Originally Posted by
betts
No, no, no., cutting doctor's fees will not make a difference. I'm going to post something here I posted elsewhere. If anyone has read it before, I apologize.
I'm a physician, so I realize I've probably lost half my audience with that statement. But, it does give me a window into the health care system. I don't have any magical solutions, unfortunately, but I can point out some things not everyone might realize or think about.
First of all, physician reimbursement makes up about 5 to 10% of all health care costs. Reimbursement for physician fees has been lowered for many procedures, others have been kept stable and most of the rest allowed below cost of living rise increases over the last ten to 15 years. Physicians who perform procedures, especially operations, are far better compensated for the care they provide, meaning that the physicians who treat you with their hands have much higher incomes than those that use their brains. (Old medical joke, but there's a frightening amount of truth to it). Since physician fees are such a small portion of health care costs, it would seem logical that lowering their fees would be the worst way to realize savings, but the other health care sectors have had virtually no control on prices, and that is why health care costs have risen so alarmingly.
As an example, were you in the ICU with pneumonia, the most your physician treating you could charge you for his care in a 24 hour period is around $100. The antibiotics being used to treat the pneumonia could total as much as $3,0000. The room charge from the hospital might be comparable to the antibiotic fees.
The price of pharmaceuticals and medical equipment far surpass anything most doctors are able to charge, as does the cost of hospital care. I believe, if we wish to help stop the rise in health care costs, that is where we need to start. Many physicians, by virtue of the freezes or low cost of living increases, coupled with tripling of malpractice fees and no freezes on overhead costs, are making half or less of what they made 15 years ago. Many are still working 10 to 14 hour days. So, even if you believe that physicians are overcompensated, I do not believe their reimbursement is where reduction in health care costs needs to start.
The government, in an attempt to contain costs, has instituted all sorts of oversights of physician charges. This has generated a massive beaurocracy, and it would not shock me were I to learn that the cost of the oversight meets or exceeds the savings generated.
If you look at the fact that the government has been cutting physicians fees regularly for years, or allowing increases less than the annual rise in cost of living, the fact that medical costs are still rising at an alarming rate demonstrates that cutting physician fees has little if any effect on health care cost containment.
Bookmarks