Money-Driven Medicine by Maggie Mahar (New York: HarperCollins, 2006) takes a broad look at what has gone wrong in US health care. Especially good are its sections on:
- The History from the Beginning of Medicare Through the 1990s - Mahar briskly starts with the background of Medicare, providing some important insights along the way. Of particular interest was how the AMA was originally equally opposed to "socialized medicine," and "corporate medicine." The organization, however, used up most of its political capital fighting the former, and hence was unable to resist the latter. Another fascinating tale was how commercial managed care arose (or was perverted?) from the original not-for-profit model, perhaps inadvertantly fueled by the demise of federal money that only went to not-for-profit HMOs.
- For-Profit Hospitals: the National Medical Enterprises Case - Mahar gives a detailed history of the case of National Medical Enterprises, a large, for-profit hospital chain that specialized in psychiatric hospitals and substance abuse facilities in the 1990s. NME was charged not only with run of the mill offenses like over-billing, but more exotic ones like kidnapping patients. NME eventually settled with federal authorities in 1994 for $379 million, and plead guilty to a variety of charges. Of course, no one went to jail, and the CEO walked away with a golden parachute. Thus, this case looked like the perfect precursor to newer cases discussed on Health Care Renewal. More striking, and what I hadn't realized, was that NME did not disappear. It didn't either go out of business or get swallowed up by some larger company. It simply changed its name - to Tenet Health, a company which has not been featured positively on this blog, and which seemed to repeat, in a broad sense, all the mistakes it had made before under a different name.
- Medical Devices: the Johnson & Johnson Charite Spinal Disc Case - Mahar again demonstrated that those ignorant of history are doomed to repeat it by narrating the more recent case of J&Js Charite spinal disc prosthesis.
In my opinion, the book's biggest weakness is its failure to dig into the causes of what it repeatedly identified as a fundamental problem, the irrational reimbursement system. However, given all that the book does address, that is a quibble.
In summary, Money-Driven Medicine provides vital background, clearly narrated, and should provoke a lot of thought about how we got ourselves into this mess, and maybe about how to get out of it.
I'm a little puzzled by Dr. Poses' comment that the book fails to dig into the causes of the irrational reimbursement system. By focusing on money and the financial drivers of the medical system, I think it does exactly that.
ReplyDeleteMahar also discusses some of how we got here -- who knew, for instance, that a Harvard economist named William Hsiao was commissioned to devise a medical reimbursement system in 1985 and that this plays a part to this day in low cognitive reimbursements? And she tells why P4P is unlikely to help with a huge source of medical costs, overtreatment.
Mahar discusses the effect of capitalist incentives in the profit-making sector in sections like (p. 142) "S&P Doesn't Give Points for Charity Care". I really think the book is ALL ABOUT money and reimbursement, and she DOES in my opinion dig very deep.
But I almost understand how Dr. Poses could make his comment. The book is so detailed, the author knows so much, that it's easy to lose the forest for the very interesting trees and miss her big picture, even though it's there. I might not enjoy a more simplified book as much, because I too am fascinated by all this, but I think it would have more impact on readers if a lot had been left out.
I'm also reading this book and when I finish it -- soon! -- I'll blog my own take on it.