Artigo Revisado por pares

We Can Reduce US Health Care Costs

2010; Elsevier BV; Volume: 123; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.amjmed.2009.12.011

ISSN

1555-7162

Autores

James E. Dalen,

Tópico(s)

Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life

Resumo

The primary reason that the US needs health care reform is that we pay more for health care than any other country in the world; yet our health outcomes are below that of other western nations.1Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Health at a glance: 2007 OECD Indicators.Google Scholar Our health outcomes are suboptimal because millions of Americans have limited access to ongoing primary and preventive care because they can't afford our health insurance.Reducing Administrative CostsWe spend more than a third of our health care dollars on overhead and administration: billing, advertising, profits, and bonuses for health care executives.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar, 3Kahn J.G. Kronick R. Kreger M. Gans D.N. The cost of health insurance administration in California: estimates for insurers, physicians, and hospitals.Health Aff. 2005; 24: 1629-1639Crossref Scopus (66) Google Scholar Administrative costs in countries such as Canada that have a single payer (non-profit national health insurance) are half as much as in the US.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar If we had a single payer instead of hundreds of insurers with thousands of different plans, we would save 15% of our health care costs. Fifteen per cent of trillions adds up!A Price Waterhouse Coopers study reported that our complex, fragmented health care delivery system wastes $210 billion per year on unnecessary billing and administrative costs.4PricewaterhouseCoopers Health Research InstituteThe price of excess.http://pwchealth.com/cgi-local/hregister.cgi?link=reg/waste.pdfGoogle Scholar The ultimate solution to our excessive health care costs is national health insurance: Medicare for all5Dalen J.E. Alpert J.S. National health insurance: could it work in the US?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 553-554Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar; but that won't happen–at least not in the very near future. What can we do to decrease health care costs now?Focus on Preventive CareWe need to change our focus from disease management to prevention and health promotion. To change our focus to prevention we need more primary care physicians, family physicians, and general internists. Multiple studies have shown that generalists practice more cost-effective medicine than specialists and that their patients have better health outcomes.6Baicker K. Chandra A. Medicare spending, the physician workforce, and beneficiaries' quality of care.Health Aff. 2004; W4: 184-197Google Scholar, 7Starfield B. Shi L. Grover A. et al.The effects of specialist supply on population's health: assessing the evidence.Health Aff. 2005; W5: 97-107Google Scholar, 8Kravet S.J. Shore A.D. Miller R. et al.Health care utilization and the proportion of primary care physicians.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 142-148Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (58) Google ScholarDue to poor planning, currently we have an overall shortage of physicians in the US.9Dalen J.E. The moratorium on US medical school enrollment from 1980 to 2005: What were we thinking?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: e1-e2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar The number of medical students recently has increased, but we have an even greater problem. The number of US MD graduates choosing primary care careers keeps decreasing. In the 2009 National Residency Match, only 7% of graduates chose family practice, and 19% chose internal medicine.10National Resident Matching Program, March, 2009.http://www.nrmp.org/data/advancedatatables2009,pdfGoogle Scholar Only a minority of those choosing internal medicine will become general internists; the majority will become subspecialists or hospitalists. Hauer et al reported that only 2% of US senior MD medical students planned to have a career in general internal medicine.11Hauer K.E. Durning S.J. Kernan W.N. et al.Factors associated with medical students' career choices regarding internal medicine.JAMA. 2008; 300: 1154-1164Crossref PubMed Scopus (315) Google ScholarOne reason that medical students enter specialties is that the average educational debt of the class of 2008 MD graduates was $150,000.12Association of American Medical Collegeshttp://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/dec08/graduates.htmGoogle Scholar This influences many graduates to enter specialties that pay, on average, twice as much as primary care so that they can pay off their educational debt.13Bodenheimer T. Berenson R.A. Rudolf P. The primary care–specialty gap: Why it matters.Ann Intern Med. 2007; 146: 301-306Crossref PubMed Scopus (196) Google ScholarTo influence more physicians to choose primary care we need to pay off their educational debt if they choose and remain in primary care. In addition, they should receive an annual stipend for each Medicare patient for whom they coordinate care and provide a medical home. These stipends added to their fee for service income should provide an income comparable to the average specialist. This would be an excellent investment for Medicare. If each primary care physician can avoid 1 unnecessary hospitalization or even 1 expensive but unnecessary test for each patient, Medicare will come out far ahead!To be effective in prevention, primary care physicians must have certain skills that our current medical school curriculum does not provide adequately. We offer minimal training in nutrition, prescribed exercise, stress reduction techniques, and other effective therapies for certain conditions, for example, acupuncture for specific chronic pain syndromes.Eliminate Unnecessary Tests and ProceduresIn addition to training a new cadre of adult generalists with expertise in prevention, we must ensure that all physicians (specialists and generalists) practice cost-effective medicine. At the present time, physicians vary tremendously in their use of expensive diagnostic tests and treatments. The average cost of treating a Medicare patient in some parts of the country is twice as expensive as in other areas.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar The most expensive cities have more hospitalizations, and physician visits and their physicians order more expensive diagnostic tests and procedures. There is no evidence that the more expensive treatment benefits patients.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar Much of the excessive treatment and unnecessary testing occurs at the end of life. We must encourage all citizens to have living wills to avoid unwanted procedures at the end of life.Many unnecessary tests are performed to prevent malpractice suits. Kessler and McClellan, in 1996, estimated the annual cost of defensive medicine to be as much as $50 billion per year.15Kessler D.P. McClellan M. Do doctors practice defensive medicine?.Q J Econ. 1996; 111: 353-390Crossref Scopus (398) Google Scholar It must be much higher at present. We need malpractice reform including limits on awards for pain and suffering. Our current system of paying millions of dollars to patients and their attorneys when malpractice is documented does not prevent malpractice. We need to require retraining of physicians who are shown to practice substandard medicine. We need to suspend or deny participation in Medicare for repeat offenders.In addition, we need to increase research funding for projects that will help to determine which diagnostic tests and procedures actually benefit specific patients. This research will increase the number of evidence-based practice guidelines. Medicare should not pay for procedures that do not benefit patients. This is not rationing–it is common sense.Controlling the Costs of Prescription DrugsOur government must control the prices of prescription drugs as is done in nearly every other nation. Drug companies can charge whatever they wish in the US. Citizens of other nations pay 20% to 40% less for prescription drugs compared with what Americans pay.16Danzon P.M. Furukawa M.F. International prices and availability of pharmaceuticals in 2005.Health Aff. 2008; 27: 221-233Crossref PubMed Scopus (101) Google ScholarMillions of Americans have chronic conditions that require life-long medications. If their insurance doesn't pay for them, or if they fall into Medicare‘s donut hole17Dalen J.E. It's time to bail out US seniors trapped in the Medicare donut hole!.Am J Med. 2009; 122: 595-596Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2) Google Scholar and cannot afford prescribed medicines, many patients stop taking their medications. The result is increased emergency room visits and hospitalizations and a further increase in our health care costs.18Tamblyn R. Laprise R. Hanley J.A. et al.Adverse events associated with prescription drug cost-sharing among poor and elderly persons.JAMA. 2001; 285: 421-429Crossref PubMed Scopus (660) Google ScholarSome authorities have suggested that if we decrease the profits of drug companies they will stop developing new drugs. Given that drug companies spend more than twice as much for marketing and advertising as they do for research19Reinhardt U.E. Perspectives on the pharmaceutical industry.Health Aff. 2001; 20: 136-149Crossref Scopus (50) Google Scholar this is a very unlikely outcome.In summary, we must reduce the cost of health care in the US. We can do this by developing a health care system that emphasizes prevention rather than disease management. To do this we must encourage more physicians to be adult generalists and we must provide them with new skills.20Benn R. Maizes V. Guerrera M. et al.Integrative medicine in residency: assessing curricular needs in eight programs.Fam Med. 2009; 41: 708-714PubMed Google Scholar Furthermore, we must insure that all physicians have cost-effective practice patterns that avoid unnecessary tests and procedures and that all citizens adopt living wills. As a nation, we need to have better control over the cost of prescription drugs.Finally, at some point in the future, we should adopt a policy of national health insurance, Medicare for all. The primary reason that the US needs health care reform is that we pay more for health care than any other country in the world; yet our health outcomes are below that of other western nations.1Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Health at a glance: 2007 OECD Indicators.Google Scholar Our health outcomes are suboptimal because millions of Americans have limited access to ongoing primary and preventive care because they can't afford our health insurance. Reducing Administrative CostsWe spend more than a third of our health care dollars on overhead and administration: billing, advertising, profits, and bonuses for health care executives.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar, 3Kahn J.G. Kronick R. Kreger M. Gans D.N. The cost of health insurance administration in California: estimates for insurers, physicians, and hospitals.Health Aff. 2005; 24: 1629-1639Crossref Scopus (66) Google Scholar Administrative costs in countries such as Canada that have a single payer (non-profit national health insurance) are half as much as in the US.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar If we had a single payer instead of hundreds of insurers with thousands of different plans, we would save 15% of our health care costs. Fifteen per cent of trillions adds up!A Price Waterhouse Coopers study reported that our complex, fragmented health care delivery system wastes $210 billion per year on unnecessary billing and administrative costs.4PricewaterhouseCoopers Health Research InstituteThe price of excess.http://pwchealth.com/cgi-local/hregister.cgi?link=reg/waste.pdfGoogle Scholar The ultimate solution to our excessive health care costs is national health insurance: Medicare for all5Dalen J.E. Alpert J.S. National health insurance: could it work in the US?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 553-554Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar; but that won't happen–at least not in the very near future. What can we do to decrease health care costs now? We spend more than a third of our health care dollars on overhead and administration: billing, advertising, profits, and bonuses for health care executives.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar, 3Kahn J.G. Kronick R. Kreger M. Gans D.N. The cost of health insurance administration in California: estimates for insurers, physicians, and hospitals.Health Aff. 2005; 24: 1629-1639Crossref Scopus (66) Google Scholar Administrative costs in countries such as Canada that have a single payer (non-profit national health insurance) are half as much as in the US.2Woolhandler S. Campbell T. Himmelstein D.U. Costs of health care administration in the United States and Canada.N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 768-775Crossref PubMed Scopus (455) Google Scholar If we had a single payer instead of hundreds of insurers with thousands of different plans, we would save 15% of our health care costs. Fifteen per cent of trillions adds up! A Price Waterhouse Coopers study reported that our complex, fragmented health care delivery system wastes $210 billion per year on unnecessary billing and administrative costs.4PricewaterhouseCoopers Health Research InstituteThe price of excess.http://pwchealth.com/cgi-local/hregister.cgi?link=reg/waste.pdfGoogle Scholar The ultimate solution to our excessive health care costs is national health insurance: Medicare for all5Dalen J.E. Alpert J.S. National health insurance: could it work in the US?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 553-554Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar; but that won't happen–at least not in the very near future. What can we do to decrease health care costs now? Focus on Preventive CareWe need to change our focus from disease management to prevention and health promotion. To change our focus to prevention we need more primary care physicians, family physicians, and general internists. Multiple studies have shown that generalists practice more cost-effective medicine than specialists and that their patients have better health outcomes.6Baicker K. Chandra A. Medicare spending, the physician workforce, and beneficiaries' quality of care.Health Aff. 2004; W4: 184-197Google Scholar, 7Starfield B. Shi L. Grover A. et al.The effects of specialist supply on population's health: assessing the evidence.Health Aff. 2005; W5: 97-107Google Scholar, 8Kravet S.J. Shore A.D. Miller R. et al.Health care utilization and the proportion of primary care physicians.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 142-148Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (58) Google ScholarDue to poor planning, currently we have an overall shortage of physicians in the US.9Dalen J.E. The moratorium on US medical school enrollment from 1980 to 2005: What were we thinking?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: e1-e2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar The number of medical students recently has increased, but we have an even greater problem. The number of US MD graduates choosing primary care careers keeps decreasing. In the 2009 National Residency Match, only 7% of graduates chose family practice, and 19% chose internal medicine.10National Resident Matching Program, March, 2009.http://www.nrmp.org/data/advancedatatables2009,pdfGoogle Scholar Only a minority of those choosing internal medicine will become general internists; the majority will become subspecialists or hospitalists. Hauer et al reported that only 2% of US senior MD medical students planned to have a career in general internal medicine.11Hauer K.E. Durning S.J. Kernan W.N. et al.Factors associated with medical students' career choices regarding internal medicine.JAMA. 2008; 300: 1154-1164Crossref PubMed Scopus (315) Google ScholarOne reason that medical students enter specialties is that the average educational debt of the class of 2008 MD graduates was $150,000.12Association of American Medical Collegeshttp://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/dec08/graduates.htmGoogle Scholar This influences many graduates to enter specialties that pay, on average, twice as much as primary care so that they can pay off their educational debt.13Bodenheimer T. Berenson R.A. Rudolf P. The primary care–specialty gap: Why it matters.Ann Intern Med. 2007; 146: 301-306Crossref PubMed Scopus (196) Google ScholarTo influence more physicians to choose primary care we need to pay off their educational debt if they choose and remain in primary care. In addition, they should receive an annual stipend for each Medicare patient for whom they coordinate care and provide a medical home. These stipends added to their fee for service income should provide an income comparable to the average specialist. This would be an excellent investment for Medicare. If each primary care physician can avoid 1 unnecessary hospitalization or even 1 expensive but unnecessary test for each patient, Medicare will come out far ahead!To be effective in prevention, primary care physicians must have certain skills that our current medical school curriculum does not provide adequately. We offer minimal training in nutrition, prescribed exercise, stress reduction techniques, and other effective therapies for certain conditions, for example, acupuncture for specific chronic pain syndromes. We need to change our focus from disease management to prevention and health promotion. To change our focus to prevention we need more primary care physicians, family physicians, and general internists. Multiple studies have shown that generalists practice more cost-effective medicine than specialists and that their patients have better health outcomes.6Baicker K. Chandra A. Medicare spending, the physician workforce, and beneficiaries' quality of care.Health Aff. 2004; W4: 184-197Google Scholar, 7Starfield B. Shi L. Grover A. et al.The effects of specialist supply on population's health: assessing the evidence.Health Aff. 2005; W5: 97-107Google Scholar, 8Kravet S.J. Shore A.D. Miller R. et al.Health care utilization and the proportion of primary care physicians.Am J Med. 2008; 121: 142-148Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (58) Google Scholar Due to poor planning, currently we have an overall shortage of physicians in the US.9Dalen J.E. The moratorium on US medical school enrollment from 1980 to 2005: What were we thinking?.Am J Med. 2008; 121: e1-e2Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (6) Google Scholar The number of medical students recently has increased, but we have an even greater problem. The number of US MD graduates choosing primary care careers keeps decreasing. In the 2009 National Residency Match, only 7% of graduates chose family practice, and 19% chose internal medicine.10National Resident Matching Program, March, 2009.http://www.nrmp.org/data/advancedatatables2009,pdfGoogle Scholar Only a minority of those choosing internal medicine will become general internists; the majority will become subspecialists or hospitalists. Hauer et al reported that only 2% of US senior MD medical students planned to have a career in general internal medicine.11Hauer K.E. Durning S.J. Kernan W.N. et al.Factors associated with medical students' career choices regarding internal medicine.JAMA. 2008; 300: 1154-1164Crossref PubMed Scopus (315) Google Scholar One reason that medical students enter specialties is that the average educational debt of the class of 2008 MD graduates was $150,000.12Association of American Medical Collegeshttp://www.aamc.org/newsroom/reporter/dec08/graduates.htmGoogle Scholar This influences many graduates to enter specialties that pay, on average, twice as much as primary care so that they can pay off their educational debt.13Bodenheimer T. Berenson R.A. Rudolf P. The primary care–specialty gap: Why it matters.Ann Intern Med. 2007; 146: 301-306Crossref PubMed Scopus (196) Google Scholar To influence more physicians to choose primary care we need to pay off their educational debt if they choose and remain in primary care. In addition, they should receive an annual stipend for each Medicare patient for whom they coordinate care and provide a medical home. These stipends added to their fee for service income should provide an income comparable to the average specialist. This would be an excellent investment for Medicare. If each primary care physician can avoid 1 unnecessary hospitalization or even 1 expensive but unnecessary test for each patient, Medicare will come out far ahead! To be effective in prevention, primary care physicians must have certain skills that our current medical school curriculum does not provide adequately. We offer minimal training in nutrition, prescribed exercise, stress reduction techniques, and other effective therapies for certain conditions, for example, acupuncture for specific chronic pain syndromes. Eliminate Unnecessary Tests and ProceduresIn addition to training a new cadre of adult generalists with expertise in prevention, we must ensure that all physicians (specialists and generalists) practice cost-effective medicine. At the present time, physicians vary tremendously in their use of expensive diagnostic tests and treatments. The average cost of treating a Medicare patient in some parts of the country is twice as expensive as in other areas.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar The most expensive cities have more hospitalizations, and physician visits and their physicians order more expensive diagnostic tests and procedures. There is no evidence that the more expensive treatment benefits patients.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar Much of the excessive treatment and unnecessary testing occurs at the end of life. We must encourage all citizens to have living wills to avoid unwanted procedures at the end of life.Many unnecessary tests are performed to prevent malpractice suits. Kessler and McClellan, in 1996, estimated the annual cost of defensive medicine to be as much as $50 billion per year.15Kessler D.P. McClellan M. Do doctors practice defensive medicine?.Q J Econ. 1996; 111: 353-390Crossref Scopus (398) Google Scholar It must be much higher at present. We need malpractice reform including limits on awards for pain and suffering. Our current system of paying millions of dollars to patients and their attorneys when malpractice is documented does not prevent malpractice. We need to require retraining of physicians who are shown to practice substandard medicine. We need to suspend or deny participation in Medicare for repeat offenders.In addition, we need to increase research funding for projects that will help to determine which diagnostic tests and procedures actually benefit specific patients. This research will increase the number of evidence-based practice guidelines. Medicare should not pay for procedures that do not benefit patients. This is not rationing–it is common sense. In addition to training a new cadre of adult generalists with expertise in prevention, we must ensure that all physicians (specialists and generalists) practice cost-effective medicine. At the present time, physicians vary tremendously in their use of expensive diagnostic tests and treatments. The average cost of treating a Medicare patient in some parts of the country is twice as expensive as in other areas.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar The most expensive cities have more hospitalizations, and physician visits and their physicians order more expensive diagnostic tests and procedures. There is no evidence that the more expensive treatment benefits patients.14Fisher E. Goodman D. Skinner J. et al.Health care spending, quality, and outcomes.http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/Spending_Brief_022709.pdfGoogle Scholar Much of the excessive treatment and unnecessary testing occurs at the end of life. We must encourage all citizens to have living wills to avoid unwanted procedures at the end of life. Many unnecessary tests are performed to prevent malpractice suits. Kessler and McClellan, in 1996, estimated the annual cost of defensive medicine to be as much as $50 billion per year.15Kessler D.P. McClellan M. Do doctors practice defensive medicine?.Q J Econ. 1996; 111: 353-390Crossref Scopus (398) Google Scholar It must be much higher at present. We need malpractice reform including limits on awards for pain and suffering. Our current system of paying millions of dollars to patients and their attorneys when malpractice is documented does not prevent malpractice. We need to require retraining of physicians who are shown to practice substandard medicine. We need to suspend or deny participation in Medicare for repeat offenders. In addition, we need to increase research funding for projects that will help to determine which diagnostic tests and procedures actually benefit specific patients. This research will increase the number of evidence-based practice guidelines. Medicare should not pay for procedures that do not benefit patients. This is not rationing–it is common sense. Controlling the Costs of Prescription DrugsOur government must control the prices of prescription drugs as is done in nearly every other nation. Drug companies can charge whatever they wish in the US. Citizens of other nations pay 20% to 40% less for prescription drugs compared with what Americans pay.16Danzon P.M. Furukawa M.F. International prices and availability of pharmaceuticals in 2005.Health Aff. 2008; 27: 221-233Crossref PubMed Scopus (101) Google ScholarMillions of Americans have chronic conditions that require life-long medications. If their insurance doesn't pay for them, or if they fall into Medicare‘s donut hole17Dalen J.E. It's time to bail out US seniors trapped in the Medicare donut hole!.Am J Med. 2009; 122: 595-596Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2) Google Scholar and cannot afford prescribed medicines, many patients stop taking their medications. The result is increased emergency room visits and hospitalizations and a further increase in our health care costs.18Tamblyn R. Laprise R. Hanley J.A. et al.Adverse events associated with prescription drug cost-sharing among poor and elderly persons.JAMA. 2001; 285: 421-429Crossref PubMed Scopus (660) Google ScholarSome authorities have suggested that if we decrease the profits of drug companies they will stop developing new drugs. Given that drug companies spend more than twice as much for marketing and advertising as they do for research19Reinhardt U.E. Perspectives on the pharmaceutical industry.Health Aff. 2001; 20: 136-149Crossref Scopus (50) Google Scholar this is a very unlikely outcome.In summary, we must reduce the cost of health care in the US. We can do this by developing a health care system that emphasizes prevention rather than disease management. To do this we must encourage more physicians to be adult generalists and we must provide them with new skills.20Benn R. Maizes V. Guerrera M. et al.Integrative medicine in residency: assessing curricular needs in eight programs.Fam Med. 2009; 41: 708-714PubMed Google Scholar Furthermore, we must insure that all physicians have cost-effective practice patterns that avoid unnecessary tests and procedures and that all citizens adopt living wills. As a nation, we need to have better control over the cost of prescription drugs.Finally, at some point in the future, we should adopt a policy of national health insurance, Medicare for all. Our government must control the prices of prescription drugs as is done in nearly every other nation. Drug companies can charge whatever they wish in the US. Citizens of other nations pay 20% to 40% less for prescription drugs compared with what Americans pay.16Danzon P.M. Furukawa M.F. International prices and availability of pharmaceuticals in 2005.Health Aff. 2008; 27: 221-233Crossref PubMed Scopus (101) Google Scholar Millions of Americans have chronic conditions that require life-long medications. If their insurance doesn't pay for them, or if they fall into Medicare‘s donut hole17Dalen J.E. It's time to bail out US seniors trapped in the Medicare donut hole!.Am J Med. 2009; 122: 595-596Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2) Google Scholar and cannot afford prescribed medicines, many patients stop taking their medications. The result is increased emergency room visits and hospitalizations and a further increase in our health care costs.18Tamblyn R. Laprise R. Hanley J.A. et al.Adverse events associated with prescription drug cost-sharing among poor and elderly persons.JAMA. 2001; 285: 421-429Crossref PubMed Scopus (660) Google Scholar Some authorities have suggested that if we decrease the profits of drug companies they will stop developing new drugs. Given that drug companies spend more than twice as much for marketing and advertising as they do for research19Reinhardt U.E. Perspectives on the pharmaceutical industry.Health Aff. 2001; 20: 136-149Crossref Scopus (50) Google Scholar this is a very unlikely outcome. In summary, we must reduce the cost of health care in the US. We can do this by developing a health care system that emphasizes prevention rather than disease management. To do this we must encourage more physicians to be adult generalists and we must provide them with new skills.20Benn R. Maizes V. Guerrera M. et al.Integrative medicine in residency: assessing curricular needs in eight programs.Fam Med. 2009; 41: 708-714PubMed Google Scholar Furthermore, we must insure that all physicians have cost-effective practice patterns that avoid unnecessary tests and procedures and that all citizens adopt living wills. As a nation, we need to have better control over the cost of prescription drugs. Finally, at some point in the future, we should adopt a policy of national health insurance, Medicare for all. The ReplyThe American Journal of MedicineVol. 123Issue 11PreviewBartecchi expresses his concerns regarding the efficacy and costs of alternative therapies and implies that primary care physicians do not need to be knowledgeable about alternative and complementary therapies. Full-Text PDF Are We Missing Ways to Reduce Health Care Costs?The American Journal of MedicineVol. 123Issue 11PreviewIn his “Commentary” article in the March 2010 edition of The American Journal of Medicine [1], Dr Dalen does an excellent job of outlining how we can reduce U.S. health care costs. However, the author makes some statements that call into question his true personal commitment to the reduction of health care costs. He states, “We offer minimal training in nutrition, prescribed exercise, stress reduction techniques, and other effective therapies for certain conditions, for example, acupuncture for specific chronic pain syndromes.” He seems to be implying that acupuncture is a proven therapy for chronic pain syndromes and is more than just a placebo, as is suggested by numerous recent studies. Full-Text PDF We Can Reduce US Health Care Costs: A Resident's PerspectiveThe American Journal of MedicineVol. 123Issue 10PreviewI read with interest the commentary by Dalen1 outlining certain key measures that if successfully implemented can reduce US health care costs effectively. I must confess that the author put forth the flaws of the American healthcare system very proficiently. But as a resident physician, I realized that perhaps he missed a point here and that a different perspective may be needed. Full-Text PDF

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