Published: July 28, 2010
DrScore Founder Debunks Health Care Reform Myths and Offers Solutions to High Cost of Health Care
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The U.S. health care system is broken with spiraling costs, according to
Steve Feldman, founder of the physician rating Web site DrScore.com and
a practicing physician. In a new white paper "A Primer on Health Care
Reform," Dr. Feldman debunks common health care reform myths and offers
several solutions to spiraling costs.
"U.S. doctors are capable of extraordinary technological feats," Dr.
Feldman says. "However, there are still problems, and, even with health
care reform, costs continue to spiral out of control."
In his white paper, Dr. Feldman debunks common myths surrounding
insurers, drug companies and lawyers:
-
Myth: For profit insurers don't have enough competition and
contribute to spiraling costs. "There is plenty of competition,"
Dr. Feldman says. "Insurers' for-profit status and high executive
salaries are not the underlying cause of high health care costs either
- there are many for-profit companies with well-paid executives that
deliver great products at a reasonable cost."
-
Myth: Drug companies and the high cost of prescription medications
are the problem. "Drug companies are just like other for-profit
companies, except that most people don't pay directly for drug
products. Unlike other goods, consumers choose drugs primarily on
perceived quality and not on price."
-
Myth: Malpractice lawyers are at the heart of the problem.
"While fear of malpractice suits cause doctors headaches, malpractice
accounts for only a tiny fraction of health care costs," Dr. Feldman
says.
Dr. Feldman attributes the spiraling cost of health care to the nation's
third-party payer system whereby consumers do not pay for health care
services and medications directly. "When insurers pay the bill, we are
insulated from the cost," he says. "When buyers and sellers interact
directly, most buyers are careful to purchase products and services they
value and don't waste money on things that provide little benefit to
them. Solving the problem of ever-increasing costs has to first address
the basic principle that someone has to say 'no' to high prices and have
the incentive to pick the less expensive option."
In the white paper, Dr. Feldman makes several suggestions to create
greater price sensitivity and rein in spiraling costs, including:
-
Patients should pay for more of the cost of care themselves.
"Drug costs are high because when well-insured patients are given a
choice between a $10 drug that may work reasonably well and a $10,000
drug that might work only marginally better, a well-insured patient
chooses the $10,000 drug because the insurance company bears the
cost," Dr. Feldman says.
-
A health insurance system should cover catastrophic events and
require personal responsibility. "With automotive insurance,
insurance plans pay for catastrophic events," Dr. Feldman says. "We
pay for the little stuff, and that helps keep the cost of those
products and services low. High deductible health insurance plans
provide an affordable solution that puts needed incentives into place."
-
Greater personal responsibility on the part of patients. "If we
want patients and doctors to make health care decisions, patients need
to take more personal responsibility for the costs," Dr. Feldman says.
"A physician may suggest performing an MRI, which can cost thousands
of dollars, to rule out a very rare risk. If patients had to pay
hundreds or thousands of dollars for the test, they might still choose
to do it, but would probably think more carefully about whether it is
really necessary and would shop around to find the lowest cost
provider, the way people do when they buy other consumer goods."
For more information, or to read the complete white paper "A
Primer on Health Care Reform," visit www.drscore.com.
About DrScore.com
Founded by Steve Feldman, M.D., DrScore.com
is an interactive online survey site where patients can rate their
physicians, as well as find a physician based on their service level
preference. DrScore's mission is to improve medical care by giving
patients a forum for rating their physicians, and by giving doctors an
affordable, objective, non-intrusive means of documenting the quality of
care that they provide.
Steve Feldman, M.D. is Professor of Dermatology, Pathology & Public
Health Sciences at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. He is a
frequent lecturer and the author of two recent books, Great
Medical Care and Compartments:
How the Brightest, Best Trained, and Most Caring People Can Make
Judgments That are Completely and Utterly Wrong. Check in with
Dr. Feldman weekdays as he hosts the "Getting
Better Health Care" radio program and on his blog.

for DrScore.com
Leigh Ann McDonald Woodruff, 336-253-3203
leighann@twobpr.com
or
Laura
Burrows, 336-575-6757
laura@twobpr.com
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