Monday, July 13, 2009

Also missing: better ways to pay doctors and hospitals
posted 6-23-2009 7:50 p.m.; updated 7-13-2009 4:41 p.m.

 
In my last post, I began a list of what’s missing so far from health care reform efforts:

• enough primary care doctors, primary care nurse practitioners and hospital nurses
• more practitioners and resources in the right places
• better funding mechanisms for practitioner and hospital malpractice insurance
• a national medical malpractice arbitration system to settle most claims, similar to no-fault workers' compensation
• functional, properly financed metro and regional trauma networks
• better physician practice organization
• needed data collection and analysis on a large scale
• a federal privacy czar at cabinet level to monitor and police the privacy and security of consumers' medical, financial and other data and punish offending database owners and other violators

The last entry addressed the first four points. Since then, I’ve come up with two more missing pieces:

• better ways of paying health care practitioners
• better ways of paying hospitals

You’ll notice I didn’t include nursing homes or intermediate care facilities; that’s an entirely separate discussion and a mammoth Gordian knot of its own. Let’s leave that for another time.

By ‘better ways’ I mean mechanisms for paying health care providers that provide reasonable compensation for them without bankrupting the rest of us. But there’s more to it than that.