PRESIDENTIAL-ADDRESS - DISCOVERING THE RIGHT QUESTIONS - OUR CALL TO ACTION - WHO WILL DEFINE HEALTH-CARE RATIONING, AND HOW

Authors
Citation
Ri. Burton, PRESIDENTIAL-ADDRESS - DISCOVERING THE RIGHT QUESTIONS - OUR CALL TO ACTION - WHO WILL DEFINE HEALTH-CARE RATIONING, AND HOW, The Journal of hand surgery, 19A(2), 1994, pp. 169-180
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Orthopedics,Surgery
Journal title
ISSN journal
03635023
Volume
19A
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
169 - 180
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-5023(1994)19A:2<169:P-DTRQ>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Will the citizens and legislators of our country be accurately informe d in enough detail to decide wisely on the proposed health care plans? If we cannot afford all health care for all people, how can we make t he government use the words ''rationing health care'' and be certain t hat the rationing is done by the stakeholders (patients and providers) ? Changes in the health care system are needed and it must be improved , but does that justify totally changing a system providing the best c are in the world for 200 million people? Or should we build on and imp rove that which is good and extend it to the remaining 10-15% who are currently without insurance? Can the government guarantee good health? Does this imply we are to guarantee health, then food, and then housi ng and clothing? Or, rather, should we guarantee the right to pursue a job that allows the purchase of health care insurance, just as we hav e the right to purchase housing, food, and clothing? Can we guarantee health to our citizens, or must we guarantee the right to pursue good health? How much should we spend on health care? Is the health care in dustry a growth industry with the product a healthier population? If s o, should it be punished or encouraged? Is what we spend out of line w ith what is spent on entertainment, tobacco, and alcohol? When viewed from that perspective is health care too expensive or a bargain! Will the individual citizen accept his/her individual obligation to change habits and lifestyle? Do the people of this country really want a heal th care service with the regulatory simplicity of the tax law, the fru gality of the Pentagon, the efficiency of the Post Office, and the com passion of the IRS? To be consistent with the Vice President's efforts to downsize government should government involvement in health care b e increased or decreased? Are the proper innovations underway on the s tate level? Is federal law necessary now at all, or should Washington just monitor the emerging new programs at the regional and state level s? if England and Sweden are backing away from socialism and starting to privatize, and if major cities in our own country are acknowledging governmental failure and inability to deliver cost-effective quality service for such simple things as trash collection and maintenance of park systems, how can our federal government run health care? What can we learn from the Rochester, NY health care system and from Oregon ab out empowering the stakeholders in a system of regional control? How c an we foster the Integrated Delivery System concept? How can we empowe r the patients, the hospitals, and the physicians to make these decisi ons locally and regionally, without politician and government interfer ence and without oppressive govern ment micromanaging regulations? If health care professionals are not responsible for the societal disrupt ions of drug abuse, AIDS, crack babies, violence, alcohol, and tobacco , should the government's cost analysis charge these costs to a health care budget, or are they better charged against social program budget s? If we subtract all these costs resulting from violence, AIDS, drugs , alcohol, highway speeding, etc., and subtract the cost savings from meaningful tort reform, would our health care costs be increasing at l ess than inflation? If so, are our health care costs as adjusted for l iability, population demographics, drugs, violence, etc., growing fast er or slower than those of Canada and Germany? Which penalizes our ind ustry more in national and international sales competition-the cost of health care or product liability? Will increasing primary care cost m ore money than it saves? Who will pay for the necessary increased educ ational costs in medical school and residencies for those primary care physicians? Who will pay for the continuing medical education? Nurse clinicians and physician assistants cost less; should they fulfill a v ery simple level of primary care and triage patients to specialists fo r proper definitive care? Would it be more cost-effective and better q uality care to eliminate the generalist physician? Is the true general ist physician with today's complex medical knowledge an impossibility, like the solo violinist trying to play Beethoven's fifth all by him/h erself? Will this country look at long-term cost-benefit analysis of m edical research? Will this country provide legal relief from product l iability and for new and emerging health care research products and te chnologies? How much can society save by investing in good medical res earch and in good health care?