Slashing doc pay
By SCOTT GOTTLIEB
Last Updated: 12:18 AM, October 25, 2011
A key government panel
voted this month to whack what Medicare pays most doctors to treat patients.
It’s an important step on the path to ObamaCare -- because the only way to make
European-style health entitlements work in America is to pay US doctors lower
European wages.
This is going to hurt
doctors -- and hit patients even harder, as American physicians scale down
their medical practices to adapt to the lower pay rates. The vote by the
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission involves slashing what the program for
older Americans pays medical specialists -- then freezing these lower rates for
years.
Everyone except primary-care docs would see payments for their services cut by 5.9 percent a year for three years (totalling a 16.7 percent cut in income), followed by a seven-year freeze at the reduced levels. Primary-care providers would have their reimbursement rates frozen at today’s pay levels for the whole decade. All this is part of a larger effort to save Medicare upward of $300 billion over 10 years.
This is no hollow
threat: ObamaCare set up an agency called the Independent Payment Advisory
Committee to fast-track these kinds of proposals into law by sidestepping
Congress.
We doctors have mostly
ourselves to blame for this mess. Hoping to preserve some organized power for
MDs, groups like the American Medical Association made two Faustian bargains
with Washington on behalf of physician members.
The first evolved in the
late 1990s. In a deal to cut the deficit, the Clinton administration joined
with a Republican Congress to cap total payments to doctors and implemented a
system of price controls for their services. The AMA signed on to the scheme in
part because Washington agreed to leave it to an AMA-run process to decide how
the shrinking pie of money Washington spent would be carved up between
different medical specialties.
The second Faustian deal
was ObamaCare. Doctors’ Washington lobbyists overlooked the fact that ObamaCare
would inevitably pay something close to (far below market) Medicaid rates for
medical services. Nor did they fathom how much would need to be cut from
physicians to pay for the plan’s costly mandates.
American doctors do earn
much more than their European counterparts -- if US salaries aren’t adjusted
for the different wealth of nations. Some of the best data on these pay
differences appear in the September issue of the journal Health Affairs, in a
study done by one of the administration’s assistant health secretaries before
she took her government job.
Annual pre-tax income
(net of practice expenses) for primary-care doctors was $95,000 in France in
2008, compared to $186,000 in the United States. For specialists, the
disparities were wider -- with orthopedic surgeons averaging $154,000 in France
and $208,000 in Canada compared to $442,000 in America.
The differences reflect
lower rates for individual services. In France, for one, private insurance pays
doctors about a third of what US physicians earn for office visits -- $34 in
France vs. $133 in America for a primary-care doctor. Even public programs like
Medicare pay twice what similar French programs offer.
In a view echoed around
the Obama administration, the analysis concludes that these bigger salaries
“were the main drivers of higher US spending” on health care.
To bring European
healthcare to America, these price differences always had to be sanded away.
The only way ObamaCare is going to bring our health benefits and spending to
European levels is to also adapt European payment rates.
As a result, US doctors
will adjust their business models in ways that won’t be good for patients. Some
with busy practices in big cities will opt out of the government insurance
systems entirely, and go cash-only. Others will retire early. But most doctors
won’t have these opportunities available to them. So they’ll need to make up in
volume what they lose in margin for their individual medical services. This
will mostly mean hiring more nonphysician providers such as nurse practitioners
to see most patients. Doctors will become managers of large clinical staffs,
leaving more direct care to less-expensive providers.
Patients will lose
access to physicians -- and spend more time waiting in busier offices.
As for doctors, there’s
still some good news. With baby boomers aging, physicians will have plenty of
business coming through their office doors. Of course, under ObamaCare, they
aren’t going to get paid much for seeing most of these patients.
Scott Gottlieb, a
physician and American Enterprise Institute resident fellow, was a senior
official at the Centers from Medicare and Medicaid Services.
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