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Interesting Times

Sound off to an organization that's on your side

by Tom Vidic, M.D. February 13, 2012 02:24 PM

Physician opinions and feedback are much in demand. We are asked hundreds of questions by our patients, our staffs, physician colleagues and friends. Email links to surveys and questionnaires arrive in abundance and urge us to respond.

But, whether you suffer from survey saturation, opinion overload, or feedback fatigue, I urge you to participate in yet one more request for information.

The Physicians Foundation is seeking input from every practicing physician in the U.S. in a survey designed to provide a “state of the union” report on our medical profession. It will examine the morale, career plans and practice metrics of today’s doctors.

What is the Physicians Foundation? It is a non-profit grant-making organization of state and county medical societies formed to help practicing physicians succeed in a changing health care system. It exists to ensure the physician perspective is presented.

The survey will be emailed in March to every practicing physician in the country. In the words of Walker Ray, M.D., vice president of The Physicians Foundation: “If the survey indicates that the medical profession itself is in jeopardy, then that urgent message must be heard both by policy makers and the public.”

Data specific to Indiana will be provided to the ISMA and communicated back to you in ISMA Reports, so I hope you will participate. We’ll be interested in your perceptions.

Guns, milk, health care? Wal-Mart ventures again into clinical services

by Tom Vidic, M.D. November 9, 2011 03:08 PM


“May you live in interesting times,” as the Chinese proverb says. And, we do.

Barely three weeks after reducing insurance coverage for part-time employees and raising premiums for full time workers, Wal-Mart announced it wants to become the “largest provider of primary healthcare services in the nation.”

According to a report on NPR and Kaiser Health News, one wag remarked, “If you get someone in the door, you can also sell them milk and a shotgun.”

At this point the retailer is requesting proposals to help them meet their goal of “managing and monitoring patients with chronic, costly health conditions like asthma, HIV, arthritis, depression and sleep apnea.” This is after Wal-Mart’s previous efforts with in-store clinics slowed as investment capital dried up. Most recently, the retailer turned to leasing space to hospital systems, but that effort, too has struggled, according to media reports.

It will be interesting to watch to see who responds to Wal-Mart’s proposal in this third effort. And will their employees get a discount on care to make up for their increased premiums or lack of insurance?

What do you think about this new attempt at providing health care?

Let’s focus on how to improve our health care delivery system

by Tom Vidic, M.D. October 20, 2011 03:29 PM


A recent study compared physician fees in the U.S. with those of physicians in dissimilar health care systems in other countries and concluded the U.S. has higher fees and higher health care costs.

Did we need another study to tell us that? We already know that health spending is about 17% of GDP.

The study totally disregards that physician services account for one-sixth of health care costs in the U.S., and this segment is growing more slowly than other segments of health care spending. Yet, across the U.S., physicians’ average incomes have not kept pace with the rising costs of managing an office.

In his article, “How Doctors Could Rescue Health Care,” published in The New York Review of Books, Arnold Relman attributes four-fifths of health care costs to hospital and nursing home care, payment for drugs and other medical products and the overhead of private insurers. Indeed, he points to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) actuarial study that found the insurance industry’s overhead and profits alone add $152 billion to the cost of care.

That said, what we need to focus on in this time of health reform is how we improve our health care delivery system. We do not have unlimited resources. We need to work together to provide the best use of current resources and to coordinate and improve care for all of our patients.

 

 

Indiana office-based physicians boost Indiana’s economy

by Brent Mohr, M.D. March 29, 2011 03:44 PM

 

We’ve always known that office-based physicians are a critical component of our healthcare system, providing treatment access for our patients. 

Now, the AMA and the ISMA have released a study showing in 2009 that office-based physicians across Indiana contributed $14.7 billion in economic activity and supported 66,409 jobs. That’s an average of 5.8 jobs per physician. 

The economic study tracked the reach of revenues generated by a business or spending program on a community. Undertaken by The Lewin Group for the AMA, the study found office-based physicians almost always contribute more to state economies than other industries including hospitals, legal, nursing home and home health.

Access to medical care improves the health of Hoosiers and adds value to their lives. This report demonstrates how office-based physicians add to the economic health of our state as well—by supporting jobs, purchasing goods and services and generating tax revenue.

Statewide, office-based physicians in Indiana contributed $9.6 billion in direct and indirect wages and benefits for all employees in 2009 and generated $581.4 million in taxes. 

As physicians, we are not often recognized as important business people in our communities. This data helps empower us as we interact with legislators, policymakers and other opinion leaders, influencing decisions on health care and the delivery of health-related services in our state.

You can view the full report on the AMA website. Please let me know what you think.

 

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