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- <text id=93TT0338>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: Out In The Cold?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 35
- Out In The Cold?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton hates to mention it, but some rationing of care is likely
- with reform
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--Reported by Rod Paul/Portsmouth and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The day before Bill Clinton's health speech, the President and
- Hillary told reporters about their conversation with a hospital
- administrator. The man told them his institution had received
- a 92-year-old man for a quadruple-bypass operation, which would
- cost tens of thousands of dollars and extend his life marginally.
- Hillary asked why. The answer: Because there was no way to turn
- him away. Later, a journalist asked a sensitive question: If
- the old man hadn't been admitted, would it have been a form
- of rationing, er, "prioritizing"? This time the President answered,
- knowing the question was really about his own plan. "I'm not
- just trying to be the tooth fairy here," he said. "Every system
- has some rationing. The system we're in now severely rations
- care in all kinds of ways."
- </p>
- <p> In even using the word in that way, Clinton had broken something
- of an Administration taboo. Rationing, the sacrificing of certain
- expensive or marginally useful treatments in the interests of
- economy, had been avidly discussed earlier in his tenure. In
- March Health Secretary Donna Shalala approved a Medicaid-distribution
- plan composed by the state of Oregon that ranked ailments and
- their attendant treatments from 1 to 709, according to their
- perceived costs and benefits. Then, based on the amount of money
- in its Medicaid budget, Oregon drew a line--at number 587--between those it was willing to offer and those it wasn't.
- Some were appalled at the cold-eyed efficiency of the plan,
- which will go into effect this February. Others suggested that
- the Administration might want to impose that sort of bareknuckle
- rationing on the nation.
- </p>
- <p> The idea was never seriously considered. "The R-word was absolutely
- forbidden," says an outside expert who attended health adviser
- Ira Magaziner's planning meetings. Quite shrewdly, it seems.
- In most opinion polls, citizens lean against rationing, even
- in the abstract.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, some of it will probably occur. Not classic, state-dictated
- rationing, with a star chamber headed by Magaziner deciding
- who gets dialysis or brain scans. But the competition Clinton
- hopes to inject into the system, combined with his proposed
- cap on insurance premiums, could cause insurance companies and
- HMOs to put pressure on their physicians, who in turn might
- respond by drawing lines not unlike Oregon's. Companies "will
- make rationing decisions in the privacy of their own boardrooms.
- I'd anticipate seeing significant cutbacks in care," predicts
- Steffie Woolhandler, a co-founder of Physicians for a National
- Health Program, which advocates the single-payer form of health
- care like Canada's tax-based government plan.
- </p>
- <p> White House health advisers deny that any but the most obviously
- ineffective or redundant treatments might be eliminated through
- this process. Nevertheless, industry experts note that even
- without Clinton's nudge, physicians, clinical researchers, ethicists
- and health-care executives have struggled to clarify what tests
- and procedures should be classified as "futile care" or "marginally
- beneficial care." In the event that the pressure to economize
- were turned up, procedures like these might be curtailed:
- </p>
- <p> Bone-marrow transplants for advanced breast-cancer patients
- allow some women whose cancers have spread into 10 or more lymph
- nodes to undergo more intensive radiation therapy. The 1,200
- instances in which the technique has been tried so far suggest
- that it may add several years to a patient's life--at a cost
- of more than $100,000 a year. However, refinements may soon
- drastically reduce that to a far more cost-effective $17,000.
- Letha Mills, director of the bone-marrow transplant program
- at New Hampshire's Norris Cotton Cancer Center, is worried about
- the chilling effect that rationing would have had on the treatment's
- invention. "You can't just stop trying to develop new ways to
- cure people," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Ultrasound exams may still be a vital diagnostic tool for women
- with high-risk pregnancies whose doctors know what they are
- looking for. But a six-year study of low-risk mothers who had
- undergone the procedure found that their children had exactly
- the same rate of birth defects, 5%, as those of women who didn't
- bother with it. "This is an example of the unnecessary testing
- that is driving up our health-care costs," said the lead investigator,
- Bernard Ewigman of the University of Missouri at Columbia. "Our
- findings are quite dramatic, and will surprise many physicians,"
- as well as healthy pregnant women. If that group, which currently
- makes up 60% of the technology's users, were to forgo it, they
- would save a total of $500 million in bills.
- </p>
- <p> Coronary bypass operations for patients over 80 generally produce
- bills twice as high as those for younger people, says Robert
- Jones, professor of surgery at North Carolina's Duke University.
- Jones, who heads a federally financed project to establish guidelines
- for cardiovascular surgery, explains that people like the nonagenarian
- of Clinton's anecdote stay in the hospital longer than younger
- people because of age-related surgical complications and the
- lack of people to care for them when they go home. As a result,
- says Jones, the pressure to turn down such high-risk, expensive
- patients "will be more than subtle. And in fact, it's already
- here."
- </p>
- <p> Neonatal care for infants weighing less than 1.5 lbs. can run
- to $1 million per child if they spend several months in an intensive-care
- unit. Moreover, very few live long enough to leave the hospital,
- and half of those who do are debilitated. Such low-weight babies,
- who make up only 3% of the 300,000 preemies born each year,
- would seem to be a bad cost-benefit risk. But Alan Fleischman,
- director of neonatology at the Montefiore Medical Center in
- the Bronx, New York, notes that 20 years ago, only 10% of infants
- born weighing under 3 lbs. survived. The rate today is 90%.
- "Health-care alliances will come together and question these
- treatments, and the treatments for adults with terminal illnesses.
- But it's important for them to have some flexibility to allow
- innovation to flourish."
- </p>
- <p> In some ways, rationing is the ultimate policy question. There
- is not a single question it raises that cannot be seen in a
- dozen different ways, and few that do not involve deciding that
- someone may die sooner than if the treatment had been given.
- To accept the need for rationing involves a certain pessimism--the embracing of a zero-sum system where the only way to
- pay for one thing is to drop another. The pragmatic wonk in
- Clinton might want to wrestle with it; but the optimist in him,
- and his political instincts, will ensure that he will try to
- to keep it from becoming a focus of debate. He will probably
- succeed in this, since his plan is designed in such a way that
- any rationing that goes on will happen far from the White House.
- The odds are that America will have to wait until that plan
- is in place even to know where the really hard decisions are
- being made.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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