Posted on 07/30/2009 3:34:15 AM PDT by Man50D
The House health-care reform bill proposes to decrease hospital visits by establishing a medical home pilot program for elderly and disabled Americans.
Such a medical home would not require a physician to be on the staff, and therefore could be run solely by nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Medical homes also would practice evidence-based medicine, which advocates only the use of medical treatments that are supported by effectiveness research.
But physicians groups say the legislation could lead to restrictions on which treatments may be used for certain conditions, despite the fact that some patients might require a unique or unconventional approach. It also may lead to dumping Medicare/Medicaid patients in facilities that are not required to have physicians on staff.
The Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI) expressed its concerns in a report that explains why statistical evidence does not always reflect reality of effective medicine.
One size fits all rarely does, the report said. From clothes to shoes to hats, few people find that items carrying that label work with their individual bodies. So why do we entrust the health of our bodies -- one of the most important assets we have -- to a one-size-fits-all mentality?
According to CMPI and individual physicians, however, this one-size-fits-all mentality is just what congressional health-care reform suggests.
Unfortunately, policies being advanced under the guise of evidence-based medicine (EBM) could do just that, the CMPI report said. The idea behind EBM, empowering physicians with sound evidence to incorporate into their treatment decisions for individual patients, is a good one.
Unfortunately, EBM now is being distorted by government bureaucrats and HMOs in ways that impose top-down, one-size-fits-all restrictions on patients and their healthcare providers.
Rather than enforcing a formulaic approach to medicine based on statistical and clinical research, CMPI says health-care reform should preserve physicians autonomy to use the research in conjunction with their experience and knowledge of the patient.
It is so critically important for the physician to maintain his or her ability to combine study findings with their expertise and knowledge of the individual in order to make the optimal treatment decisions. Evidence-based medicine in its present, distorted form emphasizes just one aspect of the clinical pie over all the others, the report found.
Kathryn Serkes of the American Association for Physicians and Surgeons echoed the observation.
There is no typical patient, Serkes told CNSNews.com. Every patient is different from a medical perspective. If we have evidence-based medicine that basically says well, we start at treatment one, which leads you to treatment two, to treatment three to treatment four. In practice, that doesnt work for the patient. Thats the art part of the art and science of medicine. Thats what we still need doctors to do, is to figure out whats right for the patient.
In the long run, according to CMPI, evidence-based medicine may not even cut costs as Congress suggests it would.
Evidence-based medicine may provide transitory savings in the short term, but the same patient who takes the cheapest available statin today may very well be the patient costing you -- the taxpayer, the policymaker, the thought-leader, the sister, the spouse -- big bucks when that patient ends up in the hospital because of improperly treated cardiovascular disease, .
The repercussions of choosing short-term thinking over long-term results and cost-based medicine over patient-based are pernicious to both the public purse and the public health, the CMPI report said.
Provisions for the medical home pilot program are an amendment to the Social Security Act, which governs the administration of Medicare and Medicaid services.
The medical home is an approach to medical practice that facilitates partnerships between patients and physicians, according to the proposed bill.
The pilot program targets Medicare beneficiaries who have a high medical risk score or who require regular monitoring, advising or treatment. This currently applies to more than 22 million Americans, according to Kaiser Family Foundation statistics.
At least $1.5 billion would be redirected from the Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund to fund the medical homes, in addition to funds otherwise available, according to the bill.
The Senate health-care reform bill also includes provisions for medical homes, although to lesser detail than the House bill.
If this portion of the legislation passes through Congress, medical homes will be part of the greater health-care reform experiment known as "the public (health insurance) option."
According to the committee, the provisions for medical homes will make the public option a stronger competitor against private health insurance companies.
The public health insurance option will be empowered to implement innovative delivery reform initiatives so that it is a nimble purchaser of health care and gets more value for each health care dollar, the House Committee on Energy and Commerces summary says about the bill.
Medical homes are tied to comparative effectivness research via something called evidence-based medicine.
It will expand upon the experiments put forth in Medicare and be provided the flexibility to implement value-based purchasing, accountable care organizations, medical homes, and bundled payments. These features will ensure the public option is a leader in efficient delivery of quality care, spurring competition with private plans, the committees summary also said.
A statement by the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) said that the effectiveness of the medical home model should be carefully evaluated before applying the model far and wide.
There should be more research to demonstrate the benefits and continuing costs associated with implementation of the full (patient-centered medical home) model, the ACEP statement said.
Demonstration projects being conducted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services must be carefully evaluated. There should be proven value in healthcare outcomes for patients and reduced costs to the healthcare system before there is widespread implementation of this model.
The proposal, meanwhile, specifically allows for facilities to be run by staff who do not possess medical degrees including nurses and nurse practitioners.
Kind of like a kubler ross death house?
Hey, if he decides on that one he can kill two birds with one stone: he can honor his childhood SE-asian homeland and knock off all our grannies with one Executive Order!
He did promise to make government more efficient! ;-)
You know, if that wasn’t so close to the bloody truth, it would be funny.
Like the two Jews waiting their turn to walk into the Nazi gas ovens, one says “let’s look on the bright side” and the other one says “BRIGHT side? what BRIGHT side? We’re about to DIE!” and the first Jew says “we won’t have to eat that awful slop they’ve been serving us anymore!”
The list, ping
The SEIU thugs may be the scariest union today.
But they don't and many families do not have the resources (money and time and a super human abundance of patience) for grownups who need partial or complete help in feeding themselves, bathing themselves, toileting themselves, ambulating, putting their clothes on, taking the medicine correctly, and, in the case of dementia, making sure they don't wander off, light a fire, flood the house, or pee or poop on the floor and then play in it. (Yes, they will play in poop like infants. And once it dries, you need a paint scraper to get it off furniture and floors.)
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Please add “Pain Killers Will Set You Free”.
They have a scale that they use to be able to evaluate who can live at their homes. Once your loved ones goes outside of their criteria, they can't care for them anymore. It may have to do with State laws and regulations and what kind of liability they want to be saddled with.
Also, no medicaid can be used for payment at a personal care home. The resident pays from his or her savings and assets. That also determines whether they can live there or not. No savings, then they go to a nursing home.
They are following the Nazi Socialist plan like Hitler did. Establish “care centers” for the undesirables among us and then the “patients” all “die” of “natural causes” within a year of commitment. They’re trying to tear up the constitution and take out all who might object one way or the other.
On page 425 it says in black and white that EVERYONE on Social Security, (will include all Senior Citizens and SSI people) will go to MANDATORY counseling every 5 years to learn and to choose from ways to end your suffering (and your life). Health care will be denied based on age. 500 Billion will be cut from Seniors healthcare. The only way for that to happen is to drastically cut health care, the oldest and the sickest will be cut first. Paying for your own care will not be an option.
Soylent Green?
Do they at least play Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony?
I understand what you are saying regarding patience and resources. But if Medicaid were to cover home care, as you suggest, I suspect many would opt for home care care for their older family members at least initially.
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