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Required reading at the White House

In Print: Sunday, June 14, 2009


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As President Barack Obama pushes health care reform and the Senate considers competing bills, the president made a New Yorker magazine story required reading in the White House last week. The piece analyzes why the small border town of McAllen, Texas, is just about the nation's most expensive place for health care, based on spending per Medicare patient — and what lessons we should learn nationally about controlling costs and improving care. Entitled "The Cost Conundrum," it was written by Atul Gawande, a surgeon and author. (Read the full piece at tinyurl.com/nzbapb.) Here is an excerpt.

We are witnessing a battle for the soul of American medicine. Somewhere in the United States at this moment, a patient with chest pain, or a tumor, or a cough is seeing a doctor. And the damning question we have to ask is whether the doctor is set up to meet the needs of the patient, first and foremost, or to maximize revenue.

There is no insurance system that will make the two aims match perfectly. But having a system that does so much to misalign them has proved disastrous. …

Providing health care is like building a house. The task requires experts, expensive equipment and materials, and a huge amount of coordination. Imagine that, instead of paying a contractor to pull a team together and keep them on track, you paid an electrician for every outlet he recommends, a plumber for every faucet, and a carpenter for every cabinet. Would you be surprised if you got a house with a thousand outlets, faucets and cabinets, at three times the cost you expected, and the whole thing fell apart a couple of years later? Getting the country's best electrician on the job (he trained at Harvard, somebody tells you) isn't going to solve this problem. Nor will changing the person who writes him the check.

This last point is vital. Activists and policymakers spend an inordinate amount of time arguing about whether the solution to high medical costs is to have government or private insurance companies write the checks. … These arguments miss the main issue. When it comes to making care better and cheaper, changing who pays the doctor will make no more difference than changing who pays the electrician. The lesson of the high-quality, low-cost communities is that someone has to be accountable for the totality of care. Otherwise, you get a system that has no brakes.


Much of the data for the New Yorker piece referenced on Perspective's front page comes from the Dartmouth Altas of Health Care, which measured Medicare spending per patient in 2006 and patient care and outcomes. (Read it in full at tinyurl.com/ll93cx.) The Dartmouth study begins with this simple statement: The U.S. health care system is broken. • Here is the abstract of the Dartmouth researchers' work: Huge inefficiencies in the U.S. health care system are hamstringing the nation's ability to expand access to care. Many experts have blamed the growth in spending on advances in medical technology. But the differences in growth rates (of Medicare spending) across regions show that advancing technology is only part of the explanation. Patients in high-cost regions have access to the same technology as those in low-cost regions, and those in low-cost regions are not deprived of needed care. On the contrary, care is often better in low-cost areas. The differences in growth are largely due to discretionary decisions by physicians that are influenced by the local availability of hospital beds, imaging centers and other resources — and a payment system that rewards growth and higher utilization.

In conclusion, the study points to three key issues that health care reform must address:

1 ) Lack of accountability for the overall quality and costs of care — and for local capacity.

2) Inadequate information on

the risks and benefits of many common treatments and the related assumption (on the part of most patients and many physicians) that more medical care means better medical care.

3) A flawed payment

system that rewards more

care, regardless of the value of

that care.

The Dartmouth study measured Medicare reimbursements per patient in 2006. This map shows

average cost per Medicare patient in each state. And here are some other breakdowns (for each city

listed, the number refers to the hospital referral region that includes the city):

nation, $8,304

Florida, $9,379

Miami, $16,351 (near doubling since '92)

St. Petersburg, $9,103

Tampa, $8,991

McAllen, Texas, $16,946 (subject of the

New Yorker piece, a town where Medicare

reimbursement has tripled since 1992)


[Last modified: Jun 13, 2009 04:30 AM]

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