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10/13/08
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January
21, 2008 In 2006, the Berger Commission (the Commission on Health Care Facilities in the 21st Century) decided that certain hospitals must close and others must merge, backing up its decrees with threats to withhold a certificate of operation. The Berger Commission was appointed by Gov. Pataki to fix problems that began in the early 1980s, when New York tried to control costs by fixing the price of every procedure performed by every hospital in the state. Rates varied, as the state awarded higher rates to financially troubled hospitals. Hospitals and workers joined together in a powerful political alliance to lobby for increased state subsidies. As a result, New York now pays for about half of all personal health care, compared to 40 percent on average in other states, writes Steven Malanga (City Journal 12/20/07). The Commission called for the elimination of about 20 percent of excess hospital and nursing-home capacity. Few closures have happened, as hospitals have gone to court to block them, but other hospitals have expanded to take advantage of the potential closure of others. So far, mergers have also failed to occur. The most recent Medicaid spending data (from 2006) shows that New York continues to hike spending, even as 22 other states have lowered outlays. With 6 percent of the U.S. population, New York accounts for 15 percent of nationwide Medicaid spending on hospitals, and 19 percent of spending on home health care (ibid.). The Commission basically appears to believe that competition between free and private entities is bad and needs to be eliminated, as by creating a system with fewer, government-controlled entities, writes Dr. Lawrence Huntoon of New York. If successful, the formation of a new nonprofit entity from Kaleida Health and Erie County Medical Center, including the University of Buffalo and a new heart and vascular center, would control 40 percent of the regional hospital market and create the regions largest nongovernment employer. It would likely result in a strike, as workers would no longer be public employees and are expected to resist the elimination of retiree health benefits for new hires. Such benefits are considered an unsustainable burden. The arranged marriage between competitors is stalled, partly for want of $250 million from a state facing a $4.3 billion budget deficit (Henry L. Davis, Buffalo News 12/5/07 and 12/29/07). Gov. Eliot Spitzer plans to help solve the problem by awarding $106 million this year for advancing adoption of electronic health records (EHRs), which are the key to [his] healthcare agenda (Joseph Conn, www.modernhealthcare.com 1/11/08) Dr. Huntoon notes that merged and consolidated hospitals would need to convert to a single EHR system in order to function. As the Berger Commission can set whatever conditions it likes for hospitals continued operation, a state-mandated EHR may not be far in the future. The stated rationale for EHRs is to improve quality and efficiency while reducing costs and errors. As Spitzer states, our best tool [for making care affordable] is to change reimbursement rates .[W]e must start paying for the right care in the right setting at the right price (Conn, ibid.). Even as physicians revenues plummet, they face a 14 percent increase in professional liability insurance premiums. And to offset the debt that has been incurred by insurance carriers, state insurance superintendent Eric Dinallo may impose, over several years, a cumulative $50,000 surcharge on every physician, and/or a $230,000 surcharge on every physician in the state-regulated high-risk Medical Malpractice Insurance Plan. The deficit has to go somewhere eventually, unless we turn lead into gold or print money, Dinallo said (E.B. Solomont, New York Sun 12/26/07). The fee might be required by law to guarantee the solvency of the states medical malpractice insurers (New York Sun 12/27/07). A Brooklyn brain surgeon now pays $267,000 a year in professional liability insurance premiums, and a Queens obstetrician, $180,490. Dr. Huntoon predicts that such a surcharge would drive many physicians out of business, lowering expenditures by making fewer physicians available to treat patients. The rate increase alone has caused a number of practices to close. In July, 215 New York obstetrician/gynecologists stopped delivering babies. New York has about 2,000 practicing obstetricians (ibid.). Additional information: *
The Medicaid Penny by Lawrence R. Huntoon, M.D., Ph.D.,
J Am Phys Surg, Spring 2005. Association
of American Physicians and Surgeons, Inc. Omnia pro aegroto The Association of American Physicians & Surgeons is a non-partisan professional association of physicians in all specialties, dedicated since 1943 to protection of the patient-physician relationship. AAPS is dues supported, and accepts no government funding, or pharmaceutical or other corporate underwriting. |
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