Mainstream media’s sinister undertone against doctors

“The plural of anecdote is not data.”

A recent lead editorial in the Sunday edition of the New York Times was entitled “A Formula for Cutting Health Costs” and contained the byline “Alaska natives have something to teach doctors and patients in the rest of the world.”

I read the editorial with interest, hoping that a new perspective, vision, idea, or insight would be mentioned that would provide a sustainable cost solution to our health care crisis in America.   After all, America desperately needs solutions to this conundrum.

We learn in the editorial how the Southcentral Foundation in Anchorage, Alaska treating rural patients ” has achieved astonishing results in improving health of its enrollees while cutting costs in treating them.”

Sadly, cost saving information was not provided.

Instead, we read that “such a transformation would require upfront financing for training, data processing and the like, but the investment should (emphasis mine) rapidly pay off in reduced costs.”

The article states that because of their efforts, “emergency room use has been reduced by 53%, specialty care visits by 65% and visits to primary care doctors by 36%.”  The editors claim “these efficiencies have clearly saved money” while saying in the same breath that spending of hospital services grew “by a tiny 7%” and its spending in primary care grew by 30% .  How do they explain this growth as cost savings in the editorial? They do so by claiming that 30% growth  was “still well below the 40% increase posted in the national index issued by the Medical Group Management Association.”

But revenues grew too – substantially.  According to Southcentral Foundation’s own press release, “total revenue has consistently increased from $120.2 million in 2003 to $201.3 million in 2010, exceeding the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) 90th percentile in 2010. Third-party payer revenue increased from $7.4 million to $17.9 million in the same time period, also exceeding the MGMA 90th percentile in 2010.”

In truth, cost of care was not reduced nor was the quantity of care. What we actually have learned is the health care bill in Alaska has continued to grow at a pace that outstrips inflation while the editors of the New York Times sit back in their chairs and want to teach doctors a lesson.

After all, is is clear that the editors feel doctors are the problem.  To the editors, doctors are the disdainers, loomers, and miscreants who must be given no place “to which they can retreat.”  Instead, if one is to believe the tone of the article, health care providers are optimally corralled, viewed in the open, and perhaps supervised by a lifeguard with a whistle. In the same breath the authors recommend establishing “trust and long-term relationships between patients and providers.”  This sounds nice until one realizes trust and long-term relationships between the patients and providers will be built (in their view) by “data mall” graphics that spur the “laggards” into compliance.

The editors continue with their scolding, pernicious nanny-state view by criticizing other providers and health care organizations who can’t “summon the energy to transform their operations” to the Utopian vision put forth by this piece.

Perhaps most concerning for physicians is the sinister undertone that is becoming increasingly prevalent in some circles of main stream media.  Presently doctors are facing huge cuts to their pay as part of the health care reform efforts underway.  If the public is going to accept this as best for their own interest, then the editors have firmly established that physicians and hard working care providers are going to have to be subtly and constantly denigrated.

It is a shame that our health care reform discussion has come to this.  Rather than enlisting physicians as part of the solution, we’re now the problem.

Remember that when you can’t get an appointment.

Wes Fisher is a cardiologist who blogs at Dr. Wes.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/gregory.buford Gregory A. Buford

    Dr. Fisher~
    Couldn’t agree with you more. The attitude in this country has changed and continues to change for the worse with respect to how doctors are seen. If the media and government are correct, we alone are responsible for rising health care costs and any associated issues with its delivery.

    It would be nice, for a change, for physicians to be recognized for the hard work, dedication, and sacrifice we have made to do what we do. Granted, we get paid well for this. But what better way to earn a living than to do so spending your time doing what you truly enjoy doing.

    I am proud to call myself a doctor but am horrified at the direction we are heading and am not surprised when I see downward trends in medical school admissions and the likes. I hope that this trend turns around but am fearful that we have a long way to go before it does.

    Thanks again!

    -gregory a. buford, md facs
    http://www.beautybybuford.com

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Rita-Chobanian-Swisher/1125771124 Rita Chobanian Swisher

    Thank you for speaking out about this, Dr. Fisher. The new reality is that the bandwagon will have everyone believe that there is nothing at all special about the training, responsibility, accomplishments, and sacrifices associated with being a doctor. “Get over yourselves and your misguided education that helps no one and actually harms everyone.” Utopian model indeed

  • LeoHolmMD

    I don’t think anyone takes NYT editorials seriously.

  • http://www.facebook.com/jignya.modi Jignya Modi

    Also remember that when you can’t find a doctor to see, just PAs and NPs. The public is so clueless, most of them don’t even know the difference. The demise and dumbing down of medicine is appalling.

  • http://onhealthtech.blogspot.com Margalit Gur-Arie

    The following was posted as a comment to the NYT editorial (copied and pasted here verbatim):

    “Native Alaskan Medical Providor
    Anchorage

    Guess what? I’m one of those physicians that work at the Southcentral
    foundation/Alaska Native Medical Center. I have to admit…I didn’t even
    recognize the system that the NYT wrote of.

    The waste here is incredible…millions are lost yearly because they simply forget to bill
    or bill incorrectly. There is rather shallow coverage…the complicated
    cases go to Seattle at huge costs to the system here. There is a
    staggering turnover: The best physicans leave because they get
    frustrated about the obstacles to provide quality care. The
    administrators leave too…I think we’ve had 4 CEO’s in 3 years. The
    reason there are no nurses stations or doctors offices in the outpatient
    side is because we have no room: it’s crammed cubicles,
    shoulder-to-shoulder. It it weren’t for the Public Health providors
    (MD’s, Pharmacists…) providing free service here on the taxpayer’s
    dime, the whole system would be on life report.

    Some GOOD things not mentioned: It’s nearly impossible to sue here…so that cuts down on
    some costs. Also, many of the specialists (myself included), travel to
    the bush and see patients there a couple of days at a place, anywhere
    from one to three times a year. It saves a lot on travel and time. We’re
    paid roughly 1/3 what they get in the private sector.

    Overall, this is not a model that will work for the rest of the USA: It would be
    an unparalled disaster. But it works well-enough here. The reality is,
    our patients are some of the unhealthiest in the entire USA.
    July 22, 2012 at 2:38 p.m”

  • http://twitter.com/pacificpsych pacificpsych

    Excellent editorial. I share your sentiments. It’s why I have on my door the quote from justice Brandeiss that [roughly] states The most comprehensive of rights, and that valued most by civilized men, is the right to be let alone.

  • Betsy Murphy

    Perhaps if physicians had not been so arrogant for so long, and so dismissive of women, they might not be as vilified in the press today. I am one of the few who actually pay for the healthcare I use but have had physicians turn a simple visit for a specific purpose into a level III bill at the front desk. I know there are decent physicians out there, and some day I hope to find where they hide.

    • http://onhealthtech.blogspot.com Margalit Gur-Arie

      A Level III bill pays around $65 if you are on Medicare and maybe up to $100 or so if you have private insurance. Do you think that’s too much for a simple physician visit, compared to, say, a plumber, mechanic or lawyer?

  • http://www.facebook.com/carol.levy.336 Carol Levy

    Often you are the problem and I will tell you why.
    Public citizen has estimated that 85% of medical malpractoce is committed by 15% of recidivist doctors yet consistently doctors refuse to speak out against other doctors even when they see egregious instances of malpractice and poor medical skills. M&M is secret so even when there is no question a patient was permanently injured or even killed as a result of malpractice it stays a secret in that auditorium where the conference is held. State medical boards and medical socvieties also stay mum on the bad docs. Start weeding out the bad guys and your stick with the public will go up. Then maybe people will not be so angry about the fees, waiting, times, unnecessary tests, etc.

    • Dr. McNinja

      M&Ms are protected because they allow physicians and their colleagues to learn from mistakes and improve upon them without the fear of being sued. Not every bad outcome is malpractice. Medical malpractice is very narrowly defined, but the lay public assumes that every time the outcome is different from what they imagined in their head, the physician or hospital MUST have been negligent.

      If you (as in, the patients of the US) weren’t so quick to sue, I promise you they would be much, much, much more open to discussing mistakes in the delivery of care. With the current litigious climate, however, it would be decades before this defensive mindset changes. Even if significant tort reform is enacted.

  • civisisus

    KevinMD – the internet waahmbulance for physicians everywhere

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1069201841 Danielle Magness

    I educate every patirnt, family members, and friends on the difference between midlevels and physicians and the quality of care. Many were clueless but once they were informed they became upset that they were being treated by someone with less than half the education who may eventually be practicung without supervision. I think it is our responsibility to educate the public in order to save our profession.