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Articles on Health Care Reform
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The Director has published three books and more than 80 articles on the state of health care reform and the trends that motivate certain important changes. This section allows you to review some of those articles. [See Director's Resume section of this website for his CV and List of Publications.]
Bookmark this web page, articles in this section will be changed to make it more interesting and informative for our visitors
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HOW WILL IT END
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TURNING BACK TO FIND THE FUTURE?
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TURNING BACK TO FIND THE FUTURE ?
A majority of the American people are outraged by the "immoral conduct" in the corporate world, the "excessive" profits in the Pharmaceutical Industry and the "rising costs" and salaries reported by "privately operated" Managed Health Care Plans--as they watch their retirement plans "vanish"; find it "impossible" to afford life-preserving medicines and are expected to settle for a "diminishing quality "and quantity of the health care "provided" when they are in need.
Truth is, they supported the growth of a "private enterprise" managed health care system. The promise of "better health care at a lower cost" failed to materialize. In short, the new system put into place failed to deliver, They know they must look for an alternative.
With polls showing a majority [70%?] of Americans favor a Single Payer Health Care System [such as exists in Canada?] the federal government could take control of health care delivery with the formation of a new bureaucracy or with the current system in place but financed and controlled by government regulation..
In the event that a National Health Service is their choice, State Governments could function in an essential but subsidiary role. Quality Control issues would then be returned to Physicians now that it is apparent that cost control can only be achieved by a reduction in the utilization of services, the quality of the Providers who deliver that service and of the materials made available to them. In other words through "Rationing of goods and services".
A national health service might choose to function by expanding the existing Medicare structure to cover all age groups while using the State Agencies in place or the facilities of the private health Insurance Industry as it currently exists. Delivery of care, at the community level, would be under the direction of regional and local committees composed of consumers and provider who would be guided by federal regulation and a limited budget.
Comments that suggest "the Government doesn’t want it" should be dismissed. Federal Bureau records expressing the belief that Government control is needed to solve the nation’s health care delivery problems have been heard since 1972. [ref: Forward Plan Of Health, FY 1978-82, US Department of HEW, page 1, publ. August 1976]<P>
Providers [Doctors, Hospital Workers and other health care professionals] who would have resisted a takeover, then, are more likely to welcome it, now, as they become increasingly concerned with their financial survival rather than the provision of quality patient care.
This new health care system would try to avoid the errors committed by existing national systems, but if history is to be our guide, it's not likely that we would fare any better. The reality is that blood is red no matter where it’s spilled and pain is the same no matter when you get it or how you say it. All sick people are the same and so too is the help they require.
After visiting several nations to study their health care delivery systems, those in existence are very much alike as are the problems they encounter/create. The outstanding similarity in all is promptly delivered, non-emergency care of good quality is available, only, outside of the system, in private offices or hospitals, for cash or supplemental private health insurance. Formerly,this service was readily avaiable in all but one nation I visited, Canada. However, in 2006. a Canadian Provincial Supreme Court Ruling mandates that Canadian Citizens be allowed to purchase private health insurance, in addition to taxes, if they wish.<>
Wherever private health insurance is available the result is the creation of the "two tier system of health care that was expected to become unnecessary. One for the poor who cannot afford anything else and another for those who will pay additional money [beyond taxes] for better care. Should we expect it to be any different here in America?
"Corporate Care", now dominating our health care scene is proving to be unacceptable because of its primary concern with profit on the provider side competing with the demand for prompt and total care on the consumer side. In America, delivering health care with profit in mind or withholding needed services for budgetary reasons is unpalatable when dealing with sickness and dying ---even more so today when so many American feel that immediate access to high quality health care is their right.
Health care costs would continue to increase during a transition to any new system as patient enrollment increases and more sophisticated methods of diagnosis and treatments are discovered. In addition, under a National Health Service more administrative levels become necessary, some nations have nine, and each requires a budget that can be expected to increase every year. As a result, less money becomes available for patient care, waiting lines begin to form. This, the most visible form of rationing, is accompanied by other less visible forms of rationing currently in use by the, only twenty years old, "Corporate Care" model. Examples are longer waiting periods for necessary care by requiring pre-authorization or possible denial of necessary medicines and surgery, shorter hospital stays and, in the not too distant future, the likely denial of services because of unhealthy life styles, obesity, smoking and substance abuse].
Points for discussion
Traditionally, a "fee for service" system flourishes in a democratic society that is economically sound. Today, as both individual and corporate economic security decline demand for less costly health care intensifies without any less intensity in the belief that access to total health care is a right that should be guaranteed to all regardless of ability to pay. It is precisely this concept, "equal care for all regardless of ability to pay" that is causing many hospitals to close their doors, for lack of funds. It's effecting physicians as well. Many have been forced to look for salaried positions rather than continue in, or open an office for, the private practice of medicine.
A return to the era of the private practice of medicine, as I knew it, is unlikely in the near future, if at all, in light of the massive changes in Hospital and Medical Clinic design; reimbursement schedules that discourage solo private practice and the greater understanding of the cause and treatments of many diseases. Today, diagnosric procedures are better, yet more expensive to provide and treatment of disease more promising, yet more expensive to obtain. With this knowledge in mind, no matter what health care delivery system we choose slogans that suggest "Something for nothing" or "It will be better and cheaper" should be ignored.
I believe that American citizens cannot swallow the idea of RATIONING or PROFIT when it comes to health care. To support my position I read in this morning’s paper that a major hospital chain has agreed to treat two children with a rare immune disease. The only known treatment is experimental, will cost 600,000 dollars and will not cure the disease. The treatment carries a 30+ % mortality rate. In the same issue, an editorial writer argues that Medicaid [welfare] patients should have access to name brand medicines despite the increased cost. News obtained on the Internet reported a 13 percent increase in premiums, for employer-provided health care insurance, which will force some employers to discontinue providing that insurance unless they can demand that their employees pay more, such as a higher co-pay, when they use the insurance .
Traditionally, extra money made by hospitals, was used to guarantee their ability to make available to all of their occupants, "regardless of ability to pay", the very best care, when needed. Doctors were allowed to charge a generous fee for their effort to deliver "up to date and high quality care" to all of their patients, regardless of race, creed or religion, at any time of day or night when it was needed. In recent years, however, the Doctors and the Hospitals are portrayed as outrageously profit oriented.
The public demanded that changes be made and they are taking place. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on your point of view, changes in such significant social services, as a nation's health care delivery system, are slow in their development. Our traditional system had been functioning, as such, for near one century. It cannot be changed overnight. Researchers who study such social phenomena tell us that three decades of trial and error are needed to place a new system. They describe an 80+ year cycles to find, use and then discard a total system. Interestingly, the USA and Great Britain are at a similar place but on different sides of a cycle [circle]. They, from my observation, are moving away from a National Health Service as we appear to be moving toward one.]
My Conclusions:
1. As the years pass, the public's demand for quality health care for all, regardless of one's ability to pay, diminishes as the rising cost coupled with an oppressive tax structure weakens their concern for the needs of the poor.
2. National health care systems employ a large number of citizens, estimated to be more than 5 million people in Great Britain. Though this may appear attractive, at first glance, it can later become the obstacle that makes the system impossible to change or remove when proven unsatisfactory [where else would you employ all those people?].
3. As the tax burden enlarges should the efficiency of the system decline, the private fee for service, practice of medicine returns [that's paying twice for the same thing]. For example, despite a U.S. Postal Service, UPS, Federal Express and other delivery services have become profitable..
4. Great societies reinvent the wheel when enough time passes for us to forget what a wheel looked like. For example: new "Corporate" health Planners are hiring Doctors and Hospitals to cover subscribers despite the fact that Blue Cross/Blue Shield and others were performing that function. Why didn't we fix what was in place, then, by demanding a reduction in premiums with a guarantee of coverage for everyone.
5. We are/were not spending more for health care than other major nations. They spend it differently and some had fewer Seniors, for many years, as a result of lives lost during WWII. Germany and Japan and Great Britain report that health care costs are rising rapidly.
6. I see an irony in the fact that many Americans act as if the Medical Profession invented the concept of greater personal satisfaction and financial reward for hard work and intellectual achievement. These rules of achievement have always been, and will never cease to be amongst the basic foundation stones of a free society operating in a free enterprise system. If such a nation chooses to abandon such principles it will be only a short period of time before they reappear.
Finally, the American public did enjoy the benefits of the greatest health care system that man has ever devised. Too many, however, have lost sight of that fact and are demanding that changes be made, and quickly. This is occurring despite the realization, by many health care professionals, that inordinate demands will soon be placed upon any new system we choose. Many of our younger citizens seem bent on their own destruction through poor nutritional habits, cigarettes, abuse of drugs and alcohol, and failure to protect themselves from deadly sexually transmitted diseases.
Ignoring these developments, our nation continues to be more concerned with reducing the cost of health care and getting rid of incompetent, greedy and dishonest Doctors. Pity, if it doesn't turn out that way. For, if we don't do it right, we will pay more, get less, and bad Doctors like bad people, won't go away either.
I believe "He who fails to learn from history is doomed to repeat it".
So I ask
Why do so many of us who hear those words act as if "they must be meant for someone else.?"
Vincent W. Cangello, M.D.,FACS,FACOG,FRSM
Director , Health Care Reform Educational Institute
Lincoln, California [www.healthcarereform.com]
Former Professor of Health and Medical Sciences
University of California, Berkeley
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Hypnosis For Pain in Cancer
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HYPNOSIS FOR THE PATIENT WITH CANCER
It has always been difficult for Physicians to handle the psychological problems that arise in patients with malignant disease, especially when cure is unlikely or impossible. We rely on the use of tranquilizers, sedatives and narcotics to solve their problems and too often they are inadequate. Also, some aspects of the Cancer patient’s care require a great deal of time and the results are frequently disappointing. For these reasons and because of the obvious hopelessness of many situations, psychiatric treatment is impractical, and not often used. Medical Hypnosis, however, offers an alternative approach to the problem and may well serve to be the most practical approach toward solving problems encountered in the total care of patients with Cancer.
That Hypnosis is useful should not be difficult to understand. It has been shown that this modality produces anesthesia, elevates pain thresholds, and improves mental attitudes. These effects specifically lend themselves to the total care of cancer patients.
Comparatively little is to be found in the literature concerning the use of hypnotic suggestion in the treatment of the patient with cancer by Physicians and other health care providers. Often, In articles that are available the number of cases is small and the conclusions of the author’s discouraging despite hours spent trying to achieve some benefit for a patient
The purpose of this report will be to present the author’s experiences in using Medical Hypnosis to deal with symptomatic, psychological and somatic aspects of the care of eighty-one patients with malignant disease. The results of this study are presented as objectively as possible. The time involved, length of time of beneficial effects, and some of the practical aspects of this technique will be discussed in order to make this study as useful as possible.
This report consists of a series of eighty-one patients with the pathological diagnosis as shown in the able below
Diagnosis No. of Patients
Carcinoma of the Cervix 32
Ovarian malignancy 9
Carcinoma of the Endometrium 7
Carcinoma of Breast 18
Carcinoma of Urinary Bladder 2
Carcinoma of Larynx 3
Carcinoma of Testicle 2
Carcinoma of Prostate 1
Carcinoma of Lung 1
Hodgkin ’s disease 1
Leukemia 1
Multiple Myeloma 2
Malignant Melanoma 1
Abdominal carcinomatosis 1
Total 81
The patients were initially interviewed for approximately thirty minutes to determine their mental ability, suggestibility and willingness to cooperate. The hypnotic induction, with appropriate post-hypnotic suggestions, was often completed within this length of time. Reinforcement or re-induction sessions were given as necessary during daily ward rounds or during special "hypnosis rounds". The author had as many as ten patients in this group hospitalized at one time.
Seventy-three patients or 90% of this group were induced into a hypnotic state. The verification of the results of this research will require an evaluation of several factors [not necessary for this brief presentation] measured during the study concerning the type of medical hypnotic approach, the attaining of a trance state, the depth of trance, anesthesia, pain relief and its duration, mood elevation, the time expended per patient, and the reinforcements sessions necessary for each patient will be found in the complete text.[ See below ]
Post-hypnotic suggestions fell into four main categories: those dealing with anesthesia, those for the relief of intractable [unrelenting] pain, those for the relief of pain not classified as intractable, and those for attitude or mood elevation.
37 patients were induced within 15 minutes, 27 in 30 minutes and 9 patients required one hour for the initial induction.
Relief of Pain
. All of the patients in this group had been requesting narcotic medications every four hours before entering this study The degree of pain relief was determined buy estimating the change in narcotic requests made by the patient before and after the use of post hypnotic suggestion. If the patient’s narcotic requests changed from every 4 hours [Q4H] to every 8 hours [Q8H] it was estimated as 50% success, from Q4H to Q12H as 66%, from Q4H to once daily as 85% and Q4H to no requests as 100% success in pain relief
Intractable Pain Group
There were seven patients in this group. All of these patients were admitted to the hospital for a surgical procedure [Cutting the Spinal Cord] to control unrelenting pain. The relief of the pain by hypnotic suggestion was attempted as part of each patient's pre-surgical work-up. The seven patients ranged in age from 28 to 76 years. Their diagnosis included Carcinomas of the Cervix (3), Ovary (1), Endometrium(1). Breast (1), and Multiple Myeloma (1).
In this group of seven--- 5 [71%] were induced into a trance state. Of these 5 patients, 4 [80%] were successful and no longer required surgery for relief of pain.
Pain not classified as intractable
This group consists of a total of 24 patients confirmed to be suffering from the pain of their disease.
This group varied in age from 17 to 60 years .The diagnoses in these patients were Carcinomas of the Cervix (9), Breast (6), and one each of Ovary, Uterus, Urinary Bladder, Testicle, Prostate, Larynx and Lung. There was also one case of Leukemia and one of Multiple Myeloma
% Relief of Pain --- % of Group
75% - 100% --- 29%
50% - 75% --- 25%
25% - 50% --- 4%
No change --- 2%
This table shows that more than 50% of these patients experienced some degree of pain relief. It also noted that the number of reinforcement sessions varied in this group from none to as many as 5 sessions, with an average of 2.3 reinforcements per patient. Time spent with these patients varied from 15 minutes to 3 hours, The majority of patients were treated within 60 minutes.
The next table shows the time of effectiveness for the 14 patients in this group during their hospital stay.
% of Pain Relief ---Time of Effectiveness
75% - 100%---2 to 12 weeks
50% - 75% --- 2 days to 6 weeks
25% - 50% --- 3 days
During the course of this study two interesting findings were noted. The first, none of these patients, whether considered success of failure, required a surgical procedures for pain relief during a nine month period that the author was able to follow the course of their disease. Secondly, all patients in the failure group continued to use the same dosage, of the narcotic drug, being administered when the hypnotic suggestions were first given. [They did not require higher doses of the narcotic as would normally be expected, with time]
It is worthy of note that observations by nurses and colleagues were considered more important than that of the author’s in these evaluations.
The next table lists the four categories of hypnotic suggestion previously mentioned and shows the distribution within the group of 73 patients according to the extent of their response. [The hypnotic suggestions concerned the mood of the patients, their activities, appetite and overall attitudes.]
Excellent ------ 30 (41%)
Good ------------20 (27.5%)
Fair --------------14(19%)
Poor ---------------9(12.5%)
68% of this total series appeared to have a good or excellent response to post-hypnotic suggestions.These suggestions proved to be invaluable as an aid to Nurses and members of the house staff caring for these patients.
DISCUSSIONS AND CONCLUSIONS
The anxieties of "not knowing" often cause the variety of reactions seen in the patient with malignant disease. Fortunately, the vast majority handle their problems well, possibly as a result of family support and/or religious conviction.
Hypnotic suggestion gave these patients a measure of control over the "frightening unknown", of how and what I would feel/suffer" if I must die from my disease". It also appeared to support the hope that a cure will be found before too long.
In any event, the student of Medical Hypnosis will witness in most of these patients an unqualified cooperation and the utmost in motivation combined with a satisfactory imaginative ability that allows their induction into a hypnotic trance to be relatively easy. Of course, one is also confronted with the patient who says, "Let’s face it, words just can’t help me".
At first, it was confusing to find that an individual who entered deep trance state might be unable to obtain relief of pain while another, who was at best in a light state, experienced complete pain relief.
When it is realized, however, that an individual may believe that this disease is a form of punishment from God; that this suffering may reward him or her with "eternal life" after death then one can realize that such patients cannot and will not accept pain-relieving suggestions.
When one understands that relief of pain could mean being sent home, for a young woman with the offensive odor urine and fecal leakage, one can understand why hypnosis might fail.
If relief of pain means that a young father has to face his family in a wheel chair, needs to have someone clean him after each bowel movement, or help him wash his scarred/deteriorating body then relief of pain may be undesirable and the hospital serves as a refuge.
If one learns that a completely bedridden patient cannot financially afford or arrange for someone to render the necessary care at home, failure is easier to understand.
All patients classified as failures were notified, if at anytime in the future they felt they could derive help through Hypnosis; it would be available. Interestingly, only two patients requested help at a later date.
Self hypnosis was taught without hesitation to terminal cases. The author could see no contraindication. It was also firmly suggested, to all patients, they would be able to help themselves, at any time, and would not always need the presence of the Therapist.
This study demonstrated that a place exists for the use of hypnotic suggestion in the care of patients with malignant disease. Its use for the relief of pain and mood elevation proved sufficiently successful, not unduly time consuming, and free of complications or morbidity. It is especially indicated for pain relief in the patient whose life expectancy is short or for whom chemical and surgical approaches are not suitable.
The time required is not impractical for the trained Physician and other properly licensed health care providers to administer/support the use of this treatment modality. The success of this effort requires a "team like" participation of all those involved in the care of these patients. Most initial inductions are completed in less than one hour and reinforcement sessions in five to fifteen minutes.
In the author's opinion, "The benefits of Medical Hypnosis for the patient suffering with a malignant disease is not in doubt. Rather, it is the patient's willingness to receive its benefits that raises the questions. Either way the choice is theirs and must be respected."
The full report of this research study is available:
Vincent W Cangello, MD,
"Hypnosis for the Patient with Cancer",
THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPNOSIS
April, 1962; Volume IV, Number 4, Pages 215-228
[The number of patients in this study is now more than twice the number of the initial manuscript]
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Humor softens the blows
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A hearty laugh is healthy
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> For Your Devotional Reading > > In the beginning... God covered the earth with broccoli and cauliflower and > spinach, green and yellow and red vegetables of all kinds, so Man and Woman > would live long and healthy lives. Then using God's bountiful gifts, Satan > created Ben and Jerry's and Krispy Kreme. And Satan said: "You want hot > fudge with that?" And Man said: "Yes!" > ...and Woman said: "I'll have one too ...with sprinkles." > And lo they gained 10 pounds. > > And God created the healthful yogurt that Woman might keep the figure that > Man found so fair And Satan brought forth white flour from the wheat, and > sugar from the cane, > and combined them. > And Woman went from size 2 to size 14. > > So God said: "Try my fresh green garden salad." > And Satan presented crumbled Bleu Cheese dressing and garlic toast on the > side. > And Man and Woman unfastened their belts following the repast. > > God then said: "I have sent you heart healthy vegetables and olive oil in > which to cook them." > And Satan brought forth deep fried coconut shrimp, butter dipped lobster > chunks and chicken-fried steak so big it needed its own platter. And Man's > cholesterol went through the roof. > > God then brought forth running shoes so that his Children might lose those > extra pounds. > And Satan came forth with a cable TV with remote control so Man would not > have to toil changing the channels. And man and woman laughed and cried > before the flickering light and started wearing stretch jogging suits. > > Then God brought forth the potato, naturally low in fat and brimming with > potassium and good nutrition. > Then Satan peeled off the healthful skin and sliced the starchy center into > chips and deep-fried them in animal fats and added copious quantities of > salt. > And Man put on more pounds. > > God then gave lean beef so that Man might consume fewer calories and still > satisfy his appetite. > And Satan created McDonald's and the 99-cent double cheeseburger. Then > Lucifer said: "You want fries with that?" and Man replied: "Yes! And super > size 'em!" > > And Satan said: "It is good." > > And Man went into cardiac arrest. > > God sighed and created quadruple bypass surgery. > > And Satan created HMOs. > > Amen > > >
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Who are the uninsured
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It's time to correct the error
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Media Reported Numbers Are Misleading
This article was originally published in 1989, with revisions in 2002, shortly after the Congressional Budget Office [CBO] reported that on any given day, in the USA, as many as 40 million people may be without health care insurance.
"They now total 48 million persons", according to a major Washington newspaper, and that's a third higher than the 37 million estimate in the 1989 report of the Urban League of Washington, D.C [the numbers kept changing].. A look at the Urban League's data, [UL is a non-profit policy research and educational organization], that was gathered for a study funded by Aetna Life Insurance Company and the U.S. Department of Labor revealed the following statistics which every American should know, if for no other reason than one's peace of mind. Better still, it provides us with meaningful information to be used in the event that we get a chance to debate this issue, [something we're seldom invited to do in these days of "don't confuse me with the truth"].
Here are some interesting figures compiled during the UI study.
1. 27 million of the uninsured [75%] are working or are dependents of workers.
2. 14 million, predominantly women, have employer-group health insurance through a relative, such as a husband or father, not from their own employer. Many are part time workers who live in above average homes and are more likely to be employed in the professional services sector and don't need/want a second health policy.
3. 20% of the uninsured are young adults 18 to 24 years of age and many are full time students covered by the family's policy till age 23.
4. Among uninsured adults, 18 to 64 years of age, 60% are employed in various services, retail trade, construction and the agriculture-forestry-fishing sectors of the economy. In this group, five million are self employed and, to my surprise, 29,000 are physicians. A closer look at a mix of 20,000 members of this group revealed that 50% were medically reinsured within 4 months and 85% within 2 years. In most cases the uninsureds are between jobs or awaiting eligibility in a new job. In addition, many at the upper end of this age group become eligible for Medicare, during their waiting period. {Shortly after this was written Congress passed a law commonly referred to as "COBRA" which allowed discharged employees, with employer supplied health insurance, to continue that coverage out of pocket, for a period of 18 months or until the individual was reemployed and covered, or had become eligible for Medicare}.
For those who are not aware, upon reaching the age a 65 a citizen receives two letters, one from their current health insurer which says "Goodbye", and the other from the Medicare office that says "Hello" A stark reminder of how old you have become. However, be consoled, for many Americans don't live to receive those letters. So be proud, it's a sign of good health
In addition, the Urban League study made it apparent that any form of health insurance would be of no benefit to a hard-core group of unemployed/uninsureds. They number approximately 6 million. They are Americans and illegal aliens who choose to live, for a variety of reasons, outside of the mainstream of American life. and for this group, American physicians and hospitals have been supplying the necessary health care, when needed, regardless of one's ability to pay. This has been the case for many more than the four decades I'd been in private practice. [Free care given in one year, in our nation, has been estimated to be 6.3 billion dollars from the doctors and 11.2 billion from our hospitals.]
Finally, There are people who use their nation's emergency care faciliaties which, in the USA, are bound by Law to treat any individual who enter their Hospital ER regardless of ability to pay. These people are to be found in every nation throughout the world. That idea didn't originate in the U.S. and won't be solved by the way a nation delivers its' health care, whether private or socialized.
As difficult as it might be for the average American to accept, there are some problems that doctors and hospital wont ever resolve....
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Capitation of Specialists
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World History Being Ignored
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Capitation invites socialization of medicine
Capitation of Physician's Fees And The Socialization of American Medicine
Some things can't work alone, a lock without a key; while other things need help, like soap needs water, and that's true of Capitation and government control of health care delivery. Even if Capitation of Doctor Fees and government control aren't combined at the outset, in time they will find each other, a result of the frustration and disappointment that both patients and Doctors will feel as they come to the realization that an authoritative force with power to penalize is necessary if the program is to survive. Even with that it hasn't.
What am I getting at?
The American physician's loss of control of their patient's care,or as aptly stated by my colleague, Doctor Colin Sinclair, "We've always had managed care . It's just a case of whose doing the managing".
It started with lower cost "Competitive Managed Care", when a distant third party, the "bill payer", had to pre-approve payment for the patient's care. This system is fraught with error. The corporate mind tends to see all patients and Doctors as being alike and believes that two plus two always equals four, while, we who deliver the care, soon learn that two plus two may equal three, four or even five when dealing with human beings and their health care needs.
"Capitation of Physician Fees".
This is well known formula for paying Doctors, for their services, in nations with government health care systems.. It amounts to Doctors accepting a monthly fee or [pay check] to care for an assigned number of patients, 24/7 as they say, for a contracted period of time, usually one year. For that prepaid fee the Doctor must give the patient as much care as they demand/request. I say demand because in nation's where Capitation is practiced the patients see the Doctor as a civil servant and the Docrior views the patient as a problem to be seen as little as possible. Work hard or easy, the pay check is the same. As Doctor Colin Sinclair would say "Any system that makes the Doctor want to stay away from the patients is a bad system".
Most patients and too many physicians unfamiliar with this method of Physician reimbursement are likely to accept this change, much as they did the earlier managed care concept, only to learn that it doesn't work and has been radically modified in the nations where it has been tried.
If Capitation of Physician's fees is widely practiced [by privately manged health care insurers] the Socialization of America's health is sure to follow. No different than soap needing water, or a glove looking for the hand. Count on it and history will support me on this. Vincent W Cangello MD
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People want fast medicine
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Most Doctor's Need More time
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I can't compete with "fast foods" and 60 minute Sitcoms
I CAN'T DO IT IN 60 MINUTES LIKE MARCUS WELBY, M.D. USED TO DO
I seem to be living in a nation that expects the average criminal, medical or family crisis to be resolved in 60 minutes. The length of a popular TV series.
My problem started with Doctors Kildare and Ben Casey and continued for several years, with Marcus Welby,M.D. and newer E.R. Sitcoms.
Those great physicians were able to diagnose an illness, cure it and resolve the family crisis in just one hour [with commercials thrown in], and they only had to deal with one crisis at a time.
They rarely lost their temper and had their hair neatly groomed, [day or night], while they performed those feats of medical magic. They seldom made mistakes and when they did it usually turned out to be someone else's fault. In other words, they were near perfect.
Today, there are many people in our nation, raised by Drs. Kildare, Casy and Welby, who don't realize that it isn't like that in the real world.
I NEED MORE TIME
I can't limit my attention to one patient at a time and problems are often ignored till they becomes too serious for a quick and easy solution. I often feel like a "juggler" who has to keep several things in the air at the same time.
If I'm called in the middle of the night my hair looks awful, I've got "morning-breath" and I may lose my temper when I think I should have been called hours or even days before. If I make a mistake, I have to take the heat myself and I'll probably be sued as well.
But alas, after years of looking skyward and appealing for help, the "weekly mini-series" has become popular. If the idea hangs around awhile I'll get some extra time. I might even get a chance to get out the old clubs and improve my game. By the way, is there a law that says doctors can only play golf on Wednesday afternoons? Many of my patients think there is.
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Medical Profession Uncertain
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Doctors Confused By Public Reaction
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Doctors disturbed by changes
What Am I Worth?
No One Seems To Know.
"This country needs a health plan like the one in Canada and England. I believe that our Doctors are fighting such a plan because the government would determine their fees, not to mention the hospital costs." A Letter to the Editor, my local newspaper.
Doctors make too much money, I've been told. Well don't they? I'm not sure and how could I know any way. Most people, even Doctors, don't discuss their incomes, and it isn't considered polite to ask. I feel that way, don't you?
Even so, magazines, newspapers and the other media tell people what I make. Where do they get those numbers? They're not correct, but my patients and even some of my colleagues think they are.
An anger is growing amongst us, I can feel it.
Well, how much should a Doctor make? What's it worth to go through all those years of school and then the training necessary to become a Doctor? I don't know and I don't know that anyone ever figured it out. Nevertheless, it's accepted by many that I make too much and it's high time that something be done about it.
My fees are being reduced and I see no end to it. That's what bothers me the most, if no one is sure what I'm worth, then who'd know where to stop, before we destroy the system that produced the greatest health care the world has ever known.
I've wondered. Is the public aware of how demanding a career in medicine can be? Do they realize that once we enter the profession, we accept the responsibility for life long learning and commitment to life long service? Do they know that during all of those years our personal needs must remain secondary to these commitments, to the demands of those who choose us to be their physician?
Can they know that in the beginning our wives, husbands and children are proud, patient and understanding. Later, these feelings can give way to anger and frustration, the result of repeated personal and social disappointments, the seemingly endless loneliness. The family's ego structure can be starving for nourishment while our lives are taken up with the needs of our patients.
Our families may disintegrate. Then, as we grow older, the ability and the willingness to be always correct and forever available becomes difficult to sustain. Guilt may follow. If so, mental depression, divorce, suicide, drugs or alcohol abuse can result.
When this happens, help for the healer in need may be limited, while criticism for those of us who falter, abounds.
So, I ask again:
What am I worth?
No one seems to know and I've
become afraid. Because,
Once they saw me as a God, and
now, I'm not sure. Perhaps...
I should have warned them.
Vincent W Cangello, MD
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England's National Health Care
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England's National Health Care Under Fire
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I went back in 1999 and England's Continues the Struggle to Improve Health Care Delivery System
Machiavelli Was Right Great nations dislike making changes in their long established social systems. Health care delivery is a good example.
Machiavelli could have been thinking about that many decades ago when he wrote: ...there is nothing more difficult to arrange, more doubtful of success, and more dangerous to carry through than initiating changes.
I had difficulty appreciating those thoughts till I'd made several trips to Great Britain, during the past 15 years, with the intent of studying their effort to deliver health care through their National Health Service [NHS].
During my effort, I've become convinced that their health care system, and ours as well, is in need of change. Many students on both sides of the Atlantic would agree, but how to change it, what to eliminate, what to keep, pose difficult questions. The process is too fast for some, too slow for others just as Machiavelli warned.
Look at what's going on, there. Margaret Thatcher, the former Conservative Prime Minister, faced with the fact that one million of her people were on waiting lists for NHS hospital care, called for greater participation by the private health insurance industry.
The Labour Party, in need of a challenging issue for the coming general election, together with the news media, who sensed an issue with great appeal, created enough adverse public reaction to force the Conservatives to suspend the reform effort.
Great Britain spends about 6% of its GNP for health care, the least of any European country.
In the US, we hear it said in the political corridors, in the corporate board rooms and on Television, as well as read it in our daily papers: we need a national health service to correct the deficiencies that exist in our health care system.
To support my concern I would point out that many of our patients are going into heavily discounted, managed health care systems that promise high quality comprehensive care for less money. Some of these programs have already failed and others are sure to follow.
Revisit June 1999. 1.Many Dentist refusing to see NHS patients. 2. In-hospital Doctors threatening a strike. 3. Waiting lines for hospital care no shorter. Estimated that 500 cardiac patients die each year while waiting- some are children.] 4. Women demanding more Mammograms and more Pap Smears. 5. People unhappy because co-pay now required for medicines and eye-glasses. 6. Private health insurance policies, private Doctors and private hospitals now more common [15%], but government wants more.
See my article on saving managed care medicine because it's better than Government care.
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Managed Care Must Be SAVED
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Managed Care Must Be Saved
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The Alternative Would Bring No Joy
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Leave My Health Care Alone
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Health Care Reform-Who's In Charge
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Don't Gamble With My Life
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