In Search of Hippocrates: A Solution to the Health Care Crisis Facing America
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AT WHAT PRICE HEALTH CARE?
Over the last several decades the cost of Health Care in America has skyrocketed to the point where expenditures for medical care will soon -- in a matter of years -- bankrupt our Nation. This was not the kind of future anticipated for our democracy by the Founding Fathers who wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of The United States of America. It has therefore become necessary for us to truthfully identify and vigorously confront the real causes of the Health Care Crisis facing America and account for those massive expenditures that could cripple our economy.
"In Search of Hippocrates" is a forceful and comprehensive analysis of the history of how we got into this mess and an in depth examination of the major cost drivers accelerating the upward spiral of rising medical care expenses. This presentation gives both the American people and their elected representatives the opportunity to take a cold hard look at the facts and presents a simple, fair, and equitable solution to the problem. It is an innovative and enterprising solution that will put every American citizen in charge of how their money is spent and, at the same time, provide all of us with excellent and affordable Health Care at significantly reduced costs.
The gauntlet has been cast for us to do what is necessary to meet this challenge and to maintain our Nation's status as the most powerful industrial democracy in the world.
Mark Handwerker
Mark J. Handwerker was born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in three of the five boroughs of the Big Apple. He is a teacher and writer with more than a dozen publications, including books and articles in a number of scientific fields. He graduated with a BS from CCNY in Psychology/Biology and moved to California in 1972 were he attended UCI, graduating with a PhD in Biology in 1976. He began teaching for the Los Angeles Unified School District in 1982 until accepting a position with the Temecula Valley Unified School District in 1988, where he continues to teach young people the basic methodology and principles of science once esteemed and put into practice by the courageous Founders of this Nation. Dr. Handwerker lives with his wife, Judith, in Riverside, California. Dr. Handwerker coauthored "InSearch of Hippocrates" with Martin J. Collen. Dr. Collen was born in Oakland, California, and raised in Los Angeles. He is an internationally recognized physician who, for more than 30 years, has practiced "the art and science of medicine" according to the tenets of the Hippocratic Oath. He is the author of more than 250 original research and review publications, including books, articles, and abstracts. He graduated with a BA in Mathematics from UCLA in 1966, and attended Chicago Medical School at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, Chicago, Illinois, graduating with an MD degree in 1970. He completed a year of internship in medicine and a year of residency in General Surgery at UCI, and went on to complete an additional two years of residency in Internal Medicine and a two year Fellowship in Gastroenterology at UCLA until 1977. He was an Assistant Professor of Medicine at UCI, from 1977 to 1980, and Instructor of the Year for two successive years. He completed a research Fellowship in Gastroenterology from 1980 to 1985 at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, and was Associate Professor of Medicine and Director of Gastrointestinal Research at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, D.C., from 1985 to 1990. He moved back to California in 1990, where he was Professor of Medicine at Loma Linda University from 1990 to 1995 and Clinical Professor of Medicine from 1995 to 2005. He earned an Executive MBA in Health Care from UCI in 1999. Since 1995, he has been in private practice as a gastroenterologist in the Inland Empire. Dr. Collen lives with his wife, Roberta, and their youngest of four children...
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In Search of Hippocrates - Mark Handwerker
ON BEING A DOCTOR
Doctor (Latin, docere) simply means to teach.
Throughout their careers, physicians will learn with and teach their fellow physicians, medical students, and patients. The alleviation of suffering by physicians requires a vast skills-set involving the most advanced technical, scientific, and clinical knowledge, as well as the attributes of empathy and compassion for their fellow humans, as set forth by Hippocrates, the father of western medicine,
in 400 BCE.
The practice of medicine is dependent on the accumulation of an enormous fund of medical knowledge. Advancements in the medical field are achieved primarily through academic and clinical research, as well as anecdotal case histories and reports. In order to acquire and maintain the highest level of current knowledge and expertise, physicians must read and absorb vast quantities of current medical literature, both through attendance at conferences, searching the internet, and consulting with their fellow physicians. This lifelong commitment to learning is essential to becoming the finest physician.
Furthermore, the inquiring physician will vigorously investigate the various mysteries of nature, which have engaged scientists in all ages, in the hope of finding the causes of disease, and developing the means to prevent and cure diseases into the future. Physicians all over the world share these lofty goals.
When taking care of a patient, empathy, understanding, and sympathy are expected of the physician, for the patient is clearly more than the sum of his various symptoms, dysfunctions, and emotions. The ill patient is frightened and vulnerable, and in great need of hope and reassurance from their physician. The strength or weakness of the relationship that is formed between physician and patient will significantly help determine the ultimate outcome of the diagnosis and treatment of the patient’s presenting illness. In other words, the physician’s support of and caring for their patient, when the patient is most vulnerable, is critical to the patient’s sense of well-being throughout their diagnosis, treatment, and recovery.
At each step of the process of caring for their patient, the questions most often asked by astute physicians are Of what benefit are my various interventions to the patient?
and Will any of these tests or treatments be potentially more harmful than the condition being treated?
With adherence to the Hippocratic Oath, the physician’s most essential obligation is to do no harm.
***********************************************
In Search of Hippocrates
A Solution to
The Health Care Crisis Facing
AMERICA
by
Martin J. Collen, MD, MBA
Mark J. Handwerker, BS, PhD
SMASHWORDS EDITION
Published by
Martin J. Collen and Mark J. Handwerker
Copyright © 2012
Martin J. Collen, MD, MBA
Mark J. Handwerker, BS, PhD
Contact us at ... insearchofhippocrates@gmail.com
ISBN: 978-1475253184
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be given away or resold to others. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase a copy for them. If you are reading this ebook and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for you for your private use, then please go to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. The author sincerely appreciates your honest regard for the hard work that went into writing this book.
***********************************************
DEDICATION
This book is dedicated to the American People
whose creativity and compassion, courage
and perseverance has been -- and always shall be --
of notable merit to the world.
***********************************************
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am grateful to the following individuals for their invaluable insights, support, and patience in the preparation of this book: my wife, Roberta J. Collen, BA, MPA, MBA, and our wonderful children, Jacob F. Collen, MD, MAJ, MC, USA; Benjamin R. Collen, 2nd Lt., US Army Reserve, 3rd year Medical Student, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Anna Collen, Undergraduate, University of California, Riverside.
-- Martin --
I would like to express my love and appreciation to my wife, Judith, and my children, Margo and Aaron, without whose support and constructive criticism this book could never have been written.
-- Mark --
***********************************************
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prologue
What is Wrong With Health Care in America?
Introduction
What Can We Do About it?
Chapter 1
America, we have a problem.
Chapter 2
The Hippocratic Oath and The Essence
That Defines a Physician
Chapter 3
Good Science and Technology Are The
Foundations of Good Medicine But Not Its Soul
Chapter 4
Being A Patient Requires More
Than Just Being Patient
Chapter 5
A Brief History of Health Care and
How We Got Into This Mess
Chapter 6
The Cost-Drivers of Health Care
Chapter 7
Nothing Less Than a Revolution: A Fair and
Equitable Solution to the Health Care Crisis
Chapter 8
What Would The Founding Fathers Do?
Information Resources
About the Authors
***********************************************
LIST OF TABLES AND GRAPHS
Figure 1
Percent of Total Deaths for the
15 Leading Causes of Death for the United States
Figure 2
Body Mass Index (BMI)
Figure 3
Types of U.S. Physician Practices
Figure 4
Annual Cost of Major Diseases
Figure 5
Population of U.S. Citizens, 65
Years of Age and Older, by Size and Percent
of the Total Population Between 1900 and 2010
Figure 6
Top Seven Earning Health Insurance
Company Total Premiums Received, Medical
Benefits Paid, Medical Operating Costs, and
Percent Operating Costs
Figure 7
Top Seven Earning Health Insurance
Company Total Earned Revenues and Profits
from Invested Premiums
Figure 8
Personal Health Care Expenditures
by Source of Funds in The United States from
1998 to 2008
Figure 9
Annual Cost of Major Preventable
Diseases
Figure 10
2010 Federal Budget Expenditures
of The United States of America
Prologue
What is Wrong With Health Care in America?
Medical care in America has never been better. Americans are living longer and healthier, happier and more productive lives. They are more industrious and have more time to realize their dreams. However, with that said, it is clear that the once great service and pleasant courtesy that existed between doctors and patients has never been worse. At the same time, the cost for Health Care in America is spiraling out of control.
How do we as Americans -- with our great heritage and penchant for doing the right and honorable thing
-- implement and deliver excellent Health Care to all inhabitants of our Nation and still hold Health Care costs at bay?
The perfect pie in the sky
plan would be to place the problem in the hands of doctors and patients. A solution that would embolden, empower, and motivate Health Care suppliers (doctors) and recipients (patients) to solve medical problems while at the same time reduce Health Care costs. That plan is easier said than done. As the daily principles of civility, punctuality, and professional thoroughness put forth by doctors and insurance carriers, and the cooperation and compliance required of patients, often fall short: a condition that promotes conflict in Health Care delivery at a professional, business, and financial level.
Doctors world-wide in American Medical Schools and medical schools abroad are trained for 7-15 years in the same principles of ethics, compassion, and caring for patients. They are taught astuteness for disease and treatment as put forth by Hippocrates, the father of western medicine, in 400 BCE. This instruction goes hand-in-hand with the goal of producing physicians who can successfully practice state-of-the-art medicine and who -- because of their training, expertise, skill, and efficiency -- should be able to provide excellent medical care for all at the least possible cost. Likewise, patients are constantly being educated in the art and science of personal health maintenance with the daily bombardment of information from television, radio, internet, and newspaper sources: a voluminous Health Care literature,
that teaches us how to take better care of our self and challenges us to be more proactive when it comes to our personal health. The adoption of a take-charge attitude -- that doctors must expect of their patients -- should result in regular physician visits, compliance with directions regarding prescribed medication, and the pursuit of preventative Health Care. However, these simple practices have not evolved to the point of becoming routine because of the continuous interjection into the Health Care mix by insurance and prescription medication carriers whose bogus and redundant requests for authorizations, miscommunications, and denials of care gum up the works.
The atrocious smoke and mirror tactics of medical insurance carriers have caused more than enough chaos in our contemporary Health Care system to make it impossible for the doctor-patient relationship to develop in America in a direction that could result in the continued delivery of better care for all at reduced costs.
Now, let us ask the big question that concerns us all.
Why is it that Health Care in America, when the ability to take care of patients has never been better, is hobbled by lousy service, poor delivery, and out-of-control costs: costs that have never been higher? Why is it -- while the technology, pharmacology, and medical training of our physicians is outstanding -- that the Health Care system in America stinks.
The present Health Care system in America promotes doctor-patient polarity, which fosters divergence from the primary goals of patient care; miscommunication with regard to doctor’s instructions and patient’s appointments resulting in medical errors, and litigious concerns and fears. The reason is, in large part, due to the conflict that exists in a Health Care system controlled by insurance companies, public and private business administrators, lawyers and other non-medical participants with no skin in the game
other than financial gain. A state-of-affairs that ends up awarding minimal control of -- and authority for -- patient care to doctors and patients. In a country that prides itself on being a free enterprise,
supply and demand system,
Health Care in America has become a severely restricted system that excludes many doctors and patients from developing a more healthful doctor-patient relationship. The primary reason for all of this is that Health Care in America is delivered in a vertically integrated Health Care system, which fosters carelessness, overwork, neglect, and greed. Costs increase because of poor motivation by supplier and consumer, and because of fixed, inelastic prices set by those non-medical participants.
Essentially, a vertically integrated Health Care system
is a monopoly
that charges what it wants, sees who it wants, and does what it wants with no regard for the simple concepts of cost, excellent service, ethical responsibility, and the caring and compassionate doctor-patient relationship that would, otherwise, be present in a supply and demand system.
The 14th Century, English Franciscan friar and philosopher, William of Ockham, proposed a simple strategy for solving problems that scientists still apply today. It is the principle known as Occam’s razor. Occam’s razor states the following: All things being equal when evaluating two or more competing theories attempting to explain the same phenomenon, it is best to accept the simpler one.
Although Occam’s razor was originally used to advance our understanding of nature’s physical laws, it works just as well to help us deal with many everyday problems: no matter their level of complexity.
Therefore, the simplest solution would be to create a Health Care system in America that utilizes a horizontally integrated Health Care approach based on free enterprise: a system that would fit more comfortably into the economic fabric of the United States of America.
Introduction
What Can We Do About It?
Since the inception of America in 1776, the American People -- empowered by the ideal and desire to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
-- have brought about advancements in the field of medicine the likes of which the world has never seen. During the past two hundred years, these advancements have included the improvement and proliferation of the skills of physicians to accurately diagnose and successfully treat their patients. This pursuit of medical knowledge and technology has accelerated exponentially in the past sixty years. In lockstep with those advancements have come the rising costs of Health Care.
Today, those costs amount to nearly $3,000,000, 000,000 ($3 trillion): more than one-fifth of our gross national product. These prohibitive and insurmountable expenses have made it necessary for We The People
to rekindle our desire to act boldly in our efforts to keep and secure the American dream by reducing those costs. At the same time, we must do it without sacrificing our liberty. In order to accomplish this task, we must stop all the distracting and useless bickering and focus on the real causes of the incessant rise in Health Care expenditures.
Prior to the 1950’s, the major focus in medicine was acute injury and illness. At that time, the modes and practices of surgical techniques, the limited availability of technology and medications such as penicillin, and an inability to provide long-term care, made it practically impossible for physicians to concentrate their attention on chronic disease and, its corollary, chronic disease prevention (preventative medicine). However with the coming of the 1960’s, there was an explosion in medical research and technology. Early treatments for such diseases as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and diabetes mellitus -- collectively known as metabolic syndrome -- made it possible to curtail the development of vascular diseases of the heart and brain, kidney and other major organs. In addition, the increased use of cancer screening tests such as chest x-ray, colonoscopy and mammogram, have reduced the impact of those devastating malignant conditions. Indeed, the use of these tests have become commonplace. Furthermore, with advancements in the treatment of acute illness such as infectious disease, and the diagnosis, treatment, and probable prevention of chronic disease, we have been blessed with better health and longevity. More importantly, the outcomes achieved by these advancements have become predictable, reproducible, and repetitive. Of course, this progress has come at a huge price tag.
We should not be surprised to find, when monetarily quantifying diagnosis and treatment, that only 10 to 25 cents of every dollar spent on medical care is physician related. While 75 to 90 cents is technology driven: such as, expenditures on medical tools and equipment associated with the diagnosis of illness, surgery interventions, and the use of pharmaceuticals. Once more, it is also unfortunate that these figures suggest a more ominous turn in the way we practice medicine today. They imply that modern medical care in our country has become synonymous with technology. This reality portends the undesirable prospect that we are slowly, and perhaps altogether, phasing out
the involvement of our physicians in our medical care. Health Care without physicians
is, ironically, the way medicine is being practiced in modern America. To an enormous extent, attending physicians are being replaced by paramedical nurse practitioners and medical technicians, who perform diagnostic and treatment procedures that only physicians were once licensed to do. And, our overuse of that technology has increased the overall cost of medical care.
Today’s monolithic system of Health Care Organizations (HCO’s), ranging from PPO’s (Private Physician Organizations), HMO’s (Health Management Organizations), and the more recent IPA’s (Independent Physician Associations) tend to foster a manner of health care
that is incongruous to the delivery of quality medical care.
These corporate organizations are frequently described as vertically integrated health care systems that can best be depicted as top-down delivery medical care organizations.
What all vertically integrated organizations possess in common is their practice of serving populations of patients who must choose
health care providers from provider networks formed by insurance carriers who control those networks. And to protect the profits of those insurance carriers, HCO’s must strive to reduce costs by implementing evidence-based standards-of-care.
These standards, which set specific physician rules and guidelines
that doctors are obligated to follow, often translate to lesser degrees of direct medical care and even less accountability. Under such guidelines, physicians find it difficult to behave in ways they ought to behave and all too easy to hide their inadequacies. In many cases, they are discouraged from consulting with other qualified physicians who are not part of their network.
Economically speaking, Health Care in