Wednesday, August 20, 2008

"The Best Healthcare System in the World"...

I'm always struck by how many of my fellow US citizens fail to see the great failings in our healthcare "system". I say "system" because we certainly do not have a cohesive, organized, orchastrated approach to providing our citizens with health care, but rather a series of niche providers, many with an entrepreneurial underpinning - we're all in it to make money! (If you've read my blog, you know that I'm a physician working as an employee of a community-owned nonprofit medical practice serving the poor, and I recognize that most physicians didn't go to med school thinking it was [only] a great way to make a living, but that we wanted to be in a helping profession. But, I would argue that the institutions of care are very much dependant upon profit, even with the best of intentions...)

I sat with a patient Monday who came in to seek care for rectal bleeding. He had met me several months ago with this problem, but couldn't find a physician willing to do a colonoscopy for less than $1400 cash. He is one of the working poor, uninsured. He has had increasing concern that something is wrong, and comes back seeking this testing again. (We are a primary care clinic, and have depended upon specialists for these sorts of tests in the past. As time has gone by, we have seen less access to specialty care for indigent patients.)

So, he tells a story that is much too common - the uninsured often delay care until disease is advanced. If, indeed, his bleeding is caused by colorectal cancer, his chances of a cure have markedly diminished by this delay.

So, do we have a great "system?" This patient clearly tells me that he doesn't think so, and wonders how his life would be different if he had access to care that other countries provide.

This report from the Commonwealth Fund shows that our "grade" as a system in the US has fallen from 67 in 2006 to 65 today, largely due to the 16% increase in the number of working-age adults who are uninsured or underinsured. That's this patient.

And, what could I say to him on Monday? Well, we'll ask our colleagues in the community and region again if they can provide this diagnostic test for you at a reduced cost to you. All we can do is ask...

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

People here in the UK complain about the NHS all the time, and to be fair I don't think we know what we have. Free health care to anyone in the UK.

I went in from a car crash a month or two back, and yes it did take me a couple of hours to be seen but I was seen and given the once over and given a ton of tablets to take for no charge, in the US you would be faced with a bill, would you not? If you didn't have health insurance.

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