healthcare, media, social networking, web, communications/marketing, and creative types. Thanks to The Decision Group, KNMP (Royal Dutch Pharmaceutical Foundation), Twynstra Gudde, and Bubble Foundry for getting this off the ground in just 3 weeks.

Continue reading…

Health 1.0h. . .Geez, This Is a Mess

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A family member just had surgery, but don’t worry, this isn’t about that.

I want to share just one observation from the experience:  Between the decision to have surgery and the moment scalpel touched flesh, the patient’s medical history was taken four times. None of these documents contains identical information.

Medical History 1. At the specialist’s office, forms were filled out in the waiting room, then completed and annotated during the in-office consult. The primary care physician’s record was not provided or asked for. We didn’t have the records from previous episodes of the medical issue in question–this all came up suddenly, and. . .we couldn’t find them.

But the hospital said they’d faxed the latest ER report, didn’t they? Can’t find it here.

Medical History 2. The day before surgery, a hospital prep nurse
called and created a new medical history by phone. My wife was there,
so she was able to correct and change some details. One of these
details was. . .the correct name of the earlier diagnosis, at least as
far as my wife could remember. I had it wrong the first time. My bad.

Continue reading…

Most Doctors Want A National Health Plan

Six in ten U.S. physicians support a national health plan to achieve universal coverage.

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A 2002 poll among American doctors was updated in 2007 to determine how physicians’ feelings about national health insurance (NHI) may have changed in the 5 year period.

In 2002, 49% favored a national plan. In 2007, 59% supported such a plan.

The chart on the left details findings by physician specialty. Not surprisingly, more generalist doctors favor a national health plan compared to specialists, although there is still support for national insurance by a plurality of specialists and the support has grown over five years.

Psychiatrists, long supporting mental health parity in American health financing, are at the vanguard of NHI support. Pediatricians, emergency doctors, and internists make up the over-50% crowd in support of NHI.

The emergency physicians’ support for NHI has dramatically grown since 2002, probably due to the fact that these clinicians are at the forefront of caring for the uninsured. They see firsthand that uninsurance and underinsurance often drives consumers to the ER. A recent study at Harvard published in Health Affairs found that overcrowding in emergency rooms has led to those with the most urgent conditions being at-risk.

Jane’s Hot Points: Physician support of national health insurance is nothing new. For over twenty years, Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) has focused its mission on achieving a single-payer system in the U.S. Today, PNHP has more than 15,000 members throughout the U.S.

That more physicians are joining the ranks of people in search of universal coverage moves the concept way past the tipping point in the U.S.

Why it’s impossible to close a hospital

Hospitals are major employers in their local markets; they are often the largest provider of jobs in a community. In its latest TrendWatch report, Beyond Healthcare: The Economic Contribution of Hospitals, the American Hospital Association details the economic impact of hospitals in each of the fifty states.
The bottom-line: hospital employment generates economic ripple effects way beyond the direct jobs provided in health care.
Hospitals
employ more than 5 million people nationwide – making them the
second-largest employer in the private sector – and account for more
than 4% of employment most everywhere. The Department of Labor
calculates that private-sector jobs indirectly generated by hospitals
is one in 10. That’s huge.

As
the chart to the left shows, hospital jobs pay more. That means those
workers generally spend more in their local economy, thus providing
spillover effects to other local employers like dry cleaners, food
establishments, auto repair shops, and other services used by workers
going to-and-from their daily jobs.

These ripple effects happen in at least three ways:
1. Purchasing goods and services from other businesses in the community
2. Providing income for employees, who then spend it in the community; and,
3. Paying wages and salaries, which are subject to federal, state and local taxes.

Jane’s Hot Points:
Always remember that one worker’s income is another one’s cost. For
some communities, the hospital is the local monopsony providing the
lion’s share of meaningful employment.
The
chart on the right from the AHA study illustrates that in many states,
hospitals provide at least 1 in 10 jobs: this is true for Maine, North
Dakota, Pennsylvania, and nearly 1 in 10 for Massachusetts, Michigan,
Missouri, Ohio and West Virginia, among others.

The microeconomy of the hospital is thus a major contributor to the States’ and nation’s macroeconomy.

When
there’s talking of closing hospitals, there’s no doubt why it’s so
tough to do so. Financing hospitals, appropriately, has implications
well beyond "the bed" and the individual patient.

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