All doctors take the Hippocratic oath in medical school to uphold values of providing best medical care and safeguarding the interests of their patients. Though the medical education prepares these doctors to make complex medical decisions and strive to do best for their patients, the path does not teach any economics of healthcare. The result is that all physicians, myself included, come out of our training without having any understanding of the costs of our actions. Our actions at times put our patients in harm’s way by prescribing treatments that either cause undue financial hardship or create barriers that do not allow our patients to realize healing for their conditions.
It is therefore imperative that doctors and healthcare providers in general must understand the inflated costs that our patients have to deal with. All, if not overwhelming majority of doctors want to do what is best...that many times includes coming up with treatment options and therapies that are financially feasible.
Primary care physicians, the bulwark of good healthcare and guardians of community health only make up 51% of the US practicing physicians...this number needs to be closer to 80-85% to reach effective population wellness as a community. But why would a medical student elect to be a primary care physician and take a pay cut because so much of what they do, counseling, coordination of care, etc. is not even paid properly for their time...so these medical students do what anyone would do, they join specialties which are more lucrative.
So one of several problems with doctors is that there aren’t enough of them who are primary care physicians, and those that are there, have patient panels that are at least 3-4 times what an effective physician should carry; so even if you have a primary care physician they don’t have the time to spend with you to coordinate a proper plan for your health. Then most physicians are completely blinded to the “billed” cost of their services, and “collected” amounts for their services. They also have no transparency of cost of medications and tests that they are prescribing--all of this leads to a fairly complex situation, your medical visit to be even more so, due to lack of information by both the patient and the doctor.
There were 991 million office visits last year and 5 out of 6 Americans had a doctor visit. So it behooves all of us to be effective stewards of our healthcare by being aware of the cost of our actions...patients and doctors especially. This can only be done by being informed and doing research to know your options--internet has put a lot of information on our fingertips, it’s time to start using this to improve our healthcare.