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Your medicare dollars at work. The latest gem from medicare is that patients and families can dispute their discharge from the hospital. If they think they just aren't ready to go home, they get 48 hours to stay AFTER the doctor discharges them so medicare can review the chart and decide if they really should go home or not. And these are the clowns who want to run national healthcare...
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Rick 1984 911 coupe |
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You're 80, terminal and need a hip replacement. Sorry...
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Aside: I remember when one indignant patient exclaimed to the secretary: "I've got great insurance! I've got OHP!" I didn't say it, but thought to myself, that's like saying: "I've got a great job. It's called unemployment."
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Yes and no. You want a hip replacement (in that type of scenario) on government dime? You're SOL. You want a hip replacement and you've got private funds or private insurance to cover it? Then you're in business.
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1987 Venetian Blue (looks like grey) 930 Coupe 1990 Black 964 C2 Targa |
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I remember when they first started talking about this in Oregon. There were people protesting in front of the hospital in Salem, Oregon. I recall when later, that OHP deal published their list, ranking diagnoses, at the end of the list was baby born without a brain.
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He is actually a terrific guy. Very talented surgeon. We're lucky to have him in our medical community. He is pretty east coast, though.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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Yes, I would have had it completely the opposite way.
The woman had terminal cancer. She was going to die from it. Putting in a pacemaker to extend her life of being in pain and bedbound not only makes no sense from a money perspective, it makes no sense from an ethical perspective. Unfortunately, our medical system is driven by the patient/family. If the family wants everything done, despite the fact the doctors disagree, then everything gets done. This woman should have been made comfortable and allowed to die. Instead we subjected her to an invasive procedure and a 3 day ICU stay with multiple blood tests and such. Get it now?
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Rick 1984 911 coupe |
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Moses and the other docs here have explained, I think, that the large majority of a person's lifetime healthcare expense comes in the last year of life.
Can you docs think of some reasonable and workable restrictions that Medicare can put on treatment to avoid unwarranted healthcare procedures in the last year of life? Something like no (or only partial) payment for drugs costing more than X if clinical trials shows less than Y months' increase in life expectancy, no (or only partial) reimbursement for procedures costing more than X if the person is not expected to live more than Y months, etc? (Assuming the patient would be free to buy private insurance with no such restrictions, or to pay out of pocket.) I'm thinking of rules that would be clear enough that all the discretion, and all the burden, wouldn't be dumped on the shoulders of the doctor on the spot who is facing the patient and family. Of course, there is the issue of whether something like this could be sold to the voters. But surely the first issue is whether workable rules can be written in the first place.
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There's no easy/quick fix to this. The problem is very complex and made worse by the fact that there's so much greed and money tied up in it now - there used to be a time when doctors simply did what they could in order to help people. Now big business has gotten into the mix with its predictable greed, lawyers, procedures, bean counters and other baggage, which has complicated things enormously.
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The er/primary care thing is a wild cultural issue. One kid has the flu, so they go to the er, while they are there... whole family gets checked out for various 'ailments'. |
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A 5-10% co-pay on all expenses including hospital that is recoverable from the estate. Suddenly, grandma will just need to be made comfortable.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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Secondly, yes you do misunderstand the mission of doctors and of the healthcare system in general. It is NOT the job of the doctor to prolong life at any cost. If a patient has a terminal condition and invasive and/or life saving procedures will neither improve their quality of life nor reverse that terminal condition, then those measures should be withheld and the patient should be kept comfortable and allowed to expire peacefully. To do otherwise simply prolongs suffering without benefitting the patient in any way. Take the example I cited. This patient had metastatic, untreatable cancer. She was weak and bedbound at home. Her mental status was minimal at best. Family brings her into the ER with a pulse of 20. Instead of being kept comfortable and allowed to die in a few hours, she is admitted to the ICU, a pacemaker is placed, she goes into progressive kidney failure (which was already started when she came in), is intubated and put on a ventilator at family's insistence and finally dies 3 days later. What did we accomplish besides prolonging her suffering? Is prolonging her suffering the right thing to do in your opinion? Is it not more humane to allow her to pass peacefully without tubes coming out of every orifice? This is basic medical ethics, people who believe that doctors exist to prolong life at any cost are exactly the reason why we have the situations detailed in this thread.
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Rick 1984 911 coupe Last edited by Nathans_Dad; 05-13-2009 at 08:56 AM.. |
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Would it work to give the hospital's senior doctors the power to withhold treatment if they determine it is not cost-effective or appropriate (maybe these are two different things), and immunize them from liability for that decision? In other words, if the doctor(s) have the power to decide, will their decisions eliminate most of this overtreatment that you docs are identifying? Or will it also be necessary to change the doctor/hospital's financial incentives, so that there is not an economic incentive to overtreat grandma? (am not saying there is one, maybe the doctor/hospital is not financially rewarded for the pointless $80k pacemaker, I don't know).
I guess what I am trying to understand is if the overtreatment problem in this type of situation can be controlled by doctors, or if doctors are part of the problem. |
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This brings my 87 yr. old grandmother to mind. For at least the last 12 yrs., she's been in and out of the hospital on a regular basis, had a pacemaker implanted, this or that bypass, constant pains, weaknesses, then it all goes away. Must cost a fortune. But she still leads a very active life, still drives, goes to her bridge club, lunch with old lady friends, etc. Looking at her age and medical history, it might seem crazy to keep doing costly procedures on her. But she's had 12 more years of a pretty active life since all this started.
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My 98 y/o grandfather, who was quite healthy for his age but mentally not so much, went to the hospital w/ some sort of respiratory condition, developed pneumonia, deteriorated and was comatose in 3 days. I flew back to NJ, met with aunts and uncles and cousins at hospital. We listened to the options (but no recommendation) given us by the doctor, then decided not to prolong his life. He had lived for 99 years by Chinese measurement, his last conscious days were with all his family, and we felt his chances of leaving the hospital were very low and his chances of enjoying his life at home again were almost nil. And he'd accomplished his goal of living to 100, because a year previous we'd thrown a big party and told him it was his 100th.
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What a wonderful thing to do!
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Jyl, there are medical ethics committees at every hospital. Unfortunately their hands are tied, mainly due to concerns over lawsuits in the event care is withheld. Hospitals and hospital systems are prime targets for lawyers since multi-million dollar judgements are possible. This causes hospitals to be completely averse to involving themselves in any way that might cause a conflict with a family. I have had several cases in the last year in which I have called in the medical ethics committee over concerns about futile care. In each case the ethics committee sat on their hands, mainly because the patient is usually obviously going to die within a few days or a week anyway and it is easier (and less risky) for the hospital to just let the family continue on the course and allow the patient to eventually die rather than risk upsetting the family by doing the right thing for the patient.
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