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Dr. Robert A. Kornfeld

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The 'New' Standard of Care in Medicine

Posted: 12/ 2/2011 7:41 am

We are in an era of medicine where we can now make far more accurate diagnoses thanks to technological advances in diagnostic imaging and laboratory analysis of blood, urine, saliva and body tissues. We also now have at our disposal treatment capabilities that only a decade ago were not possible. Advances in surgery and medicine have vastly improved our treatment outcomes. Our improved ability to diagnose and treat has saved or prolonged millions of lives and has improved the quality of life for just as many people. For this, we must thank our scientists, engineers and physicians. Since I am a part of the latter group, I would like to speak to the enormous time, dedication, study and practice it takes to be a knowledgeable and skillful physician.

The practice of medicine demands a tremendous amount from our doctors -- from four years of college to four years of medical school to residency and fellowship training. In addition, physicians complete continuing medical education credits every year in different aspects of medicine with emphasis on their specialty. Society demands a lot from the people who are responsible for their health and rightly so. The stress and strain of studying and training to become a doctor can never be diminished, however; the tremendous satisfaction that it delivers when a patient has a successful outcome makes it worth every bit of its demanding commitment.

Make no mistake; doctors know what we're up against. We are trained to deliver the absolute best medical care and the public expects the absolute best from us. Errors in diagnosis, judgment and skill are not tolerated. We need to think and think clearly to establish an accurate diagnosis and we need to implement a protocol that has the best chance of a positive outcome. For this, we turn to peer reviewed studies, seminars, training workshops and mentorship after completion of our residencies. It is a profession that takes itself very seriously and places a high demand for excellence on all of its licensees.

So, given the time involved and the high level of commitment required to become a doctor, no one is in a better position to determine treatment options than physicians themselves. We not only look for reproducible studies that give us a high degree of confidence in what we do, we also self-police. All doctors in all specialties are held to high standards of excellence in education as well as clinical performance.

So it seems completely logical that it always has been physicians themselves that set the standard of care in medicine. Yet, that no longer seems to be the case. And this sets a very dangerous precedent for medical care in this country going forward.

Health insurance companies have been able to take over control of medicine through contracted arrangements with doctors. When a doctor agrees to "participate" with a health insurance company and become a part of their provider panel, he also becomes beholden to the terms and limitations set forth by the insurance company. Realize that an insurance company is not in the health care business. They are in the "keep the premium dollars" business. That means that they have a vested interest in keeping down the costs of medical care so that they can maximize their profits. By contrast, the doctor must hold to his oath of providing the best possible medical care while also doing his/her best to do no harm. Clearly, the insurance company/physician relationship can become contentious and adversarial because of these factors.

The truth of what is now happening in this country is that diagnostic tests and certain treatment protocols are being "denied" by insurance companies as "not medically necessary." In other words, they refuse to pay because they simply do not want to finance tests or therapies that cut into their bottom line more than they want them to. In addition, physicians face audits of their records by insurance companies and Medicare in which their records are scrutinized to see that every "i" is dotted and every "t" is crossed. If not, physicians are subject to demands for "recovery" of funds for services that were "inappropriately billed."

In addition, physicians who incorporate more progressive therapies are being subjected to withholding of payments, bogus peer review and licensure review boards. These "scare" tactics are working better than they should be. To avoid all of these uncomfortable and potentially damaging threats that are now looming over physicians, many are now fully "cooperating" with whatever the insurance company dictates as the "new standard of care" in medicine. In order to do this, physicians look for the quickest and cheapest way to address their patients so as not to stand out and become a sitting duck for an audit. Who suffers are both the patients and the doctors.

Morale in medicine is at an all-time low. Doctors are very unhappy and under the stress of constant scrutiny for every decision they make. It is the "guilty until proven innocent" phenomenon. Medical income is shrinking rapidly as well. It is my honest opinion that medical care in this country is headed for a major crisis if we do not rise up against the controls placed on us by insurance companies and Medicare. In addition to patients being under-diagnosed and under-treated, we are soon to see a crisis in which the incredible commitment to practice medicine and surgery will no longer be rewarded with the income that would draw the best qualified students to the profession. It will become increasingly hard to fill classes because far fewer people will want to do what it takes just to make a mediocre living. And who could blame them?

What is on the horizon is not going to be pretty. We cannot affect an improvement in "health" care if all we are going to do is to attempt to manipulate dollars and "sense."

 

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We are in an era of medicine where we can now make far more accurate diagnoses thanks to technological advances in diagnostic imaging and laboratory analysis of blood, urine, saliva and body tissues.
We are in an era of medicine where we can now make far more accurate diagnoses thanks to technological advances in diagnostic imaging and laboratory analysis of blood, urine, saliva and body tissues.
 
 
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Ossit
Ossit
03:43 PM on 12/07/2011
On My Way 58, I'm not expecting ER's to take care of me long term. I go when it's absolutely necessary and every time it's substandard care. In all my time being uninsured since 1994 how many times have I needed an ER? 5! So it's not like I'm constantly in/out. We should be treated better. ER's are not for just certain people. Costs go up because of greed of hospitals and doctors, NOT because of us Poor. But we're a great scape goat. Thanks for the other information though I tried a Senior Center once and was discriminated against because I wasn't a senior or physically handicapped. I begged anyway for transportation going to this other place who did absolutely nothing and the Senior Place kept threatening to take away my transportation. I told them where to go. The lady was mean. I'll check out those other things you mentioned.
08:03 AM on 12/07/2011
The high and escalating cost of medicine is a real problem. It would be nice if the author could propose an alternative solution.

The author also implies that there is a relationship between cost and quality. This is not the case in medicine. For more information check out the Dartmouth Atlas: http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/ . Regions with the highest per-patient spending do no see comparatively higher outcomes.
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wakohnen
Human opinions....a fascinating study....
05:47 AM on 12/07/2011
What is the point in having the best medical technology available if medical decisions are made by the insurance companies? It isn't like they are lacking in funds to pay claims. Just look at the bonuses that get handed out annually. Of course insurance fraud contributes to this problem as well but it hasn't stopped the bonus's so it must be a smaller percentage than they would have us believe.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:04 AM on 12/07/2011
The most sophisticated technology (nuclear medicine for example) is also the most toxic. Insurance companies are evil everyone agrees but they still shouldn't have to pay for PhRMAs toxic treatments that main and kill thousands annually and neither should we in the form of higher premiums. Obamacare has neutered the health insurance industry and they will likely fail if PhRMA is allowed to continue to poison the patient population with impunity.
01:53 AM on 12/07/2011
This probably not the best place to ask but cannot find another. Does anyone know what happened to the badges, every time I want to give one I cannot, nor does it show when someone has one. Can't find a place to write hp and ask, wondered if anyone here knows? Thanks
03:36 AM on 12/07/2011
I guess you have a problem, little one!
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wakohnen
Human opinions....a fascinating study....
05:48 AM on 12/07/2011
You are not alone, they just dissapeared about a month ago.
08:40 AM on 12/07/2011
I appreciate your answer, is not altering my day but I was curious if there was an article I missed about it, again thanks for your time.
10:27 PM on 12/06/2011
One thing that has never made sense to me are health insurance companies "for profit." They only push paper and yet the top five have earned 12 Billion dollars a year. In the mean time, hospitals went broke, so had to increase prices for everything they dispense and do. (Thus, the ridiculous price of an aspirin for $12 when dispensed in a hospital.) Doctors and health care providers have gone broke, and patient care here has become third rate. Medical care is a necessity for everyone. For Profit insurance companies should be outlawed totally. Before insurance companies, health care was far less expensive, and prices for health care were far more reasonable...and our health care was considered one of the top in the world. Doctors are not to blame for this, nor are hospitals. The blame should be squarely placed on the greedy insurance companies. Though many call it "socialism" there should be single payer insurance for all where there is no profit or very low profit for coverage. Maybe the new health care law that only allows a 20% profit will move things in the right direction.
11:47 PM on 12/06/2011
Health Insurance began in 1929, you yourself recall the days of pre-insurance? Really? It was about $5 a month and covered you for 21 days of hospitalization, and average stay with the medical technology of 1929. The biggest problem is people forget, insurance is not a right. It is not forced on anyone - it's insurance - a chance you pay for incase you need it. Those without complain - it's not a 'right' people. You have the choice to go to the doctor. The doctor has the choice to charge what he likes. He has the choice to join a network or not. Do you know how much in preventative programs is available now - wellness is huge. And trust me, we go to Obamacare - good luck. And who do you think the single payer will be? Washington does not know how to process claims. And where is the risk pool to pay claims out if you really think Obamacare is free?
12:44 AM on 12/07/2011
We have always had health insurance with little or no problems before . It was when the federal government came into the picture and impossed a myriad of regulations on all aspects of health care from doctors education, treatment, legal liabilities, and even the construction of healthcare facilities. It's a situation similar to automobile coverage. When a third party is paying niether the repair shop or the owner cares how much the repair costs and consequently the cost of insurance sky rockets. The new healhcare law will only result in a flood of patients to healthcare facilities and a shortage of doctors. Long waiting periods which is the norm in Europe will be the ultimate result.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:11 AM on 12/07/2011
This is what I thought as well and PhRMA has done a good job at focusing our attention away from what is really occurring and that is collectively we are one sick nation. Why? That is the trillion dollar healthcare question. Could it be all the toxins we are ingesting? Could it be that PhRMA is poisoning us telling us to have this toxic scan, take this poison pill, vaccinate to death or total disability, try this surgical mesh or heart stint.
09:50 PM on 12/06/2011
I would also like to say that Premiums just may be going down when more people have to sign up for healthcare. I don't think I totally agree with forcing everyone with having to have healthcare but it just may be a good idea. Think of that one time you may need it.
09:46 PM on 12/06/2011
I would first like to respond to the doctors comment about him being a doctor and the insurance companies not being doctors. Health Insurance companies and TPA's are ran by doctors. All medical decisions in a health insurance company or TPA rest with one of the chief medical officers of that company. Health insurance is moving in a new direction now in which a members health is monitored in what is being done in order to promote a more healthy lifestyle. Doctors are upset now because all of the unnessecary procedures that they used to do are now not allowed. All of the jacked up billing methods have been realized and the insurance companies are sick of the doctors robbing them blind. So doctors now decide to drop out of most networks so they can rob the patients blind. I once had a woman tell me that she walked into a doctors office. He stood in front of her, looked at both her legs, walked out the room and charged the insurance company $500.00 for looking at each leg. Go figure. As for patients themselve, I saw someone wrote about going to the ER for treatment not befitting an ER visit. That is true. A lot of money can be saved by the government sponsored programs such as Medicade if they taught or directed their members to visit a network doctor for that stomach ache or toothache instead of going to the ER in the middle of the day.
doc4fitness
curing Progressives one at a time
05:57 AM on 12/07/2011
the doctors involved in the corporate decisions of health insurance companies are often no longer practicing clinical medicine, or working so limited time that they don't relate to the consequences of their coverage decisions
09:35 PM on 12/06/2011
Obamas healthcare ideas are geared towards better Care for the PEOPLE and it seems you are saying that DOCTORS want the SAME THING.
So WHY are so many doctors adamantly opposed to OBAMACARE ? ? ?
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GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
11:42 PM on 12/06/2011
I don't know any doctors who oppose the Affordable Care Act. Do you?
doc4fitness
curing Progressives one at a time
03:10 AM on 12/07/2011
I am a physician, I am opposed to it, as are most of our colleagues. I have a few friends are all in for it, they tend to have pRegressive political leanings. I enjoy wiping their arguments out though.
06:57 PM on 12/07/2011
My orthpedic said he would leave the field and go teach. He was in Europe as a team soccer doctor and the wait for a sprained ankle to be seen was 6 hours. He walked in back, threw them a 20 and took the splint and the kid out of there. He said there is no true medicine in social medicine, it's a quick stop treatment. My other ortho gave up doing back surgeries due to malpractice insurance cost. Not worth getting sued for anymore. Nice mentality this will give the providers. We need them.
12:49 AM on 12/07/2011
Because it makes them employees of the government subject to government price controls. and working hours.
08:52 PM on 12/06/2011
How does an HMO work? Anyone? A doctor agrees to join a network to ensure he has patients. Insurance companies promote who is in their network - that doctor. Members select that doctor cause they are in the network, that's their ins, easy. The doctor is rated on a tier - how much he does, how much he sends away from him to others, zipcode for usual and customary fees etc... all kinds of things. He signed the contract - he's in the network. He agrees to take say 300 patients as HMO patients. He earns a monthly fee for every patient that has selected him based on his tiering from the ins company. Could be $2 per patient. He gets now a payment of $600 a month - whether he sees all of the 300 patients or just 2 of them in a month's time. Plus the office copay goes to him, say $20, so he gets the $600, and the copays from the member. Yes, premiums help pay this.
08:45 PM on 12/06/2011
Great article and great comments. Doctors should get smart and drown the insurance companies. Health insurance is not same as auto insurance. If the doctors are willing to accept cash payment from patients equialent to the insurance company payments, why would anybody waste their money paying the premiums and get shortchanged too. Paying insurance companies is like shooting onself in the foot. Doctors and patients need to wake up. Yes, there are a few bad and greedy doctors. But, patients will learn to stop going to such ones once they have a choice. Turn off the TV when a pharmaceutical ad is on. The companies can make medications cheaper instead of paying for the ads. We have too many highway robbers.
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lori279187
Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
08:28 PM on 12/06/2011
Thank-you sir, for putting it all out there, so the truth will be known.
08:10 PM on 12/06/2011
How one sided, the whole system is a mess for many reasons. If there wasn't ins to help control cost, what do you think the cost of a doctor visit would be? And if patients weren't running to the er for a slight cough, or suing doctors every chance they get, might be a little easier to be seen and doctors to control their cost. Not every ins company is profit with share holders, some are non-profit orgs. All are to blame. And gov ins wont solve the issue. Bashing ins comps wont solve it either. So easy to complain, but wait until ins comps are driven into the ground being the scape goat. Maybe the patient's cause docs to quit practicing because they can't afford malpractice ins, oh no, it's all the bad ins companies, until you have no choice, then who will you blame. We live in a selfish world of entitlement. Everyone 'expects' to be taken care of. This was a lame article of a doctor complaining. Don't join the network then. Charge your patients what you want, and hide behind your complaints. The dental industry did it, why not follow and put the patient in the middle. Give me a break - all parites are to blame. But how do we fix it - come with a solution. This is getting so old. And no, gov can't fix, let alone process a healthcare claim... watch what you wish for.
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:08 PM on 12/06/2011
The high cost of all the various ways PhRMA has poisoned the population is now coming to fruition. We are a very sick society and many doctors have been complicate by going along with PhRMA instead of taking the time to learn about the treatments, drugs or scans they order or prescribe. The insurance companies are either going to collapse or they will raise our premiums so high that no one will be able to afford them or the government will take over healthcare. Perhaps that was Obama’s intent to begin with who knows. But we as a population have an opportunity to learn exactly why our premiums are high and the cost of healthcare has sky rocketed. It’s PhRMA stupid and it’s the doctors that continue to say nothing about it.
Doctors now that I have your attention and you are attacking me think about this, what side will you be on when the reasons healthcare costs are sky rocketing becomes known? Health insurance companies think about this, alternative medicine should be main stream and you have the potential to save lives and your bottom line if you embrace them. It goes without saying that this is my opinion but the health care bubble is about to burst. It’s time to take a side and that side is on the side of truth not the predatory medicine side.
doc4fitness
curing Progressives one at a time
06:14 AM on 12/07/2011
We doctors know why healthcare costs are rising quickly, multitude of factors, unfortunately, no attempt at healthcare reform except for tort reform in many states has addressed it. Tort reform is a small part of it
03:18 PM on 12/13/2011
So what is your view of rising costs?

And what healthcare reform would you suggest?

"Tort reform" is just code for 'protect MDs even more because we like the subject matter'. Honestly I'm not sure why any vendor should be permitted special dispensation from general tort principles.

As you point out it is a small issue, & I suspect it's academic in the vast majority of cases because of arbitration agreements - to say nothing of the fact that insurance costs are as heavily linked to the insurers' investments as actual claims made.
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jh72hockeymom
08:05 PM on 12/06/2011
Is there ANYBODY in this country who doesn't bow down to doctors and the medical community? I simply cannot believe what Americans have become. Then people talk about the greed of corporations? What about the greed of the health care industry? That doesn't count?
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
08:29 PM on 12/06/2011
I agree the health care industry is nothing more that a predatory industry and we have to keep driving that home where ever we go.
07:55 PM on 12/06/2011
I have a friend who has a very high position with the Feds. And, with that there is a lot of stress. She had been having pain in her esophagus when eating certain foods, so her doctor scheduled her for an endoscopy. She was given a prerscription as a prep. for a colonoscopy! Without realizing this, she filled the prescription at a Walgreens. When she questioned the nurse at her doctor's office, they told her to return it. Walgreens claimed, by law, they could not receive (nor refund) prescription. Now, she's out $50.00. In the meantime, she had the endoscopy performed and everything was normal. The pain still persisted, and the doctor's office told her to save the colonoscopy prep. for her evaluation in two years. The problem is, the product had an expiration date before her test would have been performed. Now she was scheduled for a motility exam. They couldn't complete the exam due to her choking everytime they tried to insert the probe down her espohagus (there's no prep. for this, as they want you to be able to swallow during the exam). She went through hell in order to be refunded the $50.00 bucks for the colonoscopy prep. She never heard a word from the doctor for the motility test (or lack of test being performed). He abandoned her. And, she continues to have the same symptoms.