Thursday, April 24, 2014

Doctors Leaving the Practice : Lack of Control of Outcomes & Money

Doctors are not public servants but care givers to those of us in need and deserve a reward for those services. But it seems at the same time too many of us lose sight of what a doctor does is the result of years of study and thousands of dollars in debt for the education to practice medicine. Having people that are thousands o miles away dictating how they should run their practice and how much they should get paid to practice their trade is cause for stress and falling quality.

Regulation of the medical profession can be a good thing especially when our health is at stake, but when regulation is the sole purpose of government agencies  in the health care industry, then we have to step back a little and recognize how much is too much, i.e. ObamaCare.

The Affordable Care Act is not the main reason doctors are leaving the practice, it's just he defining reasons among the huge burden of regulations placed on doctors. That is too much regulation from those that do not understand the practice of medicine or don't care enough to find out. Their job, the bureaucrat believes, is to write the law, not actually make them work as intended.

Why America's Doctors Are Unhappy
Source: Daniela Drake, "How Being a Doctor Became the Most Miserable Profession," Daily Beast, April 14, 2014.

April 23, 2014

America's doctors are increasingly unhappy in their jobs, says Daniela Drake, a Board Certified Internist in private practice in Los Angeles.
A whopping 9 out of 10 doctors discourage others from joining their profession, and more and more physicians are dissatisfied with their line of work. Why?
  • Being a primary care doctor is not the highly lucrative career that it is made out to be.
  • And it is becoming increasingly difficult to have a profitable primary care practice. Processing insurance forms alone cost $58 for each patient encounter, meaning that doctors have to increase the number of patients they see in order to make their practices sustainable.
  • The result? The average face-to-face visit between doctors and patients lasts only 12 minutes.
  • And doctors are worried that the Affordable Care Act does not fix this problem -- it codifies it.
The health care industry is highly focused on patient satisfaction, but high satisfaction scores are actually correlated with worse outcomes and higher health costs. Doctors need to be able to say no, not simply acquiesce to patient demands. But with Medicare payments now linked to patient satisfaction, this problem will only increase.

Primary care doctors are also overloaded with administrative tasks and insurance company disputes. And all of these things carry with them the specter of malpractice suits. Piling more regulations and rules on top of doctors is not the answer to America's health care problems -- it will only drive away physicians and increase medical costs. People need to start worrying not just about the wellbeing of patients, but of their doctors.
 

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