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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Health
Issues
Study finds that US doctors must deceive insurers to provide
quality health care
By Helen Halyard
18 April 2000
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In a new survey published in the April 12 issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association ( JAMA), 39
percent of doctors questioned admitted to stretching the truth
and even lying to administer treatment needed by patients.
The reportPhysician Manipulation of Reimbursement
Rules for PatientsBetween a Rock and Hard Placeis
based on a random survey mailed to 1,124 practicing physicians
in 1998. The objective of the survey was to determine the frequency
with which physicians manipulate reimbursement rules and to examine
the underlying reasons they do so.
The answers given by the 720 doctors who responded point to
the increasing difficulties a large number of American families
have in obtaining quality health care. While 47 million Americans
have no medical coverage at all, the report reveals that even
those who are insured do not receive proper care. The lead author
of the study, Dr. Matthew Wynia, assistant vice-president of the
Institute of Ethics, said this is the first time such statistics
have been published.
Doctors who responded to the survey did so anonymously, with
a large percentage answering yes when asked if they had sometimes,
often or very often exaggerated the severity
of a patient's condition, changed a patient's official billing
diagnosis or reported signs or symptoms that a patient did not
actually have to help secure coverage for needed treatment or
services.
Known as gaming the system, more than half of the
doctors surveyed said they had used these tactics more often now
than five years ago because of the growing number of managed health
care companies that severely limit the type of treatment a patient
can receive in order to increase their revenues. A quarter of
the doctors servicing state-funded Medicaid patients said they
were forced to use such measures in order to provide badly needed
care.
Furthermore, doctors expressed their frustration over the limitations
imposed on their ability to provide needed care, and explained
that they saw their actions as a form of patient advocacy and
professional obligation. The report points out that many doctors
are engaging in such practices despite a well-publicized crackdown
on insurance fraud and abuse.
Many doctors explained that they are simply turning the tables
on insurance companies that engage in gaming the patient.
Managed care providers routinely deny coverage requested by doctors,
but eventually approve the service upon appeal, knowing that time
and other constraints will prevent a number of appeals from being
pursued.
The JAMA survey observes, The root causes of this
problem are tensions that are structural, largely unavoidable,
and likely to become increasingly intense. These tensions reflect
an underlying uncertainty as to whether health care is best viewed
in a market-based contractual model or a profession-based fiduciary
model, when both models have ethical and legal strengths.... American
society is strongly leaning toward a market-oriented emphasis
on value for money and free choice in health care.
What is exposed by the report is a health care system in America
that is becoming more and more divided between those who are able
to pay for decent care and those who are forced to rely on managed
care plans that do not serve their medical needs.
For the full text of the JAMA report see:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v283n14/full/joc91752.htm
See Also:
Clinton panel rejects call
for mandatory reporting of hospital errors
[26 January 2000]
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