Title: History and Evolution of Medical Care Institutions
1History and Evolution of Medical Care
Institutions
- Professor Edward P. RichardsLSU Law
Centerhttp//biotech.law.lsu.edu/
2Key Issues
- Scientific medicine is about 120 years old
- Technology based medicine is less than 60 years
old - Doctors are not scientists and many do not
practice scientific medicine. - Modern medicine is shaped by its history
- Health care finance shapes medical care
- Special interests undermine cost-effective care
- Financial tinkering destabilizes primary health
care
3Critical Dates in Medicine
41400s
- Birth of Hospitals
- Places where nuns took care of the dying
- No medical care against the Churchs teachings
- No sanitation assured you would die
5Early 16th Century
- Paracelsus
- Transition From Alchemy
6Mid 16th Century
- Andreas Vesalius
- Accurate Anatomy
7Early 17th Century
- William Harvey
- Blood Circulation the body is dynamic, not
static
81800
- Edward Jenner
- Smallpox and the notion of vaccination
91846
- William Morton - Ether Anesthesia
101849
- Semmelweis
- Childbed Fever and sanitation
- Scientific Method
- Controlled Studies
111854
- John Snow
- Proved Cholera Is Waterborne
- Basis of the public sanitation movement
121860-1880s - Development of the Germ Theory
- Louis Pasteur
- Simple Germ Theory
- Vaccination For Rabies
- Pasteurization to kill bacteria in milk
- Joseph Lister
- Antisepsis surgeons should wash their hands and
everything else, then use disinfectants - Koch
- Modern Germ Theory
13Sanitation Movement - Modern Public Health 1850s
- 1900s
- Lead by the Shattuck Report on Sanitation in
Boston - 1850 - Waste water disposal
- Drinking water treatment
- Pasteurization of milk
- Food sanitation
- The Jungle - 1905
14The Business of Medicine in the 1800s
- Physicians are Solo Practitioners
- Most Make Little Money
- Have Limited Respect
- No bar to entry to profession
- Most medical schools are diploma mills
- Limited or no licensing requirements
- Cannot make capital investments
- Training
- Medical equipment and staff
15Transition to Modern Medicine and Surgery
16Surgery Starts to Work in the 1880s
- Surgery Can Be Precise - Anesthesia
- Patients Do Not Get Infected - Antisepsis
17Effect on Licensing and Education
- Once there are objective differences (people
live) between qualified and unqualified docs,
people care - You can make more money with better training
- You can make more money with better equipment and
facilities - Effective Medicine Drives Licensing
- Licensing Limits Competition
- Physicians Start to Make Money
- Allows capital expenditures
18The Tipping Point - 1910
- About 1910, going to the doctor, and particularly
the hospital, shifted from being more dangerous
than avoiding them to increasing your chance of
survival. - Flexner Report - standardized medical education
and shaped the modern training system
19Legal Limits on Physician Practice Organization -
1920s
- Corporate practice of medicine
- Physicians working for non-physicians
- Concerns about professional judgment
- Cases from 1920 read like the headlines
- Banned in most states
20Impact of Corporate Bans on Institutional
Practice in Most States
- Physicians do not work for non-governmental
hospitals - Independent contractors governed by medical staff
bylaws - Sham of buying practices
- Not as much of a factor in LA
- Charade of captive physician groups
- Managed care companies contact with group
- Group enforces managed care companys rules
- Physicians can be as ruthless as anyone
21From L'Hotel-Dieu to High Tech The Evolution of
Hospitals
22Reformation of Hospitals
- Paralleled Changes in the Medical Profession
- Began in the 1880s
- Shift From Religious to Secular
- Began in the Midwest and West
- Not As Many Established Religious Hospitals
- Today, Religious Orders Still Control A Majority
of Hospitals
23Technology in Hospitals - The Advantage of
Hospital Care over Home Care
- Driven by antisepsis - homes were safer before
antisepsis - Started With Surgery
- Medical Laboratories
- Bacteriology
- Microanatomy
- Radiology
- Services and Sanitation Attract Patients
- Internal Medicine
- Obstetrics Patients
24Post WW II Technology
- Ventilators (Polio)
- Electronic Monitors
- Intensive Care
- Hospitals Shift From Hotel Services to Technology
Oriented Nursing
25Post World War II Medicine
- Conquering Microbial Diseases
- Vaccines
- Antibiotics
- Chronic Diseases
- Better Drugs
- Better Studies
- Childhood Leukemia
26Effect of Medical Science on Hospital Care
- 1930s
- Few effective treatments means no cures other
than surgery - Long stays, hospitals act as nursing homes
- Care is nursing and palliative
- Post-1960s
- Many effective treatments
- Much shorter stays - expansion of nursing homes
- Most care is technological
27Changes in Hospital Financial Models
- Pre-1970s
- Mostly Charitable
- Built on donations, not debt or bonds
- Reduced operating costs and pressure on occupancy
- Post 1970s
- Debt
- Stock market - pressure for performance
- Huge pressure on occupancy and profitability
28Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals
- 1950s
- American College of Surgeons and American
Hospital Association - Now Joint Commission (on Accreditation of
Anything that Makes Money in Health Care) - Split The Power In Hospitals
- Medical Staff Controls Medical Staff
- Administrators Control Everything Else
- Enforced By Accreditation
- Depends on Medicare/Medicare waiver
- Seldom pulls accreditation
29Contemporary Hospital Organization
- Classic Corporate Organizations
- CEO
- Board of Trustees Has Final Authority
- Part of Conglomerate
- Medical Staff Committees
- Tied To Corporation by Bylaws
- Headed by Medical Director
- Raises Conflict of Interest/Antitrust Issues
30Medical Staff Bylaws
- Contract Between Physicians and Hospital
- Not Like the Bylaws of a Business
- Selection Criteria
- Contractual Due Process For Termination
- Negotiated Between Medical Staff and Hospital
Board - Limits corporate control as compared to employee
models
31Break
32Introduction to Medical Care Economics
- From the Blues to Managed Care
33Paying for Medical Care
- Pre-WW II
- Mostly Private Pay
- Some Employer Provided - Kaiser
- WW II
- Price Controls
- Post WW II
- Health Insurance As Benefit
- Private Insurance
- The Blues
- Medicare/Medicaid
34Blue Cross - Blue Shield
- Developed by Docs and Hospitals
- Sold to Teachers
- Assure Access
- Assure Payment
- Reimbursement Policy
- Pay Whatever Was Charged
- Subsidize the Rural Areas
- Subsidized Over-bedding and Over Treatment
35Federal Programs
36Social Security Income and Disability
- 1930s
- Lifted the elderly out of poverty
- Provided disability insurance for workers
- The disability is quite a big and valuable
program and pays for a lot of medical care
37Hill-Burton
- Post-WWII
- Funded construction of community hospitals
- Had community service requirements, but those
have all expired - Created the US emphasis on hospital based care
- Spent from the 1970s to the 1990s reducing
hospital beds to control costs - Excess beds or Surge Capacity?
38The Great Society
- Medicare
- Old People
- Certain disabled people
- Medicaid
- Poor People
- Nursing Homes
- About 40 of medical dollars
- Fought by the AMA
- Made Docs Rich
39No Good Old Days for Patients
- Gaming the System under Fee For Service
- Right to Die As Example
- Cannot Just Open the Checkbook
- Greed Is Not Good in Medical Care
- Fee for Service Drives Unnecessary Care
- Hospitals Have to Care More About Money Than
Patients - Rich Docs Are Not Always Better Docs
40Federal Interventions
- Feds Pay About 45 of Health Care
- Other Plans Follow the Feds
- Usual and Customary Charges for Docs
- Based on the Community
- Adjusted for the Docs Previous Charges
- Complex
41Hospital Costs
- Big dollars are in the hospital charges
- Docs only get 20-25 of the health care budget
- Hospitals get a lot of the rest
- Drugs are an increasing share
- Fee for service drove unnecessary care
- Open-end reimbursement drove high prices
- Hospitals did not even know what things cost
42Diagnosis Related Groups - DRGs - 1983
- Watershed in Health Care Reimbursement
- Prospective Payment (Capitation)
- Based on Admitting Diagnosis
- Fixed Payment
- Some Adjustments
- Encouraged health insurers to also manage
physician care
43Making Money Under DRGs
- Fewer Tests and Procedures
- Complete Reversal of Prior Reimbursement
- No Bump for ICU
- Reduce Length of Stay
- Dropped About 20 at Once, continued to drop
- Ideal Is Out the Door, Dead or Alive
- Patients Discharged Much Sicker
- Which Was Right, Then or Now?
44Federal Laws Enabling Managed Care for Docs
- Federal HMO Act in the 1970s
- Preempted State Laws Banning Prepaid Care
- ERISA
- Passed to allow labor unions to negotiate
national health plans with big employers - Preempts state regulation of certain self-insured
health plans - Gave self-insured plans an edge and drove most
employers to them
45Managed Care Organizations - MCOs
- Insurance Plans That Control Patient Care
- Includes the Old Alphabet Soup
- HMOs
- PPOs
- IPAs
46Two Major Variables
- Employer or Contractor
- Do the docs work for the plan or a captive group?
- Do the docs contract with many plans, treating
patients based on different plan benefits? - Open or Closed
- Do the docs treat only patients from a single
plan or a mix of plans? - Why do these matter?
- Leverage on the doc's decisions
47Direct Controls on Costs by the Plan
- Pay Less for Services
- Use Market Power to Bargain
- Control Access Points
- Limit Hospital Stays
- Limit Tests, Procedures, and Referrals
- Direct Control of Access
- Pre-approval
- Tell the Docs What to Do
- Most Honest
48Indirect Controls
- Capitation
- CRF--Consultation and Referral Funds
- Withhold and Incentive Pools
- Stop-loss and Reinsurance
- Total Capitation
- Economic Credentialing
- Dumb Down Services
- Free Ride on Other Plans or the Government
49The Cost of Medical Care in the United States
- Health As of GNP Has More than Doubled in 50
Years - It is 20-50 Higher Than Europe
- Their Health Statistics Are Just As Good
- Do They Know Something We Don't?
50U.S. Has A Lower Life Expectancy than Most Other
Industrialized Countries
- Taken as a major criticism of the US system
- Is life expectancy really the right measure?
51Life Expectancy Is Not Health
- Bias
- Weighted Toward the Young
- One Baby Is Worth Several Grannies
- Only Life Counts
- Discounts Quality of Life
- Nursing Home Is As Good As the Ski Slopes
- Masks Aging Population
- Masks Improved Health
- A Good Measure for Developing Countries
52What Complicates Health in the US?
- We Have 3rd World Public Health
- Ineffective Prenatal Care
- Poor Immunization Practices
- Limited Access to preventive and routine care
- Teen Pregnancy
- Prematurity
- Poor Parenting
- Developed World Leader in AIDS
53Non-medical Issues
- The Problem of the Poor
- Poor Education
- Poor Health Habits
- Cannot Afford Prevention
- Geography
- Too Many Isolated Areas
- Expensive to Deliver Care
54How has the Health Care Umbrella been Expanded?
- Sin to Sickness
- Alcoholism
- Drug Abuse
- Miscatagorization
- Nursing Homes - housing?
- Vanity Surgery - life style?
- Should Compare Total Social Welfare Budget with
Europe
55The Core Problem
- Public health and primary care does not work well
- Chronic diseases can be mitigated, but not cured
or prevented - Shifts care to expensive technology and drugs
56Second Order Demographics
- People live longer because of medical care and
public health - More old people
- More people with chronic illness do not die
- Old people need more
- Total cost goes up
- Health is much more expensive than death
57Impact of Governmental and Private Plan Economics
and Special Interests on Care
- High tech care has the strongest interest groups
- Providers and suppliers have a lot of money
- Patient advocacy groups are easy to capture
- Captures every more of the budget
- Primary care, prevention, and public health
- Not sexy
- Big savings are low tech, long term
- Not a good news story
- Providers do not have the money to fight
58Specialty Hospital Example
- Pros
- Complex care is safer when regionalized
- Better care at lower prices
- Cons
- Do not money losing services
- Do not take uninsured patients
- Shift the most valuable patients from community
hospitals - No EMTALA requirements if no ER
- Dramatically increase unnecessary surgery
- No limits on construction in LA
59Patient Directed Care Example
- Patients will spend their own money and will thus
make better decisions - What is their knowledge base?
- Can you really learn what you need on the WWW?
- How will this play out for preventive care?
- What is the incentive for providers?
- Feel good drugs?
- Antibiotics?
60Health Care Reform
- Who will lose?
- Who will win?
- How will we pay for expanding access?
61First Shot in the War Against ReformComparative
Effectiveness Research
- Pharma and their supporters say it will interfere
with your doc's right to make the best decision
for you - Question - how can he make that decision with no
comparative effectiveness data? - What is Pharma really worried about?