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And well-written. However, the # of hospitals is indirectly addressed in the article, and bear in mind that doctor and hospital fees are set by Medicare/Medicaid. If in fact profit is the issue, only an increase in patient encounters will do the trick.
I practice cost-effective medicine, and half my patients are uninsured. Some of the other docs in the area really resent it. Apparently I am blowing the curve on profit - which is of course part of my motivation. (I was poor a long time, as were my parents and their parents etc.)
Patients almost always agree with this approach and taking the time to do it right is more "time-effective" in the long run anyway. Believe me, there is no shortage of sick people - just a relative shortage of wealthy and/or well-insured sick people.
The "over-use" of tests etc is a hard call. Most doctors do NOT have any increased income from that practice, and in general it is forbidden by Medicare et al. Perhaps I am naive, and there are secret kickbacks going on all around me - but no one has ever approached me about it and I have had a high-volume practice most years. I have had offers to sign off on care, to get reimbursement for a hospital's specialty program, which I reported and which was investigated - but not prosecuted as it was a "low priority" per FBI.
A related cause is the number of doctors employed by hospitals - which is against the medical practice act in this state, but routinely ignored. This does lead to pressure on the employee (doctor) to increase revenue for the employer (hospital system).
As a doctor AND a taxpayer, the idea of "making more money" from tax-funded programs like Medicare and Medicaid is ridiculous. But those programs (and others) often have policies which worsen the problem, whatever the original intent. The private insurers do a poor job too, and aggravate it more by denying payment after the work is done. No matter what was "authorized" prior to the work BEING done.
Also Medicare in particular does not know how to use its own statistics. I once got a letter warning me I was coding for a particular level of new patient evaluation more than other docs in my specialty - which ACTUALLY showed that on average I was coding lower, therefore charging less, than other docs in my specialty! Another time, due to intentionally coding lower in a particular area, there was incorrectly analyzed statistical "evidence" that I was "over-coding" -because the lower charges were not analyzed as part of the group of codes some company got paid to analyze for Medicare.
However, this article addresses actual cost per capita, and as such I think it is reliable and valid.
BTW I am open to nomination for any national position such as surgeon general, etc, if you are listening Mr O.
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