The health-care postman
always rings twice, and now medicine itself is the target, instead of
unsympathetic insurance companies. Under the plan, all Massachusetts doctors,
hospitals and other providers must register with a new state bureaucracy as a
condition of licensure—that is, permission to practice.
They'll be required to track and report their financial performance, price and cost trends, state-sanctioned quality measures, market share and other metrics. The best that can be said is that in principle such transparency could increase useful information about cost and quality. Today's lack of comparative tools makes it hard for consumers to search for value in health care, even when they have the incentive to do so. But Massachusetts takes 360-degree surveillance and converts it into a panopticon prison. An 11-member board known as the Health Policy Commission will use the data to set and enforce rules to ensure that total Massachusetts health spending, public and private, grows no more than projected gross state product through 2017, and 0.5 percentage points lower thereafter. (And Paul Ryan's Medicare projections are unrealistic?)
No registered provider
is allowed to make "any material change to its operations or governance
structure," the bill says, without the commission's approval. The
commission can also rewrite the terms of provider contracts with insurers and
payment levels and methods if they are "deemed to be excessive."As
the commission polices the market, it can decide to supervise the behavior of
any provider that exceeds some to-be-specified individual benchmark—that is,
doctors and hospitals that are spending too much on patient care.
These delinquents must
submit a "performance improvement plan" that the commission must
endorse. In other words, the commission is empowered to control the practice
and organization of medicine.
The Massachusetts left
complains that this government control is too weak because the delinquents can
only be fined $500,000 for disobeying the commission's dictates. But more teeth
can always come in round three when this plan fails, as it will.
The main reason is that
the enlightened planners never allow for the complexity of medicine in the real
world. For example, Medicare has for years been trying to lower hospital
readmissions using the strategies across the health policy universe—generate
performance and quality measures, then pay "good" hospitals more and
the "bad" less.
But it turns out that
many of the supposedly bad hospitals also have much lower mortality rates than
the ones Medicare is rewarding in its readmission programs monitoring heart
attack, heart failure and pneumonia.
The reason is that
patients who die can never be discharged and then readmitted if something
later goes wrong. The alleged underachievers that Medicare punishes are often
much better at treating sick people and saving lives, less good at crunching
the numbers.***Despite these Medicare failures, Washington has never gone as
far as Boston is now going, installing itself as the arbiter of care in order
to redesign care, though under ObamaCare it's only a matter of time. Everyone
agrees that the health system needs to deliver medicine more efficiently and be
more accountable, but accountable to whom? The answer for the political rulers
of medicine, if not patients, is always: government.
Source WSJ, Updated
August 5, 2012, RomneyCare 2.0
http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443687504577563000563259044.html?mod=WSJ_hps_sections_opinion#articleTabs%3Darticle
Comments:
With regulations like this, we need our freedom to pay
cash and bypass “the system”.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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