ObamaCare: The
Threat to Physician Autonomy
By
Richard Amerling, MD
The debate raging over ObamaCare has been carried
on mostly by politicians, pundits, policy wonks and economists, with
little input from those most intimately involved with delivery of
health care---medical practitioners. Doctors have too often been
marginalized as self-interested. If that were true, there would be
far fewer practicing physicians. Of course we are concerned with
income, as are all taxpayers and businesses faced with rising costs
and taxes. Unlike other businesses, however, most doctors are
unable to pass higher costs to consumers due to price controls on
reimbursement. When costs outpace income, bankruptcy ensues.
This renders discussions of autonomy moot.
Autonomy, for physician and patient, is central
to the medical profession and dates back to Hippocrates: “I will
prescribe regimen for the good of
my patients according to
my ability and
my judgment. I will keep
them from harm and injustice.”
To be fair, physician autonomy, and the
doctor-patient relationship, have been under assault for decades.
This was an inevitable result of the acceptance of third party
payment by physicians, and was greatly accelerated by Medicare and
Medicaid beginning in 1965, and the Health Maintenance Organization
in the 1970s.
Medicare and Medicaid sought to control costs by
limiting reimbursement to physicians, payment to hospitals based on
diagnosis, and by limiting payment to services it deemed “medically
necessary.” Practice was and is distorted by these interventions.
For example, faced with declining payment for services, doctors
increase the volume of services. This means less time per patient,
declining quality, and greater reliance on laboratory services,
imaging procedures, consultants and hospitalizations. Total costs
actually rise when physician fees are cut!
Health Maintenance Organizations promised to
improve quality and control costs by assigning each patient to a
Primary Care Provider, or PCP. The PCP, who could be a nurse
practitioner or physician, serves as a gatekeeper, blocking access
to higher level care. They receive direct financial incentives to
spend the least amount per patient. This is the opposite of
physician autonomy, with the PCP in effect working for the HMO.
Whatever its final form, ObamaCare would
perpetuate these failed models. In addition, it will include
enhanced measures to control medical care. These will be
implemented under the guise of quality assurance and cost
containment. Slipped into the so called stimulus bill passed last
February is a new federal health care panel that will decide which
procedures and drugs are “medically necessary” and “cost
effective.” Based on the writings of Ezekiel Emmanuel, brother of
Rahm and close Obama health advisor, we can assume rationing of care
to the elderly (over 65!) and very young (under 2). Also included
is a mandate for adoption of electronic health records (EHR). The
clear goal here is to have access to every medical interaction; the
only rationale for gathering such detailed information is to
exercise control over medical decision-making.
The mechanisms are already in place. For the
past couple of decades medical specialty societies, aided and
abetted by the government, the American Medical Association, and Big
Pharma, have been crafting clinical practice guidelines. These
mostly opinion based recommendations will be transformed into
mandates, first as “clinical performance measures,” then as “payment
for performance.” Treatment algorithms will be built into the EHR
to guide decision making at the point of service. Such a “one size
fits all” approach will be an unmitigated disaster for patients.
The Senate bill states that qualified health
plans may only work with doctors who “implement such mechanisms to
improve health-care quality as the secretary (HHS) may by regulation
require.” In other words, doctors who refuse to turn over patient
information and treat according to guidelines will be barred from
participating.
The way to preserve a semblance of physician
autonomy is to send this bill to the shredder. Failing this, the
medical profession must come together and refuse to sell out their
patients and their profession. We must assert
our right to treat
patients as individuals, to the best of
our ability.
Read other articles and learn more about
Richard Amerling.
[Contact the author for permission to republish or reuse this article.]
|