Medical care and airlines – should there be a difference?

A recent article by Pauline Chen features a group of primary care physicians at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, who have created a concierge practice that funnels income into the traditional general medical practice that sees less-advantaged patients.

Surveys (performed by the medical center itself) found that patients rated the quality of interactions with their doctors similarly regardless of their affiliation. The only significant differences in responses had to do with the services offered — care coordination, physician access and interactions with office staff. According to the medical director, analogous to airline services providing both first class and coach services, the parallel practice gets patients to the same destination – some eating peanuts, others eating caviar.

I believe this is an intelligent hybrid that may have successfully reacted to our broken medical system, but the ends does not justify the means. Differing services based on the ability to pay is discrimination – it is demoralizing for coach flyers, but morally wrong for economically-disadvantaged patients. This is because medical care is not the same type of services as airlines – people will not die if they cannot fly to places, but they will die without medical care.

In a civilized society, its members should have equal access to life-saving services regardless of the ability to pay. Just like the fire department, medical care should be provided as a societal safety net so that, instead of worrying whether our house will burn down while we’re off at work or whether a catastrophic illness will take away everything we’ve worked hard to earn, we can focus on higher pursuits like being a productive member of society.

Differences in health outcomes between two groups remain unclear. If they are unequal, then there is discrimination based on the ability to pay. If they are equal, then first-class patients pay more money without justifiable returns other than convenience and a more pleasant office staff, which I argue should not be different in any circumstances – I’d like to believe that medical professionals treat fellow human beings in sickness with utmost compassion at all times, regardless of payment scheme.

Either way, segregating patient care leaves a bad taste in my mouth. As a doctor, we ask patients to trust us with personal life stories that they may never share with their parents or their significant others. Such level of trust can hardly be established in the settings of discrimination.

“angienadia” is an internal medicine physician who blogs at Primary Dx.

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  • Jenny Reiswig

    On the flip side, air travel is becoming more like medicine what with all the invasive mass screening.

  • http://www.drmintz.com Matthew Mintz

    Excellent post. Using this analogy, the current health care system we have is a plane with all first class seats, but not everyone can get on board, so many do not arrive at their destination. In addition, any attempts from the left to create a system where there are no first class seats (Southwest?), are met from the right with concerns of “rationing” and “socialism.” I think the only kind of health care system that will be supported by most will result in tiered health care. We currently ration health care; we just ration irrationally. The key is to ensure that all our citizens receive the basics regardless of ability to pay.

  • ninguem

    You’re getting X-ray at the airport.

    The TSA agents are all wearing rubber gloves.

    Soon they’ll be doing cavity searches. Might as well check the prostate while they’re in the neighborhood.

  • http://www.theschwartzcenterblog.com Jamie Rauscher

    The controversy around concierge medicine often centers on the belief that patients in a concierge practice receive more care than other patients. This blog post, by Dr. David Fairchild of Tufts University Medical Center counters that argument. Dr. Fairchild notes that patients in a concierge practice often use fewer medical services because physicians have more time to interact with their patients.
    http://www.theschwartzcenterblog.com/2010/10/lessons-of-concierge-medicine.html
    While face to face time between patients and physicians may be greater in a concierge practice, I wonder if physicians couldn’t increase all patient interaction time by making better use of information technology such as email and virtual office visits.

  • Yusuf Harper MD

    Medicine is a different human relationship to all others. Trying to compare the physician pt. relationship to planes or trains or supermarkets distorts reality in a distructive manner. The insanity of all third party payment systems has brought us to this point. Public health (that which has proven societal benefit) should be treated as and monetarily supported as a public utility. All else should be between physicians and patients directly. Physicians should bill patients and patients should arrange payment. The only other system that ethically distributes medical benefits is a universal mandated but this would eventually destroy the Dr. Pt relationship.

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