Watch and beware because
this is a competitive press and public relations system at work. The first
news flurry is often about a non-creative knee-jerk bureaucratic response to a
budget cut. The bureaucrat is faced with a budget cut, in order to ultimately
avoid it, he or she proposes to eliminate a high visibility program, like
healthcare coverage for poor children, because the hue and cry of those
affected make the budgeters look for another, less vocal target. The process
is so well worn and successful, that it has a name, ?gold-watching?.
Bureaucrat financial lesson number one is when faced with a budget cut,
propose to eliminate your most important program; in other words, put your
?gold watch on the table? and the cut will never happen!
In State of Fear, a
fictional novel, Michael Creighton wrote about the role of the press in the
national debate about global warming. It is a very controversial book because
it questions global warming and a major theme is that the press has
manipulated the public with shock and dismay because the press thrives on and
profits from it! As an aside, it is the only fictional novel by Creighton that
is well documented with footnotes.
Another force is the Inertia
of Status Quo also known as ?circling of the wagons?. Every proposed
healthcare solution is physician, pharmaceutical, and hospital centric. Open
forum discussions are limited in creativity and scope. Even after seemingly
open and free debate, final decisions in favor of status quo are made in the
back room (i.e., Nevada State Senate Bill S360 that supported healthcare
freedom of practice and choice and healthcare transparency did not make it out
of committee even after vigorous and wide public support).
Watch and beware because the
healthcare system status quo and the healthcare crisis exist because many
people are making a lot of money from it! But ask yourself, ?How did we get
into this crisis?? By definition, this is a crisis in the status quo; status
quo caused the healthcare crisis; do not expect status quo to solve it.
Status quo made the field of
competition uneven and many of you practitioners have felt the impact of
?circled wagons?. For example, even though licensed, your scopes of practice
are under assault in many states. All non-physician providers feel the
constricting power of federally mandated codes that do not meet market demand
and prevent easy unencumbered billing and reimbursement.
In the 1970?s during the
Carter administration, our economy was in ?stagflation? which was financially
very uncomfortable for most Americans. Prices were going up and the economy
was not growing. In our current crisis, healthcare costs are going up and we
are not getting better services. After President Carter left office, President
Reagan and Paul Volcker, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, revved up
the supply-side economy. They did something different and classic capitalism
thrived. It is time to eliminate healthcare stagflation by doing something
different.