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- <text id=93TT0382>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: Here Comes Doctor No
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 26
- Here Comes Doctor No
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Led by the A.M.A., many of the country's medical practitioners
- launch a major assault to refashion President Clinton's health-reform
- plan
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS--Reported by Greg Aunapu/Miami, Dan Cray/Los Angeles and Dick
- Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Politicians can't seem to resist playing doctor when they start
- talking about health-care reform. They diagnose a system in
- critical condition that only their wise prescriptions can save.
- So maybe turnabout was fair play last week when the doctors
- decided it was time to play big-league politics and rolled out
- the polls, direct mail and satellite hookups in a lobbying assault
- the likes of which had not been seen in Washington since--well, since 1965, when the American Medical Association decided
- it didn't much like the idea of Medicare.
- </p>
- <p> It was the A.M.A.'s annual National Political Education Conference
- in the capital, and twice as many doctors as usual showed up.
- They came looking for a fight, not only over the Administration's
- plan but over the profession's soul. Watching 600 or so doctors
- troop up the steps of Capitol Hill, it was tempting to assume
- they had come to defend their right to earn six times as much
- money as the average American family and still play golf on
- Wednesdays. But to dismiss their motives as selfish and their
- concerns as unfounded meant ignoring the people who know firsthand
- what is wrong with American medicine, and who will have to be
- allies in fixing it.
- </p>
- <p> And so the politicians came and listened. Senate majority leader
- George Mitchell appeared, as did Bob Michel, Richard Gephardt,
- Bob Dole, Newt Gingrich and Jay Rockefeller. It was not, on
- the whole, a happy meeting. The only member of the Administration
- who dared to show up, HHS Secretary Donna Shalala, was booed.
- </p>
- <p> "How many here favor the Clinton plan?" asked one of the presenters.
- Only two people had the nerve to clap.
- </p>
- <p> By the time the conference ended, it was clear that the Administration,
- despite its best efforts, had failed to win over a crucial partner.
- After months of coy hand holding, the A.M.A. broke free last
- week and emerged, if not as an enemy of the Clinton plan, at
- least as an obstacle to it. Unveiling a $7 million lobbying
- effort, the A.M.A. leaders vowed to "broadly inform our patients
- of our concerns and activate an unprecedented national network
- of physicians" to fight for changes in the plan. Chief among
- the complaints was the imposition of cost controls and new bureaucracies
- and the failure to put financial limits on malpractice judgments.
- </p>
- <p> The American Medical Association represents less than half of
- America's 650,000 doctors, down from 70% in the 1970s; but it
- is still the nation's largest medical organization and one of
- its richest lobbies. "Without the tacit support and approval
- of the medical profession," warned the A.M.A.'s chief executive,
- James Todd, "health-care reform is not going to go very far."
- If the medical rank and file rises up, President Clinton could
- find his moral authority challenged by the far more personal
- persuasion of a hundred thousand healers, some of whom have
- developed a close relationship with their patients, and many
- of whom feel they will be fighting for their professional lives.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed the warnings in Washington are echoed in examining rooms
- all around the country. "We're being handed this massive program
- for reform," says Pittsburgh cardiologist Dean Kross, "and we're
- troubled that none of the systems they're proposing have ever
- been tried...Why should we accept a system that bureaucrats
- have proposed based on information that's not been properly
- tested?" Says Dr. Gordon Schiff, an internist at Chicago's Cook
- County Hospital: "The problem is that the people who are being
- listened to for the solutions are the people who have been most
- responsible for creating and denying the problem, especially
- the insurance industry."
- </p>
- <p> Even doctors themselves, however, are divided about where the
- best solutions lie; older doctors find themselves arguing with
- younger ones, primary-care givers with specialists. And that
- leaves the Administration with an opportunity. If it cannot
- possibly hope to please everyone, it may at least win enough
- support for reform within the medical community to discredit
- the efforts of those who oppose it.
- </p>
- <p> For a while it looked as though the A.M.A. was pledging neutral
- cooperation, as when board chairman Lonnie Bristow promised
- last week to "support those provisions that are good for our
- patients and work to change those that are wrong for our patients."
- But such accommodating sounds were the exception. In a 15-page
- letter to every doctor and medical student in the country, the
- A.M.A. announced that it was "adamantly," "staunchly" and "unequivocally"
- opposed to several of the Administration's "unacceptable" proposals.
- "It's the old-line A.M.A.," says ethicist George Annas at Boston
- University, who viewed the campaign as a "typical, self-serving,
- maximize-my-income" stance. "They don't know what's happening
- in medicine. That's why less than half of doctors belong. If
- they are going to be obstructionist, they are irrelevant, as
- they should be."
- </p>
- <p> The A.M.A. leadership knew better than to try to block reform
- altogether. Back in 1988 the doctors' own polls found growing
- support for a total overhaul of health care, and the A.M.A.
- leadership recognized that it would be better to join the process
- and try to shape a package that doctors could live with. Other
- physicians' groups were positioning themselves to challenge
- the A.M.A. as the voice of organized medicine in Washington:
- the American College of Physicians and the American Academy
- of Family Physicians have supported the idea of comprehensive
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> And so with much fanfare the A.M.A. unveiled its own reform
- plan, ``Health Access America," calling for universal coverage,
- cost containment and the requirement that employers provide
- health care for workers. When Bill Clinton took office in January,
- the A.M.A. ran upbeat newspaper ads announcing a "new partnership"
- to work for health-care reform. But the A.M.A. was quickly shut
- out of the process once the White House task force headed by
- Ira Magaziner set to work behind closed doors.
- </p>
- <p> Some doctors suggest that the Clintons might have avoided last
- week's trouble if they had schmoozed the A.M.A. a little sooner.
- But even as Todd and Magaziner were arm wrestling in the privacy
- of the health honcho's office in the Old Executive Office Building,
- the A.M.A. offensive was in the works. The organization's leaders
- and media advisers gathered in Chicago in August to refine their
- analysis of the Clinton proposal and their public reaction.
- Speakers were coached in sound bites: "The A.M.A. doesn't want
- to see the calculator replace the stethoscope." As the day for
- the unveiling of Clinton's plan approached, A.M.A. spokesmen
- fanned out across the country to provide local TV stations and
- newspapers with a response. Brochures and other materials were
- shipped out to county and state medical societies. Satellite
- hookups allowed A.M.A. officials to visit editorial boardrooms
- across the country. Meanwhile, local medical associations had
- been moving to shape the debate. Ever since Clinton placed reform
- on the agenda, the stack of magazines in the waiting rooms often
- included brochures praising certain reform plans; that kind
- of in-house advertising is bound to grow as the argument over
- Clinton's plan unfolds. "If it looks like it's really going
- to mean a problem for us," says David Holley, president of the
- California Medical Association, "we'll take whatever means necessary
- to educate the public." The only reason it hasn't started yet,
- says Holley, is that "we don't know what we're commenting on."
- </p>
- <p> Many doctors feel they know enough already to share their concerns
- with patients who ask their opinion. Doctors fear that the hated
- insurance-company bureaucrats will be replaced by hateful government
- bureaucrats, that the regulations, paperwork and workload will
- increase while flexibility and autonomy will disappear. The
- doctor-patient relationship, they worry, won't just be harmed.
- It will be eliminated.
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Melvin Kirschner, a family practitioner for 32 years in
- Van Nuys, California, does not hide his disdain. "With managed
- care," he says, "the decisions are made by a utilization review
- board, which sometimes has a doctor and sometimes not. We get
- lots and lots of rejections." Some of his patients have been
- with him for more than three decades, he says, and are used
- to having some control over their treatment. "They see some
- black wart on their forearm, and they worry it's cancer," he
- says. "That was great when the indemnity paid, but now what
- I get from managed care is, `If it's benign, you don't need
- to take it off,' or, `If it's malignant, you'd better show us'--as if I have microscopic eyes that detect every lesion and
- can tell you ahead of time whether it's cancerous or not."
- </p>
- <p> Though the Clinton plan aims to simplify health-care delivery,
- doctors see the trend moving in the opposite direction. Some
- private physicians join dozens of different insurance plans
- so their patients can continue to see them. But each one holds
- the physician to different rules. "Some plans crucify you if
- you don't do a throat culture in a given case," says Dr. Richard
- Chamberlain, an osteopath in rural Franklin, Ohio, "while in
- other plans you're practically strung up and quartered if you
- do a culture. The administrative work involved in these plans
- is so incredibly detailed and complex that it's probably costing
- us money to see our patients."
- </p>
- <p> Doctors worry about the "cookbook" plan that tells them what
- they are allowed to do for each different condition. "That's
- what government medicine is all about," says internist Morgan
- Meyer of Lombard, Illinois, a former president of the state
- medical society. "There will be hospitals closing, people out
- of work, and we're going to be expected to make all health-care
- decisions according to imposed guidelines. The benefits of this
- plan are vastly overrated, and the savings they anticipate in
- Medicare are illusory."
- </p>
- <p> Many doctors agree that holding down costs is harder than it
- looks, even if millions more patients are forced into joining
- health maintenance organizations. Physicians note that in the
- past 10 years 31 million new patients have entered HMOs, but
- costs have continued to rise. "Much of the criticism of health-care
- delivery is directed toward the financial rewards of overutilization,"
- notes Dr. Jay Skyler, a University of Miami endocrinologist.
- "But in an HMO, the financial incentive for not doing procedures
- is equally as bad, and may even border on the dangerous." Dr.
- Pepi Granat, a South Miami family practitioner who used to work
- for an HMO, goes even further. "You have to be loyal to whoever
- is paying you. If an organization is your boss, you can't be
- a true advocate for the patient." The HMOs, she says, "will
- end up wiping us out. They will eventually replace us with nurse
- practitioners and physician's assistants who will have the appearance
- of doing the same thing but won't have the expertise."
- </p>
- <p> A more effective way to hold down costs, doctors argue, is to
- confront the controversy over rationing care. It simply is not
- possible, they argue, to provide high-tech, high-cost care without
- limit. "Should a 95-year-old with lung cancer be given expensive
- chemotherapy if it's only going to give him three months more
- life?" asks Dr. Peter Cassileth, chief of the hematology-oncology
- division of the University of Miami. "That's the most expensive,
- least effective sort of medicine. By making hard choices, the
- cost savings would be extraordinary. But it's just not something
- you can do without engaging the country in a dialogue."
- </p>
- <p> For many doctors, however, the dialogue on rationing and other
- painful issues does not belong in the examining room. "The examining
- room is not the time to push political issues," says Boston
- University's Annas. "The patient is very vulnerable. The implication
- is, If you don't listen, I am not going to take an interest
- in you; or worse, If you don't say yes, I am not going to treat
- you. It is totally inappropriate."
- </p>
- <p> If doctors can't win over their own patients, they have little
- hope of blocking fundamental aspects of the Clinton plan. But
- they also have to be viewed as a constructive force in the debate.
- Republican pollster Linda DiVall informed the physicians assembled
- in Washington that three-quarters of the American public think
- that the health-care system is headed toward a crisis because
- of cost. Nearly 70% thought the Clinton plan was better than
- doing nothing at all. And in conversation among themselves,
- many doctors agree. It is Clinton's direction, not his intentions,
- that scares them. "I have a feeling that five years from now
- we're going to look back on this time as the good old days,"
- Dr. Chamberlain muses. "And if these are the good old days,
- we're really in trouble."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-