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MY TWO CENTS ON THE COST OF U.S. MEDICAL
CARE
This essay asks more questions
than it answers, and prods its readers to ask themselves questions. If it
seems to be naïve, it probably represents widespread naïvete. If I've
missed some points, such as the cutting edge in some medical research areas that
can lead to higher quality and lower costs, please let me know. But most
of all, I hope this article will motivate people to make US medical care costs a
living consumer issue rather than something left to the those working in the
field to straighten out by
themselves.
One note that I hear
sounded over and over again, from people in every economic situation, is “How
can I get someone else to pay for my medical care?”
One thought I never hear expressed, on the other hand, is “How much
should my medical care cost?” or, even more daring, “How much is my medical care
(or what would be considered by most to be basic medical care) worth?”
One question most people never dare to ask their medical care providers is
“What services can I expect to get at this visit and how much will each cost?”
Why do we always hear about the cost of medical care but never its
price?
Talking Dollars and Cents
What is proper medical
care worth? Some people would
argue that it’s priceless.
But how much is it right to charge people?
Due to the wonders of economy of scale, some old, health-preserving drugs
are quite affordable. On the other
hand, is it right for gatekeepers to insist on several hundred dollars worth of
visits and routine blood tests every year or six months to allow patients access
to these drugs when they treat quite successfully stable, incurable chronic conditions?
What is a reasonable price for a drug marketed for preventive purposes to
otherwise healthy people with certain "risk factors" if they feel sicker taking it? We all must be familiar by now with the issues raised by the expense of
first-generation anti-cancer chemotherapy and coronary bypass operations, which don’t lengthen life
much but may provide some relief and/or buy some crucial time.
One telling quality measure is comparative: many other countries with
greater longevity and lower infant mortality rates have cheaper medical care per
capita (1).
More medical insurance
coverage doesn’t seem to be the answer.
The original idea of insurance was to have everyone pay in a little so
that a few very unlucky people running into unpredictable problems would be spared financial ruin by being allowed
to take out a lot.
Unfortunately, medical care in
America
cost about $7600 per capita in 2007 (2), and patterns of individual financial
need (largely based on age and sex) are very predictable.
That makes it tough for insurance plans to cut our expenses down to
something that would be affordable for everyone.
Of course, some of that expense is in medical and malpractice insurance premiums, and they need
to be more expensive than actual treatment (or payouts in malpractice suits) for insurance companies to stay in
business.
Having the government cover persistently high expenses in a single-payer system would have to
mean much higher taxes for many people, especially those used to having almost
complete employer-based medical insurance coverage.
What Happened to the Free Market in Medical
Care?
We are used to thinking
about medical problems and medical care as personal issues, but they’re also
basic business issues. One
thing that has historically made
America
a great country is its free market system and its informed consumers.
We do comparative shopping.
We trade opinions.
We’ve put together non-profit consumer groups that represent us.
We’ve even gotten our government to go to bat for us in our fight for
quality products and services at reasonable prices – to a large extent, anyway.
We can often get these organizations to work harder by calling problems
in this area to their attention, especially if we document them properly.
Sometimes we put our social awareness and personal ideals first and
boycott businesses for reasons unrelated to the way they meet our personal
needs. But sometimes we develop
blind spots and wake up one day to discover that we have lost control as
consumers; the medical care industry is perhaps the most extreme example.
Under normal conditions,
we rely on market forces to set prices: there is competition, and those who
offer the best tradeoff between quality and price make the most money, although
there is always the danger of an eventual monopoly.
But the professions have had traditional protections against this.
In fact, services in general present more challenges to the consumer than
goods do, not the least because of lower quality expectations.
This is especially important because
physicians have been given great legal authority over us:
the government does not allow us to obtain many kinds of medication or
medical devices without their cooperation.
And now the number of competing medical care provider organizations is
dropping drastically: even in a large city, a handful of medical centers which
tightly control physician behavior might dominate business, bringing up prices and
lowering responsiveness to consumer needs.
This is not to say that
our current system favors medical care providers in every way.
It's probably safe to say that there is a general consensus that relying entirely on litigation
to assure patients’ rights isn’t working.
What about a system that measures the improvement in
quality of life that patients
experience as the result of their treatment?
It seems common sense to have a system where prospective patients can get
some idea of what different doctors and hospitals are like and how much their services cost,
and make their choices on that basis. It’s
sometimes hard to get a handle on the basic standards that medical care provider
professions set for their members and how well they meet them, but wouldn’t we like to have that information
available? Isn’t that what a free
market really about?
How Much Medical Care Is Each American Entitled To?
We actually have a sort of merit system: employees of large and prosperous
companies have almost unlimited access to all but the most experimental forms of
medical care, while low-earning self-employed people and those working for very
small companies get little or no medical insurance coverage. Those on
Medicare and Medicaid plans have fewer doctors from which to choose: it is
illegal for a doctor to charge these patients "normal" rates, but legal to
reject any patient not requiring emergency care. In addition, many doctors refuse to take Medicare or Medicaid patients. There are some notable
exceptions to this rule, however: prisoners are in theory entitled to care
dictated by medical necessity.
What about Medical Equipment Costs?
Physicians, hospitals, and the pharmaceutical
industry has gotten a lot of scrutiny in recent years, but not much is heard
about the stubbornly high cost of medical devices, imaging equipment and
procedures. Economy of scale, that
great reducer of technology costs, has unusually little influence here.
I used to joke not too long ago that had the computer industry progressed the way these medical instruments did, 1) computers would still be
huge, 2) we would have to wait in line to use them, 3) we would be billed for
the rationed time allowed, 4) we would submit paperwork to a large staff that
would translate it into code over hours or days and 5) each program run would
cost at least several hundred dollars.
Actually, it was almost that bad at the beginning of my programming career a few
decades ago. But over that
length of time, we have continued to use the same basic products and processes
to do the day-to-day work of medicine.
We still get the same blood and urine tests (although prohibitively
expensive DNA analyses have entered the picture), the same type of clunky
X-rays, the same EKGs, the same primitive-looking ultrasounds the screens of
which look like '60s-era malfunctioning TV sets; even MRIs have been around
without change for at least 25 years.
Yes, we added some methods like CT scans but none of these is cheap.
In sum, we are stuck with a bunch of first-generation inventions (and the
necessarily expensive, highly trained
technicians and radiologists needed to operate them and interpret their output)
that
pump up the GDP and the stock market nicely each year but don’t improve our
standard of living
.
One thing that keeps the
total costs of patient use of such hospital equipment low is that physicians'
reluctance to stick patients with an unaffordable bill.
But the fewer times a piece of equipment is used, the higher the price
per usage has to be in order to pay for the initial investment in the equipment.
So everyone loses!
What happens when a second-generation medical device is introduced?
The reaction from some influential segments of society can be surprisingly hostile. Three writers associated with
the Center for Public Integrity
attacked the digital mammogram as a form of "political pressure" to force
Medicare to pay more for mammograms (4). How much is this extra cost?
They estimate it to be $350,000,000 over 2003-2008, or less than 20 cents per
year per American citizen. Suppose this new technology, which uses the
same image-processing principles that photographers use to improve defective
photos with software, reduces the overall cost of breast cancer treatment with
an increase in quality?
Yet these authors claim that two studies (one unnamed, the other a 2008 paper in
Annals of Internal Medicine) prove that digital mammography
is "no better than film among women 65 or older with fatty breasts"
(although presumably other types of women did benefit, including some qualifying
for Medicare) and that the
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force "found there is insufficient evidence to
assess the benefits or harms of digital mammography, regardless of a woman's
age." Does the lack of "sufficient evidence" mean the same as the presence
of sufficient condemning evidence? If these two studies are the only ones
done on this new technology, a technology that has perhaps been around less time
than it takes to determine for certain the outcome of a case of breast cancer,
is this enough information? But the bottom line, the authors conclude, is
this: digital mammography compared with its film counterpart "does not save any
more lives per dollar spent." This of course begs these questions:
does it save more lives, and if it does, is this extra tiny diagnostic expense
such a hardship?
The tide is turning a
little. We have more home tests,
such as those for blood sugar levels and pregnancy.
But there do seem to be some breakthroughs on the horizon, such as breath
tests, perhaps in lieu of blood and urine tests.
But this development has been coming remarkably slowly: as far back as
1971, Linus Pauling measured more than 200 chemicals in exhaled human breath,
and the Breathalyzer was invented in 1953 (3).
In some other areas, steady product change has not been accompanied by
affordable cost: although hearing
aids have become smaller and more inconspicuous over time, they now cost from
$1000 to $4000, probably largely dependent on effectiveness (5).
Building Sprees: A Big New Medical Expense
Lately, medical centers having been building many new specialized
hospitals, e.g., for women or children, cancer treatment or expensive imaging,
and the cost is sharply increasing: According to one analyst, "Helped by low
interest rates, hospitals have splurged on new projects and spent heavily on the
latest technology," yet inflation has been driving up construction costs
(measured by cost per square foot) by 20% annually (6). Of course, as
previously noted, technology costs are not coming down. An increasing
number of medical centers pass on the cost to patients by charging them an extra fee,
but the amount is not revealed to the patient until after the visit.
Patients sometimes ask, "Why am I being charged an emergency room fee for an
outpatient visit?"
Now it turns out that physicians working at medical centers instead in
group practices are reimbursed more by Medicare (7).
Why Our (For-Profit) Medical Insurance System Does More Harm than Good
For-profit medical Insurance doesn't really make sense in terms of market
forces. Let's consider, in contrast, the grocery store business.
There are lots of different kinds of food products and brand variation among
them; every store seems to handle produce differently. You can choose
between a full-service or self-service checkout. You can use a big cart, a
little one, or a basket, and you don't have to commit yourself to one of these
choices each time. You can read nutrition information and ingredients on
canned, bottled or bagged products. Grocery stores work hard to figure out
popularity of foods not just across customers, but for each individual, and
motivate these customers to help them do this with reward discounts.
You can walk in, look around, and leave if you can't find anything you want.
But you'll keep coming to one because you need food continually. This
isn't even everything they do! And many of these stores are
profitable in spite of their apparent generosity. No question about:
market forces make the grocery store business in general a thriving one.
Can you picture a for-profit medical insurance company that offers that
type of service? It's really hard to see anything analogous to the
grocery store business. And why is this? There's an actual
exchange at a grocery store. It gives you food; you give it money.
On the other hand, you hope to get money from the medical insurance company
(unless you're that rare bird who never sees the doctor) while it aims to get
money from you. That's what you'd call a "conflict of interest" if
that expression hadn't acquired a specifically legal connotation. Also,
doesn't it seem odd that customers are competing for a company's service, rather
than the companies competing for customers?
Anyway, that's what
causes the following problems, none of which should be
unfamiliar: 1) People with good medical insurance don't care about cost
because prices are invisible to them, and may wind up letting themselves be overtreated,
while those with minimal or no insurance get cheap drugs and short, cursory
visits. 2) Medical insurance profits by making premiums big and
payments small. 3) Medical insurance administrative overhead is very
expensive, since it involves much analysis and changing of policies, all to
maximize the money they get and minimize the money they pay. 4) Filing of insurance claims by physician's office
employees is expensive. 5) Those who need medical care the most are the
least likely to get it, since one needs to be in good physical health to
qualify. In sum, medical insurance is a merit system as currently
practiced in the US, with healthy people and employees of large organizations
being considered most meritorious. But incentives alone don't produce
health or employment with the "right" employer, and when untreated infectious
disease and disability spread among those considered least "deserving" of
medical care, the rest of us can suffer as a result.
What About the Very Sick and the Poor?
There will always be some people who won't be able to pay their bills because of
the intrinsic nature of capitalism: some people will lose in the competition.
Others will have very serious, unpredictable medical problems which are
generally fixable in the long-term by doctors with special skills, but the labor
costs are inevitably extremely high: consider victims of some major accidents or
violent attacks, babies born with some kinds of malformed hearts, blood
poisoning, mysterious hemorrhages to name a few. These people need help
from others, but the payback is substantial for both the individual and society.
This is the classic idea of the safety net. It seems both rational and
compassionate to protect these people from financial ruin; perhaps the
government is the most economical source of help in these special cases.
A grayer area is that represented by conventional, expensive but typically
ineffective medical treatment or that that works only briefly. When is
treatment for advanced cancer, for instance, little better than gambling?
How many coronary bypass operations should an individual be allotted?
How many poor children go without immunizations or eyeglasses or routine
treatment for infections to pay for one of these operations? How
many are poor because a parent is too sick to work but can't afford the
necessary diagnostic work or treatment (or is deemed to be unable to pay and
unable to mount a legal battle against a doctor who cuts corners?) We assume it
doesn't work that way, but maybe it does.
Those other causes of inequality of medical treatment you probably
haven't thought of
Even if you are a compliant patient and responsible in paying your medical
bills, you still might get worse care from your physician than someone else of
similar character, thanks to the lavish information available to your physician
via the new information systems and information you yourself unwittingly
provide. Malpractice lawsuits, a subset of personal injury suits,
are always on physician's minds, but now that they can assess your net worth,
they can come up with a pretty good estimate of how much they might suffer from
making mistakes in your diagnoses and treatments. If you're older and
especially if you're retired or disabled, you're going to be able to collect
less money than a young person in a lucrative field (8). If your spouse
shows little or no interest in your medical problems, that may indicate little
potential for a civil trial full of passionate, persuasive testimony to your
physician. But I should warn physicians not to be overconfident in these
cases: the spouse might find the potentially lucrative wrongful death and its
accompanying award in court the preferred outcome.
Where Do We Go from Here?
We need to start thinking like consumers when it comes to medical care.
We need to define quality comprehensively and in objective detail. We need
to think of how much certain services are worth to us and figure out how much
they should cost in terms of skill and effort involved. We need to become
better informed about professional standards. But we also have to demand
innovation in products and processes. We can only go so far by
demanding that those who serve us work harder for less money. Real
national wealth is largely a function of technological innovation and economy of
scale, and medical care is ripe for a revolution in that department.
So where are our major scientific and engineering brains directing their
efforts these days? Chemists are developing new drugs and new tests
(mainly blood tests) to perform old purposes. Physicists are refining
complicated, expensive imaging equipment. Biologists, mainly
pharmacologists, are testing candidate drugs to determine their safety and
appropriate doses. There is a lot of research aimed at developing
expensive new therapies, e.g., growing organs and finding applications for stem
cells in desperately ill people: again, we are looking at big price tags.
Genetic testing to determine the best course of therapy is not cheap, either.
Maybe this is why we're not seeing economy-of-scale leadership from private
industry. These days, the economical innovative ideas seem to be coming from
places like the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health (3).
I hope that a lot of science students out there are thinking along these lines
and hoping to work on breakthrough inventions that will increase our national
medical wealth.
References
1.
Bureau of Labor Education, U. of Maine (2001)
The US Healthcare System: The best in the world or just the most expensive?
2.
National Coalition on Healthcare, "Health Insurance Costs"
3. Ehrenberg, R."Every breath you take tells of all
your aches," Science News 174, 5(2008).
4. Eaton, J., E. Lucas, & D. Donald (2011) "The
mammogram hustle." Retrieved March 6, 2011 from
http://www.newsweek.com/2011/01/30/the-mammogram-hustle.html
5. Holder, D., “Hearing aids shrink as
they get more powerful,” p. 5D, The News & Observer, July 10, 2008
6. Moore, R. (2011), Hospitals struggle with soaring building costs.
Retrieved March 6, 2011 from
http://www.bizjournals.com/birmingham/stories/2006/08/28/focus3.html?page=1&b=1156737600^1336841
7. Gottlieb, S. (2013) Doctors will have to take a pay cut under
Medicare. Retrieved 3 Jul 2013 from
http://www.forbes.com/sites/scottgottlieb/2013/06/28/doctors-will-have-to-take-a-pay-cut-under-obamacare/
8. Perlmutter and Schuelke (2011) "What is the typical personal injury
settlement when someone gets hurt?"
http://www.civtrial.com/auto/what-is-the-typical-personal-injury-settlement-when-someone-gets-hurt/
9. Smith, A. (2011) "Rajaratnam's kidney transplant could cost taxpayers
$300,000" Retrieved October 21, 2011 from
http://money.cnn.com/2011/10/21/news/companies/rajaratnam_kidney_taxpayer/index.htm?iid=Lead
10.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2011/06/genomics-and-health-care-inequality
11.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/the-coming-explosion-in-health-inequality/2011/05/19/AGpbcApH_blog.html
Copyright © 2008-2019 by Dorothy E. Pugh. All rights reserved.
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