photo credit: the Economist |
Last week, pharmacy giant CVS has agreed
to purchase Aetna for an astounding $69 billion dollar sum. The company allegedly plans to reduce health spending
by developing an integrated system touted as “a new front door for health care
in America.” This merger is actually an acquisition, entailing transfer of
ownership. The central aim of an acquisition
is to increase market share, expand the scope of services provided, and improve
financial stability. CVS hit the jackpot
on all three objectives. While Wall
Street investors celebrate, many of us knowledgeable in the delivery of
healthcare services are wondering who will bear the responsibility for the patients
harmed by this experiment?
Aetna has compiled vast amounts of data from 22
million health plan members. CVS
provides pharmacy benefits management to nearly 90 million consumers. Together, with 10,000 stores and 1,100-minute
clinics already in the CVS network, this acquisition will create a ‘Walmart for
Healthcare.’ Applying bulk-purchase
business strategies to the sale of merchandise is one thing, while providing
healthcare services by ‘trial and error’ to human beings is another matter
entirely. Bypassing physicians to
deliver healthcare by protocol categorically jeopardizes patient safety.
Executives at Aetna-CVS plan to utilize pharmacists
and nurses in the evaluation of acute illness and management of chronic disease. If an insurer, drugstore, and pharmacy
benefit manager unite as one, it will usher in an era of medical “segregation,”
defined as the isolation or separation of a race, class, or group by enforced
or voluntary restriction, by barriers to social intercourse, by separate
educational facilities, or by other discriminatory means.
CVS-Aetna executives are hypothesizing these
clinicians working independently can provide “separate but equal” healthcare services
at a lower cost than physicians. There
is no scientific evidence their assertion is true or even possible. Their innovative business model will be, in a
word, an experiment on citizens of this nation.
In Brown v. The Board of Education in 1954, the Supreme Court unanimously
agreed “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal” and are in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection clause (“no state… shall
deny to any person…the equal protection of the laws.”) Why is “separate but equal” suddenly acceptable
for healthcare? It is absolutely not.
For example, recently, a mother brought in her
18-month-old with a fever, runny nose, and ear pain. On examination, he had an ear infection and was
prescribed Amoxicillin. The next
evening, he refused oral intake, and developed a rash in his mouth, hands and
feet. The mother took him to a retail
clinic after work that evening. “Minute Clinics” are convenient because they accept
walk-ins, charge by the visit, and order tests by protocol, as if ordering dessert,
a la carte in a restaurant.
At the retail clinic, a rapid flu test was negative
and a rapid streptococcal test was positive.
Using this “information” to guide diagnosis and treatment by protocol, his
“Strep Throat infection” in conjunction with a rash was assumed to be Scarlet
Fever, which was theorized to be “resistant to Amoxicillin.” The clinician prescribed
Omnicef, believing something “stronger” was required for Streptococcal bacteria.
Having regular commercial insurance, the mother returned
to my office for medical care when her son continued complaining of ear pain
despite the “stronger” antibiotic two days later and his oral lesions continued
to multiply. His exam revealed Herpangina
(a variation of the hand, foot, and mouth virus) and his eardrum was now bulging
with pus. I recommended restarting the amoxicillin
and for her son drink cool liquids until the oral lesions resolved; the child
recovered uneventfully.
Pharmacists and nurses will be thrust into independent
roles for which they are ill-equipped to handle; if using this shotgun
approach, costs will continue their upward climb. First, children under two rarely get
streptococcal throat infections, so strep tests should not be routinely
administered in this age group. Secondly,
symptoms of streptococcal infection are well-defined: sore throat, fever, swollen lymph nodes, and
abdominal pain in the absence of a runny nose and cough. A positive test in this child indicated they were
a carrier which needs no intervention. Third, scarlet fever looks nothing like
herpangina, which is a virus and resolves on its own. Fourth, Omnicef, at a cost of $150 per
course, is not a first, second, or even third-line treatment for Group A Streptococcal
infection; the first line choice is amoxicillin, costing less than $5.
If this ill-advised merger between Aetna and CVS
proceeds, millions of lives will hang in the balance. This new business model reminds
me of the scene from Dickens’ A Christmas
Carol, when Ebenezer Scrooge sees the Cratchit family mourning the loss of
Tiny Tim. Research has shown life
expectancy is directly proportional
to the ratio of primary care physicians available per 100,000 population. How many children, like Tiny Tim, will be
harmed before lawmakers and the public refuse to accept a future devoid of
primary care physicians?
Thankfully, time has a way of revealing truth. CVS considers having a medical degree to be an
“obstacle” to affordable medical care, which they plan to eliminate with “one-stop
shopping,” having pharmacists and nurses practicing medicine by protocol. A segregated, two-tiered healthcare system will
ultimately emerge as Aetna members are directed to “Minute Clinics” without
access to physicians while those on other commercial insurance plans will see the
physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant of their choice. Changing the delivery of healthcare services
by circumventing physicians to save money is equivalent to gambling with
patients’ lives. This vertical business model
should induce fear and panic in all of us – we should run for our lives, and
never look back.
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