How ObamaCare Micromanages Medicine
When the Obama administration announced the release of new regulations designed to encourage medical providers to work together through accountable care organizations (ACOs), Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius declared that the new rules would "improve the quality of care patients receive and help lower costs." Dr. Mark McClellan, a Brookings Institute scholar and major backer of the rules promised that ACOs would "enable care providers to get paid more when they do what they really want to do for patients--provide better care at a lower cost." When ObamaCare's backers talk up the law's "delivery system reforms," the ACO rules are the sort of thing they're talking about.
The folks at The Cleveland Clinic, a highly integrated provider organization that has been touted as a model for the sort of team-driven health care that ACOs are supposed to encourage, aren't buying the promises made by the administration and its backers. Last month, I noted that the Clinic was disappointed with the regulations. Since then, its officials have expanded their criticism in a new letter written to Medicare director and superstar ACO-wonk Donald Berwick.
According to the letter, posted by Modern Healthcare, the Clinic staff is "disappointed generally with its content."
Rather than providing a broad framework that focuses on results as the key criteria of success, the Proposed Rule is replete with (1) prescriptive requirements that have little to do with outcomes and (2) many detailed governance and reporting requirements that create significant administrative burdens.
These aren't guidelines made to encourage better care. They're rules and requirements designed to micromanage the practice of medicine at the federal level.
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Feature, not bug, etc.
Working as designed.
Did anybody think a 2300 page bill at the federal level was going to result in less administrative overhead? If so, kindly show me these people. I have some investment opportunities to discuss with them.
My favorite: "Section 4102 [...] The Secretary shall develop oral healthcare components that shall include tooth-level surveillance for inclusion in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey"
I knew it!
I know a few of them in real life. One in particular who's coming to mind went from vociferously antiwar during the Bush presidency to cheering Obama's Libyan hijinx.
Slightly OT but related to the post was this letter to the editor in the WSJ this morning taking issue with Cass Sunsteins claim "that federal agencies are working to eliminate excessively burdensome regulations".
When the Commissioner of the Consumer Product Safety Commission says that they are adding more regulations without regards to efficacy or any cost-benefit analysis than it's safe to say that the era of deregulation is at best a myth with this administration.
That's pretty much the M.O. of this administration across the board. Say one thing, repeatedly and loudly, and do the opposite. Then hope a)nobody notices, and/or b)people are so far up the ass of Team Blue they ignore it.
I do sometimes wonder what it must be like to live in, say, Biden's world where jobs "saved and/or created" is a meaningful statistic, Obama's no-brainer decision to get Bin Laden is the "boldest move in modern history" or that we need to "spend our way out of Bankruptcy."
And yet the press ignores him like the crazy Uncle at Thanksgiving dinners. It really bugs the shit out of me, especially when we had to listen to everyone whine about what a disaster Palin would've been as a VP.
Mayo Clinic calls provisions of Obamacare so complex, they are unworkable
President Barack Obama's main idea for getting quality health care at less cost was in jeopardy Wednesday after key medical providers called his administration's initial blueprint so complex it's unworkable.
Just over a month ago, the administration released long-awaited draft regulations for "accountable care organizations," networks of doctors and hospitals that would collaborate to keep Medicare patients healthier and share in the savings with taxpayers. Obama's health care overhaul law envisioned quickly setting up hundreds of such networks around the county to lead a bottom-up reform of America's bloated health care system.
But in an unusual rebuke, an umbrella group representing premier organizations such as the Mayo Clinic wrote the administration Wednesday saying that more than 90 percent of its members would not participate, because the rules as written are so onerous it would be nearly impossible for them to succeed.
http://americasmedicalsociety.com/tag/mayo-clinic/
The only things Obama has "saved and/or created" are his and Bush's wars.
That's pretty much the M.O. of this administration politicians across the board.
ftfy
Sunstein? Is he still around?
I thought he was at home making dinner for his wife...The Conqueror of Libya".
As Gomer Pyle says, "Surprise, surprise, surprise!" Duh.
This is a common flaw of all top-down, technocrat-driven approaches to health care systems: the belief that you can impose the creation of a Cleveland Clinic or a Kaiser Permanente by administrative decree. Highly integrated systems like these can do great things for patient care, but they come about because visionary physicians succeed in drawing together enough like-minded docs to make them a reality. In the case of Kaiser (which I'm a little more familiar with), it's much less tightly managed and integrated in its current, national form than it was in its early days, so it may not even be the case that such systems are self-sustaining. Which, again, only reinforces the idea that you can't impose this type of organization by decree.
You're talking about people who honestly believe they could repeal the Law of Gravity thought legislation and regulation.
The most ridiculous aspect is the attempt to create a Cleveland Clinic or Mayo Clinic--over the objections and despite the criticism of the Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic!
The Obama Administration cites these entities as evidence that their plan will work well--even while those entities continue to denounce their plan because it won't work.
It's like the Marshall McLuhan scene from Annie Hall...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBtXfBdEXEs
The Obama Administration goes on pontificating about the Cleveland Clinic (among others) when Suderman pulls out the Cleveland Clinic. The Cleveland Clinic looks at the Obama Administration and says, "You know nothing of my work."
I love that scene: "You know nothing of my work."
I saw that film when I was really young.
Probably stoked my freakish love for art house films.
It's his second best film. Crimes and Misdemeanors is his masterpiece.
That was a good movie, too, but I liked his earlier, funnier movies.
Who doesn't realize how fucking idiotic is to look to a lawyer for medical advice? Then Time depicts as much on their front cover, as if it makes any sense at all.
Not that you can expect something to meaningful from Time...
Lawyers make a great many medical decisions right now. That's a big part of the problem with healthcare right now, and one of the reasons Obamacare only makes sense on the Bizarro-World. . .if we're talking about improving and reducing the cost of medical services and health insurance, that is. We aren't, of course, which is the whole point.
As P.J. O'Rourke said about the last health care cluster under the Clintons, "I know the first thing I do when I'm trying to make something cost less is put a Yale lawyer in charge of it."
Don't worry, Joe Klein and the rest of the Obama hagiographers at Time will soon be busy penning yet another article about how the poor faultless President is just misrepresented by malevolent forces, and if people really knew his message, they'd all hop on board.
Sickening.
When's The Derider? going to come and defend this? Son, I am disappoint - get yer ass in here and defend this, Derider!
He's escaped to the socialist paradise of The People's Republic of Vermont.
Have patience. Your PWNAGE is coming.
Isn't that what HMOs were originally created to do? No doubt in 20 years or so ACOs will be hated by everybody and blamed on the "free market".
By the way, that Time cover is legit, isn't it? Not a photoshop job?
They wouldn't have meant for the cover to be that terrifying, would they?
Because the man isn't qualified to take my blood pressure--much less regulate my healthcare. If Time meant to portray Obama as a quack dressing up as a doctor and trying to practice medicine, they got it exactly right.
Combine it with the photo of Romney pulling on the rubber glove, and it makes me never want to go to the doctor again.
Romney would send flowers the next day.
He and Obama should do a duet: "You Don't Bring Me Flowers."
His Highness has provided you a gift of free health care for all. All glory to Obama
Because the man isn't qualified to take my blood pressure...
Don't ask where he wants to put his finger!
When Cleveland Clinic and Mayo, the two organizations in the entire world that are in the best position to do an ACO, say "No, thanks", then your shiny new rules are fucked.
And as I recall, the Mayo Clinic gave ObamaCare a thumbs down--even before it was voted in too.
It's a sick sad world when the President's idea of leadership is that once our representatives are already on the record voting for something, they'll fill the world with bullshit before they'll ever admit they made a mistake...
What the Democrats are doing now with ObamaCare is very similar to what the Republicans did with Iraq.
"In general, the proposals under discussion are not patient focused or results oriented. Lawmakers have failed to use a fundamental lever ? a change in Medicare payment policy ? to help drive necessary improvements in American health care. Unless legislators create payment systems that pay for good patient results at reasonable costs, the promise of transformation in American health care will wither. The real losers will be the citizens of the United States."
---Mayo Clinic Health Policy Blog
http://healthpolicyblog.mayocl.....ayo-clinic's-reaction-to-house-tri-committee-bill/
the Proposed Rule is replete with (1) prescriptive requirements that have little to do with outcomes and (2) many detailed governance and reporting requirements that create significant administrative burdens
What I tell the "true believers": Read the actual legislation and weep.
I am disappointed in all of you. I ask for one thing and you can't even do that for me. It's almost as sickening as Suderman's lack of alt-text.
Fred: I'm so sick. I need a doctor.
MedClerk: I will be your clerk today. Here is an aspirin, and a thermometer for you to take your temperature. Don't lose it. There are no doctors here.
Fred: I really need a doctor.
MedClerk: Don't worry. I will record your symptoms and look up your treatment in the book. We find that this resolves over 40% of client needs at little public expense.
Fred: I was looking for a doctor.
MedClerk: Stop complaining. This is all free.
The EMTALA Paradox
12/05/10 - Feb 03 - Emergency Medicine News
[edited excerpt] The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) is diminishing the access it was intended to promote.
Congress enacted EMTALA in 1986 and expanded the law five times, often without clear guidance. It has been a massive regulatory burden for already overwhelmed hospitals and physicians.
Since enactment, US emergency visits surged from 85 to 110 million yearly. But, more than 550 hospitals, 1,100 emergency departments (EDs), many trauma centers, maternity wards, and tertiary referral centers have closed. 90% of hospitals have saturated their capacity for treating patients.
EMTALA requires EDs to provide care to everyone, but does not pay for that care. Many specialists avoid on-call duty because they are not paid. They drop their hospital privileges or operate exclusively in their offices or ambulatory surgery centers.
The government's solution is all stick and no carrot. There is no incentive to participate in what is a nationalized health system. EDs are increasingly unable to provide specialty medical care to all of their patients.
AMG: This terrible medical law has been in place since 1986 without rational correction. This is the model for ObamaCare. Mandate care for everyone. When the doctors won't work without pay, blame them for limited services. Motto: "We have a vision of care for everyone. We are good, but they are not, so don't blame us".
Via: EMTALA Sucks but Obamacare Will be Great
12/04/10 - M.D.O.D by 911Doc
Kaiser Permanente's "Best Practices" Death Panel Scam
POLITICIANS, BUREAUCRATS, AND DR. STRANGELOVE PHYSICIANS ARE "BENDING THE COST CURVE," BUT BREAKING THE PATIENTS AND DESTROYING THE DOCTOR- PATIENT RELATIONSHIP. Special interests have hijacked Medicare by rationing healthcare of the taxpayers who fund it.
Twenty years ago, Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, ObamaCare's ethics engineer, published that he had invented a scheme that induced 70% of patients to reject treatment and life support in a 15 minute end of life counseling session.
Kaiser Permanente's Managing Director of Investments supervises the HMO's $40 billion non-profit slush fund, all income from which is non-taxable. CEO George Halvorson's annual compensation is $6.7 million. All Permanente Medical Groups are for-profit.
Kaiser Permanente rents its patients to researchers to secretly test drugs and medical devices, in which for-profit, Kaiser Ventures, invests.
Original investigations are posted on YouTube and HMO Hardball.
http://www.hmohardball.com/Death Panel Birth & Attachments 1st in Series 2-14-2011.pdf http://www.hmohardball.com/Paul Bernstein- Medical Director.pdf
Robert Finney PhD
thanks
thanks