Been there, done that. Isn't the definition of insanity doing the same thing and expecting a different result? Here's a massive takedown by PNHP's Kip Sullivan over at FDL on the Waxman "cost savings"* now being crammed into HR3200 (more from Obama here**):
Some of the “reforms” (such as hiring more nurses to help chronically ill patients learn to manage their diseases better, a reform all gussied up with the pointless metaphor “medical home”) will improve the health of some patients, but the cost of the intervention (in this case the hiring of more nurses and other activities that are supposed to go on in “homes”) have already been shown in most pilot projects to match or exceed the savings due to improved health of patients.
Other “reforms” Scarecrow cites are just new forms of managed care. “Payment models,” for example, no doubt refers to some form of “capitation,” the payment method that HMOs popularized in the 1970s and 1980s. Or perhaps it refers to the latest rage in establishment health policy — “pay for performance” — which means bureaucrats prepare crude report cards on doctors and hospitals (much as Bush prepared crude report cards on schools) and reward “good” providers and punish “bad” providers. ACOs refers, I presume, to “accountable care organizations,” a new euphemism for HMOs. The “measurement tool” that will be used to inform doctors about how many tests they order compared with the average for their location is just a reincarnation of “profiling,” something the HMOs pioneered.
These Managed Care 2.0 “reforms” will probably work the way traditional managed care worked — they will drive up the administrative costs of the system, reduce access to medical care for some patients (especially services to more vulnerable patients and services for which guidelines are hard to write, such as home care services, stroke rehab services, and treatment of mental health problems), damage quality of care more than they enhance it, and have no net effect on costs or even raise costs.
The House bill and the Senate HELP committee bill are already riddled with with numerous expressions of Managed Care 2.0 theology. I’m surprised Waxman felt he had to burden the House bill with even more experiments in unproven managed care tactics.
Why? The entire "public option" (or "plan") is a gigantic medical experiment performed on the American people without their informed consent. It's completely unethical, and for Versailles
, that's saying a lot.
America is going through a hideous deja vu experience. We’re seeing the old HMO experiment recycled with all the same rhetoric and false diagnoses of the problem we endured between 1970 and 1973 when the modern health care reform debate began, and when the Nixon White House and Congress cooked up the doomed experiment with HMOs. The unholy alliance that persuaded Nixon and the Democrats back then to promote HMOs (the insurance industry, big business, and some policy entrepreneurs like Paul Ellwood and Alain Enthoven) looks very much like the unholy alliance promoting Managed Care 2.0 today.
If we don’t stop it, we will look back on the days of Managed Care 1.0 as a picnic. During the heyday of Managed Care 1.0 — about 1970 to 1995 — it was the insurance industry that wielded the basic tools of managed care (financial incentives to doctors to deny care, utilization review of doctors by HMO bureucrats when financial incentives didn’t “work,” and limited choice of provider). The unholy alliance promoting Managed Care 2.0 today wants the government, especially Medicare, to play a much more active role in creating financial incentives to deny care and in meddling in the doctor-patient relationship.
There are so many reasons to dislike the House and Senate HELP bills. It’s hard to say which ranks as my most important reason for disliking these bills. I guess the fact that both bills funnel hundreds of billions of dollars to the insurance industry and almost no dollars to the pathetic little “public options” is my number one reason. But right behind that is my horror at the brave new world of managed care that is being cooked up for us while we sleep.
On the other hand, maybe my number one reason for disliking these bills should that when the Managed-Care-2.0 tactics fail and infuriate the public, Americans won’t just point the finger at insurance companies. They will point them at “government,” and in particular the Democrats who promoted this stuff.
Not only Democrats. "Progressives." I'm so glad I'm not a "progressive." How do they sleep nights, after promoting this swill?
NOTE * No mention of the administrative savings from single payer. Bien sur.
NOTE ** I love the rhetoric. President Hoover appeals to Congress not the "lose heart." As if they had hearts to lose.
- lambert's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- 1+[encrypted]+#b94+
Printer-friendly version


Front page


Comments
I still have this idea that my HMO is supposed to facilitate
coordination of care among my various doctors. Why else would it be required that my GP do all the paperwork of sending referrals to any other doctors I need to see? I mean, once they've established a relationship, it seems fairly easy to send summaries of treatment, tests, etc., back to the referring doctor.
Only it never happens--I have to get or make copies and take them to my other doctors. My parasite does nothing to ensure one doc knows what another doc is doing. Or I have to ask the specialists to write something to my GP or other coordinating doctor.
I was such a naif! That coordination crap was just part of the PR to sell the control and denial of care set up!
BTW, Prez Hoover did seem a bit PO'd about the CBO report....
Kip's take down was fab
And thank you Lambert for picking up on it!
And, Kip is no "newbie" to health care issues, unlike some vipers I might mention. ;)
"As Good As It Gets" featured a rant against HMO's by one of the
main characters, a waitress played by Helen Hunt, and that got tremendous audience reaction in almost all showings. I remember the film for that take down of HMO's.
Today, of course, the waitress would not have any employer provided health insurance....
Anyone have the YouTube?
I looked online but couldn't find it.
"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi
i [heart] kip sullivan
so much so that i blatantly steal from him.