Sean
MacStiofain said “most revolutions are caused… by the stupidity and brutality
of governments.” Regulation without legitimacy, predictability and fairness always
leads to backlash instead of compliance.
If something is not done to stop MACRA implementation, more physicians
will opt-out of Medicare and Medicaid than is fathomable. Once DRexit begins, there will be no turning
back.
The
Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) is destructive to the
physician patient relationship because it prevents physicians from prioritizing
patient care. MACRA supporters like to point
out this legislation was passed with bipartisan support; in reality, it was
passed simultaneously with repeal of the Sustainable Growth Rate Formula. The SGR
was holding billions hostage and lawmakers had a gun to their head, leaving
them no other choice. There is nothing bipartisan about that.
The
Sustainable Growth Rate Formula was enacted through the Balanced Budget Act of
1997 and was designed by lawmakers to control Medicare expenditures. The SGR
formula limited the annual increase in cost per Medicare beneficiary to the
growth of the national economy. Under
the SGR formula, if overall physician costs exceeded target expenditures, a reduction
in payments would be triggered.
Expenditures continued to climb, so Congress stepped in 17 times with
short-term legislation (referred to as “doc fix”) to avert the payment
reduction since 2002.
These
patches kept increases in physician payments below inflation which ultimately
resulted in a huge discrepancy between the actual level of Medicare
physician-related spending and the target in the SGR formula. In 2015, if
Congress did not act by March 31, payments to Medicare physicians would have
been reduced by 21.2 percent.
Enter
stage left, MACRA, known as the Permanent Doc Fix, which was passed concurrently
with the Sustainable Growth Rate Formula repeal legislation. This was the original repeal and replace. MACRA established yet another new (and
untested) method by which to pay doctors. MACRA is the largest scale reform on the
American health care system since the Affordable Care Act in 2010 and the jury
is still out how great (or not) that system is working for the American
people.
Under
MACRA, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services was tasked
with implementation of a Merit Based Incentive (MIP) program which consolidated
three useless incentive programs into one big colossal unworkable program for
eligible physicians everywhere. The legislation also allows for Advanced
Alternative Payment Models (APM), which shockingly, are not actually saving
money on care.
Even
better, MACRA related regulations also addressed incentives for use of health
IT by physicians and other care providers.
Similar in scope to the Meaningful Use (aka Meaningless Abuse) Program
except, now on steroids. The Government
Accountability Office in partnership with the DHHS have been assisting with the
implementation of electronic health records (EHR) nationwide, while at the same
time comparing and selecting programs for providers.
So
to recap, Congress has been working on a “doc fix” system in conjunction with
every lobby possible on the planet EXCEPT that of Practicing Physicians since
1997. They “repealed and replaced” SGR (first
disaster) with the atrocity known as MACRA, which will end in a mass DRexit. They are rapidly moving ahead with
non-evidence based payment methods intended to decrease costs, yet are highly
unlikely to be successful based on recent studies. On top of all that, they are selecting computer
systems for physicians which incentivize computer data entry while discouraging
the placement of hands on patients. Did
I miss anything?
Recent
studies show physicians spend twice as much time on technology than we do with
patients. Maybe with full MACRA
implementation, we can be retrained as data entry clerks to treat conditions
instead of people. Imagine if we just
called in prescriptions for hypertension, diabetes, or even started
chemotherapy regimens without seeing patients at all? MACRA pays us more for “doing less,” so now
we can practice “drive-by medicine.” I
wonder if health outcomes will improve and mortality will be lower when
compared with “drive-by shootings.”
Controlling
costs involves four major pillars of change to our healthcare system, about
which I have been writing for some time.
Listening to a talk given recently by the executive director for the
Association of Independent Doctors, Marni Jameson, helped focus the strategy. The first cost control pillar is to educate
patients and lawmakers as to how consolidations of hospitals and medical
practices raise costs, reduce quality, decrease access, eliminate jobs, and
result in unnecessary testing and procedures. The second pillar is to increase
price transparency, so consumers can compare costs and choose the most
affordable option. The third pillar is eliminating the onerous ‘facility fee’ to
bring payments of hospital-employed doctors in line with the lower payments to
independent doctors for the same care. The
final pillar is ensuring hospital profits are taxed equally across-the-board,
regardless of whether they are non-profit or for profit institutions.
In
the next four posts, I will cover these issues in more detail as each deserves
its own separate discussion. It will be
an interesting mathematical exercise to calculate the forecasted cost savings
of these four interventions alone. If
you are reading this post, you have skin in the healthcare game, whether as physicians,
lawmakers, economists, hospital administrators, government, or IT experts alike. As I have said before, we will ALL be
patients eventually.
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