Title: Ethics and Managed Care
1Ethics and Managed Care
- Where did it go wrong? (If it did?)
2Louis Harris Poll, 1980
- 97 of HMO enrollees satisfied, would renew
- 30 of non-members find HMO concept very
attractive
3WARNING
The following slide contains adult language.
4Fucking HMO bastard pieces of shit!
--As Good As It Gets (1997)
5You know youve joined a cheap HMO when..They
give you Viagra tablets in different colors with
little ms on them.
--David Letterman
6What is managed care?
- Same organization combines two functions
- Insurance
- Delivery of services
- Specified, covered population
- Prospective financing of services from a limited
budget - Buchanan, 1998
7The first HMOs
- 1940s
- Either labor union-driven or community
cooperative (all non-profit) - Payment per member per month (capitation)
- Financial incentive to keep people healthy
- Group practice/clinic model
8Turning Point 1970-1980
- Health care share of GDP went up from 4 to
10-12 since 1945 - Big Three realized they were paying more on a
per-car basis for health care than for steel - For first time, HMOs attractive as a way to cut
costs, not as a way to change the direction and
quality of care
91980-2000
- New Federal legislation encourages creation of
HMOs - Some evidence early that this led to a slow-down
in rise of health costs (temporarily) - Suddenly for-profit managed care is the fastest
growing segment of industry
10Kaiser plan, 1970
- Has served same population for 30 years
- Very stable group of physicians and staff
- Most work there out of choice
- Work as team to assure that quality of care is
kept high - The competition is very wasteful, so even a
modest trimming of costs makes Kaiser the best
deal
11Acme HMO, 2000
- May have been created yesterday
- Physicians are tied in virtual network, no
history of teamwork - Rapid turnover of patients, no way to capture
savings from preventive care - Competition lean and mean cant compete unless
costs cut to the bone
12Does the term managed care specify an entity
with a constant, predictable set of ethical
problems?
13Basic ethical problem
- Physician or nurse as gatekeeper
- Gatekeeper may recommend care as medically
necessary or not - Plan pays for medically necessary care
- If less care recommended, staff may make more
money (or may be retained, not fired)
14- Rationing
- Bedside Rationing
15Rationing
- There is a limited amount of resources available
- Need/demand exceeds the available resources
- We must have SOME system to decide who gets how
much - Ability to pay
- Lottery
- Degree of need
- Etc.
16Where Rationing Occurs
Administrative Level
Bedside Level
17Administrative Rationing
- Policymakers set very general guidelines based on
data of effectiveness and cost - Physicians at bedside merely apply those
guidelines with virtually no discretion - Examples
- No one over age 70 gets renal dialysis
- No one gets expensive anti-ulcer medication for
more than 2 months
18It is society, not the individual
practitioner, that must make the decision to
limit the availability of effective but expensive
types of medical care.
--Norman Levinsky (p. 102)
19Bedside Rationing
- Physician/nurse caring for individual patient
- Makes a decision not to provide some treatment
- Decides on basis of relative need of this patient
vs. other patients in plan
20Trust and Rationing
- Levinskys argument
- If administrative rationing, physician is still
uncompromising in personal dedication to patient
welfare - If bedside rationing, physician a double agent--
willing to compromise patient welfare in name of
cost saving or service to society ( other
patients)
21Fee-for-service practice
- Patient (or insurance company) paid a set amount
for each service - Strong financial incentive for physician to
recommend or perform unnecessary services - Return office visits
- Unnecessary surgery
- Unnecessary labs, x-rays
22No one has yet designed a way of financing health
care that pays the providers when, and only when,
they do something beneficial for the patient
--so every plan has some perverse incentives
23Is Less Care the Problem?
- Assume ethical flaw in managed care is that
physician is rewarded for doing less for the
patient - Assumes that more care is always better care
- If so, should see consistent trend in research
for managed care to have worse outcomes (not so)
24One Example ABMT
- ABMT for advanced breast cancer thought to
provide 10-15 chance of survival when all else
has failed - Costs 150,000
- Many women sued HMOs successfully when ABMT
denied because experimental - Latest research-- ABMT adds nothing to survival
in advanced breast cancer
25The real question
- Is gatekeeping ethical?
- Can gatekeeping be avoided?
26What is Gatekeeping?
- Physician cares for a population of patients
- Limited budget
- If patient 1 gets something, there is something
that the other patients will not get - Comparative judgments of relative priorities of
need among patients
27Example 1. ICU nurse
- Nurse has 2 patients
- Mr. Smith Just about ready to transfer out but
has a lot of questions - Mrs. Jones Acutely unstable, impending multiple
organ system failure unsure of cause - Who will you spend more time with?
28Example 2. Primary care office
- NP has waiting room full of patients
- Mrs. Green Has a 10-min appointment, starts to
complain of several new problems which she has
had for years - Mr. White Has a 10-min appointment Oh by the
way chest pain - Will you reschedule or run overtime?
29Inevitability of Gatekeeping
- Time and not just money is a limited resource
- So long as you have more than one patient in your
practice, you must always make tradeoffs among
needs of different patients - Seems reasonable to make tradeoffs based on best
assessment of relative need
30Inevitability of Gatekeeping (Morreim)
- Policy-makers write clinical guidelines to save
money and maintain quality - All guidelines have wiggle room
- Physician must decide whether to adhere to
guideline or try to declare this patient an
exception-- both bedside decisions impact on
resources available to other patients
31Eddys Argument
- Two positions
- First position I am generally healthy, my
chances of getting any one particular disease are
relatively low - Second position I already have developed an
advanced disease
3230yo Healthy Woman
- Would rather have lower premiums and put money in
kids college fund, etc. - Strong interest in funding preventive care e.g.
mammograms - Little interest in funding desperation care
like ABMT
3345yo Woman with Metastatic Breast Cancer
- Prevention is now of no use
- Ive paid my premiums for all those years now
its my turn to get something back - Strong interest in having funding for last
ditch measures even if low likelihood of success
34Eddy The Conflict
- Should we interpret the ethical question as the
patient vs. society? - Or is it ourselves at one point in our lives vs.
ourselves at another point in our lives? - If the latter, which of the two positions is
ethically privileged in terms of taking a moral
priority for health policy? - Eddy argues First position
35When is Gatekeeping Unethical?
- Very generally-- when financial incentives are so
intrusive into physicians thoughts that she is
highly likely to place financial concerns ahead
of concerns for the well-being of the patient
36Bowman Case (TN)
- Prisoner died of pneumonia had known sickle cell
disease - For profit prison management firm had capitated
contract with physician - By denying care physician could double his annual
income - No carve out for prisoners with known serious
illnesses
37Gatekeeping cases spectrum
Predominant duty is to conserve scarce resources
for others
Predominant duty is to do whats best for sick
person
ExampleIV antibiotics for pneumonia
Gray zone-- tough choice (e.g., treatment very
expensive but also very beneficial)
Example MRI scan for tension headaches
38For-Profit Managed Care
- Is this form of financing inherently unethical?
- Is a for-profit plan inherently less trustworthy?
39Non-Profit Plan
40For-Profit Plan
41For-Profit vs. Nonprofit
- Unless for-profit plans considerably more
efficient, they will have less to spend on care - No evidence of such efficiency
- BUT at least a few non-profit plans spend less on
care than a few for-profit plans, tho on average
NP spends greater percentage than FP