Lowering costs and improving quality of care |
I suggested that having fewer primary care doctors
compared to specialists was a serious problem for U.S. health care. This may
seem counterintuitive. Primary care physicians have a broad range of skills,
but most specialists spend more years in training and know their particular
area of expertise inside and out. You may wonder what would be wrong with going
to see a specialist every time you had a health problem - for example, an
orthopedic doctor for back pain or a cardiologist for chest pain? There are two
very good reasons: cost and quality of care.
Simply put, there are powerful monetary incentives for
specialists to do more to patients, and for primary care to do less. President
Obama recently took some flak for suggesting that U.S. doctors' medical
decisions are driven by economic incentives rather than what is best for the
patient. In cases when the correct course of action is absolutely clear, I
would agree with the many physicians who were outraged by Obama's comment.
However, most of the time medical decisions aren't black and white - and it's in
that wide "gray zone" where money comes into play. The more tests and
procedures a specialist performs, the more money he or she earns. At a primary
care office visit, on the other hand, payment maxes out quickly - so that there
is essentially no difference between treating, say, 5 versus 10 medical
problems, and writing more prescriptions or making more referrals doesn't have
any effect on the practice's bottom line.
As a result, places with more procedural specialists have
significantly higher health care costs (with the same or worse health outcomes)
than places with fewer specialists, as Atul Gawande reported recently in the
New Yorker. In fact, U.S. counties with more primary care physicians per capita
have lower death rates, which some speculate has to do with specialists
ordering additional procedures that are unnecessary (because they are not
indicated for the patient's problem, or performed more often than guidelines
recommend) and carry their own health risks. For example, + Alex Krist and
colleagues found that gastroenterologists in Washington, DC and Virginia
recommended repeat colonoscopy (a screening test for colon and rectal cancer)
at shorter intervals than necessary more than 60 percent of the time. They
estimated that if this pattern of excessive procedures was similar throughout
the country, it would cost an extra $3.4 billion and lead to more than 14,000
serious complications, including 142 deaths.
The bottom line? More primary care relative to specialists
is not only good for the country's health, it's good for your health. So the
next time you need to see a doctor, visit a family physician or general
internist first. And tell your representative or Senator to make improving
primary care access an essential part of health reform. As medical blogger +KevinMD pointed out earlier this month in an address at the National Press
Club, it does no good to give everyone health insurance if there aren't enough
primary care doctors in the U.S. to care for them.
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