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14 Apr 2009 06:06 pm
Why Healthcare Costs So Much, Ctd.
A reader writes:
Your reader's response to Megan got a lot closer to the core of the
problem with healthcare costs. I am a physician in an emergency room
in New York City, and every day I see tons of cash needlessly flying
out the door due to "the Burger King factor." American patients often
come to the ER with very minor complaints - back pain for which they
have not even tried tylenol, nasal congestion for two days, itchy
mosquito bites, and so forth. All of them expect something from you,
quickly, for their trouble - and it must meet their preconceptions or
they will accuse you of ripping them off.
Many of them become virtually incandescent with anger if they aren't
given some kind of medical test that they (or one of their friends)
thinks is a good idea, but they don't really need. They insult you,
they threaten you, they loudly announce that they're going to call
their lawyer or the hospital administrator, etc. Sometimes we stand up
to them, and sometimes we're too exhausted to fight. Sometimes it's
just easier to get the x-ray on the patient with back pain rather than
take the abuse and argue with them for 40 minutes and then have them
send an angry letter to the review board. Others are simply beyond
the pale and can't put anyone else ahead of themselves. Some are
incensed that I have to see a critically ill patient before I see them,
because "I got here first." People will literally interrupt cpr to
scream that they want a sandwich or something to eat NOW. People want
a blood test, a cat scan, an EKG, anything in exchange for their time.
People will quote TV shows as medical authorities. All of us have
our favorite 'placebo' methods to try and gratify these patients, from
ultrasounding their skulls (safe, dramatic, shows nothing but costs
nothing) to pointing an ultraviolet flashlight into their maalox before
they drink it. It's our version of wearing a wooden mask and shaking
a rattle - we hate it, and patients love it.
The amazing thing is that when needless tests come back negative, the
patient is completely satisfied. There is never a sense of regret, or
how much money they just wasted, but rather one of accomplishment, even
if they still have the same problem they walked in with.
Ultimately, the American sense of entitlement, so long appeased and
encouraged by our commercial culture, is what is poisoning the
healthcare system. Doctors have played into it and are just as guilty
for caving in when they know better, or billing for procedures a
patient doesn't really need. We have played along and made medical
glitz into the standard of care,
feeding and feeding off of a narcissism that cannot be satisfied. It
is a uniquely American problem, which is why the solutions that other
nations have reached will not work as well for us.
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