Dr. Paul Hsieh answers the question posed in the title in his recent commentary in Forbes. See here.
He outlines four important ominous consequences of basing health care on spending other people's money.
Everyone should read this excellent article in its entirety but let me briefly comment on the first in the list.
"Doctors will be increasingly expected to save money' for the system ."
This
is already happening.Various medical professional organizations are
re-writing traditional medical ethics, pushing the fiduciary duty of the
physician to the patients in the memory hole and substituting the bogus
concept of the physician as a steward of society's medical resources which at least one physician's organization (the ABIM Foundation) has strangely linked to social justice. I
have ranted about this before
but the caravan rolls on and increasingly the rhetoric in various
medical forums emphasizes saving money for the system. It seems that the medical professional elite would have us believe that the road to social justice is for physicians to follow guidelines.
The medicine of
the collective is replacing the medicine of the individual. This is
being promoted in part by what I have called the progressive medical
elite who, to a frightening degree, seem to occupy the leadership
position in many influential medical organization . Their unspoken
mantra is that medical care is too complex and too important to be left
to the individual patient and his physician. Wise leaders with ideas
need to be in charge. Of course, it is promoted by the third party
payers, private and public who may well consider the medical
professional elite in this ethical paradigm shift as useful idiots.
The third party payers and the professional medical elite have attempted to turn traditional medical ethics around so that the fiduciary duty to the patient is somehow replaced by an ethical duty to save money and the whole flim-flam activity is sprinkled with non sequiturs about social justice. Social justice is typically taken to mean redistribution and if cost to the system is reduced it is difficult to see wherein the redistribution lies if everyone gets less.
In regard to private property the owners have the incentive to be a "good steward" of the resources.You have to ask what is the incentive of physicians to act as stewards of a mythical collectively owned resource?
The
notion of "the system" [in regard to medical care] while a rhetorically
useful notion for a certain agenda, is basically fallacious aggregating
elements that do not belong together. In short, there is no system for
health care just as there is no car delivery system or a home building
system. It makes no sense to speak of the situation in which someone
buys a new car as a cost to the car supply system or a person buying a
home as a cost to the home supply system.All of these are transactions
in which there are buyers and sellers and exchanges take place.Mr Jones
gets a CT of the abdomen.. This is not a cost to any system. It is a
cost to Jones and/or his insurance company while to the providers of
care it is a payment.. One person's cost is another person's income.To
call this a cost to a system is nonsense.Unless all the health care is
provided, operated and owned by a single entity, usually the
government., then the services provided could be considered a cost to
the system.
Who gains from acceptance of this bogus
notion of physicians as stewards of some mythical collectively owned
medical resources? The third party payers for whom the gain is obvious and the medical elite
progressives who stand to gain from their position of prestige as
experts and rule makers and the rest of us lose.
So, in summary there is no medical care system to which a cost is charged with every medical care transaction and secondly the physician as steward concept is completely contradictory to the traditional role
of the physician as the fiduciary agent of the patient.
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When ACA or Obamacare was finally passed,I was struck or dumbstruck,by comments of at least one U.S. Senator and spokespeople for the AMA a...
Monday, December 30, 2013
The intended and unintended consequences of Obamacare are too much for one blog
When ACA or Obamacare was finally passed,I was struck or dumbstruck,by comments of at least one U.S. Senator and spokespeople for the AMA and ACP that ACA would further the cause of social justice.
The now infamous comment of then Speaker of the House,Nancy Pelosi , was to the effect that we had to pass the bill to see what was in it. Well. it has been passed for quite a while now and we are still finding out what is in it and as the consequences are materializing many of them appear in no way to conform with the common meaning of social justice .Many examples of that will be discussed as the blog slogs along.
Another issue of concern for this new blog effort will be the topic of social justice in general and as it applies to Obamacare and to the practice of medicine. Readers of my other blog, retired doc's thoughts,might have noticed my alarm over and my criticism concerning the Physician's Charter which if it as widely accepted by physicians in practice as it has been nominally and formally by their professional organizations the relationship between physician and patient has been damaged if not destroyed. This not a new topic for me but although I focused Retired Doc's Thought on that issue many times, the new effort will have a more limited focus as RDT has had other targets and interests.
The now infamous comment of then Speaker of the House,Nancy Pelosi , was to the effect that we had to pass the bill to see what was in it. Well. it has been passed for quite a while now and we are still finding out what is in it and as the consequences are materializing many of them appear in no way to conform with the common meaning of social justice .Many examples of that will be discussed as the blog slogs along.
Another issue of concern for this new blog effort will be the topic of social justice in general and as it applies to Obamacare and to the practice of medicine. Readers of my other blog, retired doc's thoughts,might have noticed my alarm over and my criticism concerning the Physician's Charter which if it as widely accepted by physicians in practice as it has been nominally and formally by their professional organizations the relationship between physician and patient has been damaged if not destroyed. This not a new topic for me but although I focused Retired Doc's Thought on that issue many times, the new effort will have a more limited focus as RDT has had other targets and interests.
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