Lets get us some of that REform!

'Let's get us some of that REform!'

I must admit I’m a little weary of the entire debate on health-care reform.  But something still haunts me.  And that something is accountability.  Of course, over the almost twenty years that I have borne the title ‘MD,’ I’ve learned a few things about accountability.

purchase zithromax
lasix prescription

purchase diflucan
buy lasix
cheap diflucan
lasix no prescription
buy zithromax
zithromax canada
zithromax uk
diflucan online
where lasix
buy lasix
purchase zithromax
lasix online
zithromax online
get diflucan
order diflucan
order diflucan
zithromax online
lasix prescription
buy lasix
buy lasix
order lasix
diflucan canada
buy lasix
lasix no rx
lasix online
get zithromax
where zithromax
diflucan no rx

buy lasix
order diflucan
diflucan canada
zithromax uk
lasix no rx
cheap lasix
cheap diflucan
purchase zithromax
lasix buy
lasix no prescription
diflucan no rx
cheap diflucan
cheap zithromax
lasix prescription
diflucan canada
zithromax no prescription
purchase lasix
where zithromax
lasix online
zithromax online
where lasix
cheap zithromax
buy zithromax
diflucan online
order diflucan
cheap diflucan
order zithromax
diflucan online
where lasix
purchase lasix
buy diflucan
purchase zithromax
order zithromax
zithromax online
zithromax cheap
cheap zithromax
cheap zithromax
purchase lasix
get lasix
get lasix
diflucan online
cheap diflucan
purchase lasix
zithromax online
diflucan online
get zithromax
purchase zithromax
cheap zithromax
zithromax buy
diflucan buy
cheap diflucan
purchase zithromax
zithromax online
diflucan online
zithromax cheap
buy diflucan
get diflucan
diflucan prescription
zithromax no rx
zithromax prescription
lasix cheap
lasix uk
diflucan cheap
diflucan prescription
diflucan online
buy zithromax
purchase diflucan
order diflucan
lasix online
purchase lasix
diflucan prescription
diflucan prescription
cheap zithromax
lasix buy
lasix online
where lasix
get lasix
order lasix
diflucan online
diflucan online
order zithromax
purchase zithromax
where lasix
diflucan online
buy lasix
zithromax online
order diflucan
purchase lasix
order zithromax
buy diflucan

I understand that, almost without fail, the buck stops with me.  The nursing home director knows the elderly lady wasn’t seriously hurt in that fall, but he sends her to the ER ‘just to check things out.’  That is, just to make sure that if a problem does crop up, someone else is accountable for finding it.

The surgeon wants me to see the post-op patient because she’s busy, and it’s just too risky to make a decision by phone.

The private physician admitting the very ill pneumonia patient has that patient stop in the ER, ‘just so someone else can lay eyes on them.’  In other words, to share the blame for complications.

The patient with chest pain in the cardiologist’s office is sent to the ER ‘to stabilize him before he goes to the ICU.’  To wit, so that the cardiologist needn’t leave the office to see the potentially sick person who could easily go to the ICU.

The sick child is  sent from the pediatrician’s office, so that the emergency physician can arrange the transfer to the teaching center, and so that the icky parts of pediatrics, like frightening resuscitations, can be kept at arm’s length.  So that someone else can be accountable for that part.

I understand accountability.  We all try to share it when we can.  I consult people when I’m uncertain.  But the fact is, everyone wants someone else to bear accountability.  As someone said to me in medical school, ‘Focus the Glory, Diffuse the Blame!’

Unfortunately, accountability in person isn’t very popular.  However, anyone in America can feel good about themselves simply by saying, ‘well, I don’t know, but if I were you I’d go to the ER!’  They feel good, but I’m still the one making decisions and signing forms.

Fair enough.  I figure, that’s one of the things I went to school to be.  Accountable!  Physicians, particularly young ones, should learn to embrace it and bear it up like real men and women.  I guess at least half of my income is simply for being willing to take the blame as well as the praise.

But when this health-care reform package passes, and if it does to the economy and to medical practice what many of us fear, will anyone be accountable?  Will they step up and say, ‘yep, that was me!  Sorry, I’ll try to fix it!’  It’s unlikely.  That’s not how politics are conducted.

I suspect we’ll see what we always see in politics.  The positive feedback loop.  More money spent, more money fails to help the problem, thus, more money must be spent.  If money does appear to help (whether or not it actually does), also spend more money.  We’ll see the same with climate change.  Increase taxes and fees and clamp down on industry.  If it seems to work, apply more harshly.  If it doesn’t, apply more harshly.

Imagine the same in medicine.  The clot buster didn’t help the stroke?  Well, heck, give more of it!  We’ll teach that stroke!  The antibiotic gave you diarrhea and didn’t make the urinary tract infection better?  Here’s a bit of the ‘hair of the dog.’  More of the same is always better!

And I wonder, will the physicians who pushed so hard for this package suddenly be willing to see more uninsured or under-insured patients?  Will they open themselves to new Medicare patients, despite cuts?  Will they extend their hours to allow more access to primary care?  Will they hire more partners and dilute their income, to improve everyone’s health?  Doubtful.  But they may seek more sweeping health-care reforms!

Maybe it will work!  Maybe health-care will all be vastly better!  Although I disagree with the entire monstrosity, I hope no one is hurt by it.  I even understand the motivations of those who, in good faith, just want to help the downtrodden.

All I want is for someone to be willing to take the blame if it all goes to pieces.

All I want is for others to share in the accountability.  The same way I have to when I make a decision…and find out the next morning it was the wrong one.

I don’t think that’s asking too much, do you?

Edwin

0 0 votes
Article Rating