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Expert says Healthcare Crisis requires new
way of thinking
Newswise — To heal our ailing
healthcare system, we need to adopt a new
way of thinking as Americans.
That’s the consensus of two
articles published this week in the American
Academy of Neurology journal Neurology by
Dr. Marc Nuwer, a leading expert on national
healthcare reform.
“Americans prize individual
choice and resist limiting care. We believe
that if doctors can treat very ill patients
aggressively and keep every moment of people
in the last stages of life under medical
care, than they should,” explains Nuwer, a
professor of clinical neurology at the David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
“We choose to hold these
values. Consequently, we choose to have a
more expensive system than Europe or
Canada.”
Consider these statistics:
• The United States boasts
the world’s most expensive healthcare
system, yet only one-sixth of Americans are
insured. Medical expenditures exceed $2
trillion annually, making healthcare the
economy’s largest sector, four times bigger
than national defense.
• By 2015, the U.S.
government is projected to spend $4 trillion
on healthcare, or 20 percent of the gross
domestic product.
• An aging population will
boost spending. Half of Medicare costs
support very sick people in their last
stages of life, and experts estimate that
Medicare funds will be exhausted by 2018.
• Thirty-one percent of U.S.
healthcare funds go toward administration.
“We push a lot of paper,” says Nuwer. “We
spend twice as much as Canada, which has a
more streamlined healthcare system that
demands doctors complete less paperwork.”
• Ten percent of U.S.
expenses are spent on “defensive medicine”—
pricey tests ordered by doctors afraid of
missing anything, however unlikely. “Doctors
don’t want to be accused in court of a
delayed diagnosis, so they bend over
backwards to find something – even if it’s a
rare possibility -- in order to cover
themselves,” says Nuwer.
Reforming the U.S. health
care system with the goal of providing
universal, affordable, high-quality care
will require rethinking our overall values
and paying greater attention to care-related
expenditures, according to Nuwer.
Part of the problem, Nuwer
believes, is that doctors are oblivious to
the price tags of options they’re
prescribing for patients. He recommends
educating physicians about the costs of
care, including imaging, blood tests and
specific drugs.
“Does a fancy electric
wheelchair cost $500 or $50,000?” he asks.
“Most doctors have no clue. We need to give
physicians feedback about the dollar signs
behind their orders.”
Nuwer’s coauthors on both
articles were Dr. G.L. Barkley (Henry Ford
Hospital, Detroit); Dr. G.J. Esper (Emory
University School of Medicine, Atlanta); Dr.
P.D. Donofrio (Vanderbilt University School
of Medicine, Nashville); Dr. J.P. Szaflarski
(University of Cincinnati Academic Health
Center); and Dr. T.R. Swift (Medical College
of Georgia, Augusta).
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