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Philip Lee Miller

Philip Lee Miller

Posted: March 18, 2010 11:51 AM

Health Care Reform: Myths and Misunderstandings

What's Your Reaction:

Too often have I written about the endgame. Shades of Mark Twain -- reports of my death are exaggerated. But this really is the ninth inning. The problem is the president is looking for the long ball -- the out of the park home run. When he should have been hitting singles, or emulating the great Joe Montana -- short yardage high percentage gains -- not Hail Mary passes.

Ave, Imperator, morituri te salutant

The secret fate of all voting democratic House members. The arm twisting in the house rises to epic proportions not seen since the days of the infamous Tom DeLay - the Hammer.

This will be a bad bill. You are all unwitting pawns in this game. It will solve nothing. It cures nothing. It has emboldened the insurance raqueteers and Big Pharma. It has only one potential good outcome -- Rush Limbaugh has promised he will leave the country.

They have rolled Howard Dean and Dennis Kucinich. Other voices have been marginalized - Bernadine Healy, Robert Reich, Norman Goldman of Talk Left, Marcia Angell. And who will benefit from a fatally flawed passage? The rising unaffiliated -- the independent vote. This is a Greek tragedy. A Pyrrhic victory.

We are all too aware of the right wing echo chamber. A well orchestrated score promoting stereotyped rat a tat answers. How do they do this?

The same may be true in on the left as well. We hear platitudes and assertions over and over again without challenge.

1. United States ranks number 37 in the world in healthcare.

Why repeat this assertion over and over and over again? Because it makes a false point.

This figure is derived from life expectancy in the OECD (organization of economic cooperation and development) countries. The spread is narrow -- less than five years.

My friend Burton Goldberg, one of the most successful publishers of alternative medicine, constantly beseeched me on this issue -- investigate life expectancy derivations. Life expectancy is a highly complex mathematical formula that balances death with infant mortality.

2010-03-17-Lifeexpectancyequation.png

A country with a high infant mortality has a lower life expectancy rate - at birth.

For the most perplexing reasons, the United States still has a relatively high infant mortality rate. If the figures are adjusted for life expectancy after the age of 60 we rate number 5 in the world. If life expectancy figures are adjusted after the age of 80 we rate number 3 in the world.

In other words, as we advance in age, the effect of infant mortality is factored out and the real life expectancy becomes more apparent. We are not number 37 in the world.
We are in the top three. Life expectancy figures beg a revised definition.

2010-03-18-Lifeexpectancymalesatbirthand80.gif

Furthermore, life expectancy is dreadful and inadequate measure of the health of a nation. It says nothing about the quality of life. [HDI (Human Development Index) may be a better measure.] It says nothing about vibrancy, activity, mental health, social health, sexual health, or productivity. It simply means that you crossed the finish line at a particular age. No matter whether you dashed across or fell across the finish line and died.

In Anti-Aging Medicine we talk about "squaring the curve." Increased Health Span and not Life Span. A healthy life into old age with sudden death. Not a slow inexorable painful march to the end.

2. The medical system suffers from over utilization.

Not as I see it. Quite the opposite. I see scores of patients who have pleaded for years for adequate and thorough lab testing only to needlessly suffer through unnecessary dysfunctional states. This is a natural consequence of HMO and PPO medicine. Bottom-line cost-recovery medicine is a zero sum game.

3. If you do not pass this bill everybody will end up in the emergency room.

There is such an appalling lack of medical input in this entire debate. Urgent care medicine had its roots in the 1980s. Originally funded and promulgated by astute entrepreneurs and ex-emergency physicians, these facilities answered the need for acute medicine outside of an emergency facility. There are more than 8700 Urgent centers visits vs. 4600 emergency departments. [And by the way, Emergency care represents less than 3 percent of the nation's $2.1 trillion in health care expenditures while covering 120 million people a year.]

This is market-oriented medicine. A workable and elegant solution in response to a market demand for immediate care outside of exorbitant emergency rooms. They are successful and see all comers. In Atlanta alone, my good friend Jordan Rice, one of the leading entrepreneurs in the country boasts of the ability to see Medicaid and cash paying patients.

Even the original Medicare bill of a 1965 garnered 13 Republican votes in the Senate and 70 Republican votes in the House. To pull every legislative trick in the book only underscores the thinness of support for this ill-conceived rewrite of our social fabric. To be honest, Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign could have more far-reaching effects that all 2700+ pages of this legislative lunacy.

 
 
 
 
 
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04:59 AM on 03/19/2010
To be accurate, the WHO reported rankings of health care systems in 2000, which lists the U.S. in position 37. In terms of life expectancy, the U.S. is ranked 24th. If your opinion is that the health care bill should be voted down, rather than passed, readers would want to know why that would benefit them. You offer nothing. Your blanket statements about urgent care centers is made in full knowledge that 45,000 people die needless deaths due to being uninsured. There are tens of millions of people without affordable insurance, today, and this bill offers 31 million of them affordable insurance. Is it not an absurd argument to make that we should not allow those 31 million a shot at insurance coverage?
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Philip Lee Miller
11:58 AM on 03/19/2010
Life expectancy is not a measure of Health. It is a measure of existence. We should all be concerned with quality of life and then quality of care.

50,000 people a year die in auto accidents. Each year 100,000 people die and 1.5 million are harmed by routine medication errors. I know these are mind numbing statistics. But we live in an age of sensationalism.

From the Columbia Journalism Review (Mar 17, 2010):

"True enough, insurance companies could no longer turn down people with health conditions, costly or otherwise, and they can’t explicitly charge them more because they are sick. But they can certainly charge them more money. The bill allows something called age rating—that’s wonk talk for making older people pay more money. Age, in other words, becomes a proxy for health. Older people generally have more health problems."

Bitter disappointment is in store for so many who believe this will make health care more affordable.
Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
01:33 PM on 03/18/2010
So, who do we believe? What written words do we believe? What statistics do we believe? Both sides of the isle call each liars. I'll tell you who I believe, ME! I want change. I can not afford employer provided insurance and certainly not individual insurance. What we are doing now is a start. If it doesn't work, them we'll try something different. We'll keep on til we get it right. Whe can try . We CAN hope for change.
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Philip Lee Miller
02:02 AM on 03/19/2010
Yes, we can all hope. But you now need more than hope. You need results. Read all my previous blogs. What they should have done is call this insurance reform not health care reform and regulate insurance rates. That is your primary concern. Nothing in these bills regulates the industry like utilities are regulated. It only mandates your participation. It will solve nothing.

Most unfortunately what you are witnessing is political "face saving." Don't make the President look bad. You deserve more than that.