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- <text id=89TT1305>
- <title>
- May 15, 1989: Rationing Medical Care
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 84
- Rationing Medical Care
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A fiscal squeeze points to drastic measures
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson
- </p>
- <p> Which is more valuable? To provide a $150,000 liver transplant
- for an ailing child of indigent parents? Or to use that money for
- prenatal care that may enhance the life expectancy of fetuses being
- carried by 150 expectant mothers? To most Americans, the either/or
- aspect of the question is morally repugnant -- surely the leader
- of the democratic capitalist world can afford both. Yet a growing
- number of health experts argue that the U.S., in fact, no longer
- has the financial resources to provide unlimited medical treatment
- for all those who need it. The only solution, they say, is
- rationing health care.
- </p>
- <p> The state of Oregon and California's Alameda County, which
- includes Oakland, are on the verge of taking that seemingly drastic
- step. In April, the Oregon senate passed a bill that would extend
- Medicaid coverage to 86,000 low-income people previously not
- covered. There would, however, be limits to the care they could
- expect. The measure, now before the lower house, would also
- establish a commission of experts and consumers to rank health
- services -in order of importance; the legislature would then decide
- which to finance. Oregon has already set up committees of doctors,
- nurses and social workers to establish priorities in four medical
- categories covered by Medicaid. Prenatal care, nutrition,
- immunizations, birth control and abortions rank high on the lists,
- while organ transplants and cosmetic surgery have been given low
- priority.
- </p>
- <p> In Alameda County, the board of supervisors last January hired
- a professional ethicist to assist a committee of medical experts
- in deciding what specific services will be made available to the
- county's uninsured poor. "It's scary," says Dr. Marye L. Thomas,
- Alameda's director of mental health and a member of the committee.
- "As a physician, I was trained to give the best possible care to
- anyone, period. Back when I was in medical school, I never thought
- I would be discussing this."
- </p>
- <p> Health officials cite grim statistics as evidence that they
- are acting out of fiscal need, not cruel disregard for human
- suffering. In Alameda, roughly 75% of the county's $278 million
- health-care budget comes from state and federal sources. But that
- money is drying up. For example, state funds are currently only
- about one-half of what the county received in 1982. Health
- administrators argue that rationing is a pointed way of telling
- legislators they must bear the responsibility for their budgetary
- decisions.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense, rationing medical care is a form of triage -- the
- mellifluous French term, derived from wartime practice, for giving
- medical attention to the most likely survivors. This goes against
- the American grain. According to a 1987 Harris poll, more than 90%
- agreed with the statement that "everybody should have the right to
- get the best possible health care -- as good as the treatment a
- millionaire gets." But another survey, by the Public Agenda
- Foundation, found that only one person in ten would accept a $125
- tax increase to support a national insurance program for
- catastrophic illness. As medical costs rise at an annual rate of
- more than 15%, public health facilities try to cope with the needs
- of the 37 million Americans -- about 15% of the population -- who
- have no medical insurance at all. "We want to be all things to all
- people, but the money's just not there," says Dr. Tom Miller of
- Alameda County's public health department.
- </p>
- <p> The experts who favor rationing as a solution note that the
- reality of it is not new. In 1987 Oregon decided that it would no
- longer pay for organ transplants for Medicaid patients, even as the
- legislature added $5 million to the state budget for prenatal care.
- Many doctors readily admit that applicants for new high-tech
- operations have to pass a "green screen" or "wallet biopsy" --
- meaning those who can pay get first crack at the operations.
- </p>
- <p> Daniel Callahan, director of the Hastings Center, which
- specializes in the study of bioethical issues, approves the
- pioneering steps being taken by Oregon and Alameda. Trying to
- contain medical costs by greater efficiencies is "wishful thinking"
- in his view. One reason is the inexorable aging of America, as the
- nation's over-65 population rises from about 28 million today to
- a projected 35 million by the year 2000. Callahan also blames
- high-tech research for producing ingenious new operations that
- remain astronomically pricey even as they become popular and
- desirable. He proposes a slowdown on developing gimmicky procedures
- like artificial hearts and a more careful review of their social
- and economic consequences. Says he: "We keep inventing new ways to
- spend money, and that complicates things."
- </p>
- <p> In response, Dr. David Rothman of New York City's
- Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center notes, "This is not a country
- that has ever turned its back on new technology." On the broader
- issue of rationing, many opponents argue that the new Oregon and
- Alameda County regulations are inherently unfair, since the limits
- on health-care protection apply only to the poor, particularly the
- young. Dr. Sam Flint, a director of the American Academy of
- Pediatrics, notes that children account for roughly 50% of the
- Medicaid population but receive only about one-fifth of health-care
- dollars. Meanwhile, the elderly get about 40% of those funds.
- </p>
- <p> An Oregon lawmaker opposed to the bill is Democrat Tom Mason.
- "You can't approach medicine merely as the greatest good for the
- greatest number of people," he says. "If we do that, why should
- anyone take care of you after a horrendous traffic accident?" A
- fair question, since it points to the medical reality that what is
- merely an option for one individual can be a life-or-death matter
- for another. Still, until the U.S. is ready for the huge fiscal
- sacrifices that would make complete medical care available to all,
- some form of rationing -- with rules clearly established and given
- community support -- may be the only fair and practical answer.
- </p>
- <p>--Mike Cannell/New York and Dennis Wyss/San Francisco
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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