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- <text id=91TT2652>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: Health Care:Condition -- Critical
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 34
- COVER STORY
- Condition: Critical
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Millions of Americans have no medical coverage, and costs are
- out of control. Here are 10 ways to fix what ails us.
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro--With reporting by Mary Cronin/New York,
- Barbara Dolan/Chicago and Hays Gorey/Washington, with other
- bureaus
- </p>
- <p> There are two kinds of prices in America today: regular
- prices and health-care prices. The first kind seems to follow
- some sensible laws of supply and demand. But America's medical
- bills are something else. They flow from a surreal world where
- science has lost connection with reality, where bureaucracy and
- paperwork have no limit, where a half-hour tonsillectomy costs
- what an average worker earns in three weeks. The prices, like
- the system that issues them, are out of control. Examples:
- </p>
- <p>-- Annual dose of human growth hormone for a child with a
- severe deficiency: $20,000.
- </p>
- <p>-- Coronary bypass surgery for a 50-year-old man: $49,000.
- </p>
- <p>-- Cost of a Bufferin tablet for a patient in a
- psychiatric hospital: $3.75.
- </p>
- <p>-- Price of a modified radical mastectomy: $7,900.
- </p>
- <p>-- One day's intensive care for a crack baby: $2,000.
- </p>
- <p>-- A 50-minute session with an elite psychotherapist: $160.
- </p>
- <p>-- Delivery of a baby by Caesarean section: $7,500.
- </p>
- <p> Americans spend $23,000 a second on medical care, more
- than $2 billion a day, $733 billion a year. That is nearly
- twice what they spent seven years ago, including annual
- increases of 10% during the past two years. For the Federal
- Government, medical costs have become the fastest-growing major
- item, increasing at more than 8% annually at a time when
- inflation is only about 5%. For corporate America, health care
- has become a crippling expense. General Motors laid out $3.2
- billion last year, more than it spent on steel, to provide
- medical coverage for 1.9 million employees, dependents and
- retirees. Unchecked, the U.S. medical bill will more than double
- in the next 10 years, to $1.6 trillion, crowding out spending
- for other urgent needs. "Health-care costs have created an
- American state of siege," says Florida Governor Lawton Chiles.
- "It's going to break us."
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly health care is becoming the litmus test of
- American politics. It was a central issue in this month's
- senatorial race in Pennsylvania. Little-known Democrat Harris
- Wofford, who called for a health-care plan that would cover all
- Americans, easily defeated former Governor Dick Thornburgh. As
- the 1992 presidential campaign gathers steam, every Democratic
- candidate is putting universal health care at the top of his
- agenda. While Nebraska's Bob Kerrey proposes a comprehensive
- plan that would require substantial new taxes, others, including
- Bill Clinton and Tom Harkin, are fashioning less costly
- approaches that emphasize preventive care. Says Harkin: "We
- don't have to spend a nickel more. We just have to spend it
- smarter." Congressional Republicans, sensing that the White
- House is moving too slowly on the issue, offered their own plan
- earlier this month to provide basic care for uninsured
- Americans.
- </p>
- <p> How did America's health care slip into such a critical
- condition? It's all so paradoxical. We're the medical miracle
- workers. We're the picture of health. We live decades longer
- than we did before. We've harnessed the body's natural defenses
- with antibiotics, defeated plagues and diseases, learned how to
- make spare parts for almost every organ except the brain.
- </p>
- <p> We got what we wished for, a medical miracle system--but
- all its perilous side effects too. Medicine's amazing new tools
- have made decent health care a rich man's privilege, too
- expensive for the working poor and even many middle-class
- people. Moreover, America may be shackling its economy by
- investing too much in one industry. The U.S. currently devotes
- 12.3% of its gross national product to health care, up from 9.4%
- in 1980. At this rate, within 20 years Americans will be
- spending a third of all their resources on medicine. Says Daniel
- Callahan, the director of the Hastings Center in Briarcliff
- Manor, N.Y.: "We have let ourselves be seduced by the idea that
- there is no such thing as enough health care."
- </p>
- <p> Yet we accomplish less and less. Doctors may waste more
- than $100 billion a year on overzealous testing and unnecessary
- surgery, among other things. Insurance companies say patients,
- hospitals, doctors and thieves are cheating them out of $60
- billion or more. Meanwhile millions of Americans are starving
- for care in the midst of plenty. Doctors have migrated away from
- rural areas across America, leaving families in dread fear of
- the tractor accident, the heart attack, the sudden illness.
- Another problem: the health-care system devotes so much of its
- resources to last-minute miracles that it neglects the more
- mundane realm of preventive medicine, where many terrible
- illnesses could be halted sooner or avoided altogether. "We have
- to rearrange how the dollars are being spent and refocus them
- on earlier stages of illness," says Jeff Goldsmith, a
- health-care adviser to the accounting firm Ernst & Young.
- </p>
- <p> Americans used to take health care for granted. But now
- they can see the cracks in the system--and those gaps scare
- them. The prospect of an additional 30% increase in medical
- costs next year has prompted many employers to cut their work
- force, reduce health benefits, or both. At the same time,
- insurance companies are raising premiums to nigh unaffordable
- levels. Millions of workers are terrified of losing their
- coverage.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, attempts at reform have run into a gridlock of
- powerful constituencies: giant corporations, doctors, hospitals,
- insurance companies and the highly organized senior-citizens
- lobby. But popular opinion may break the impasse. In a TIME/CNN
- poll of 1,000 adults surveyed by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, 91%
- said that "our health-care system needs fundamental change."
- Most of those polled, 75%, said costs are much higher than they
- should be, and 83% said they would cut costs by limiting
- doctors' fees. Two-thirds said health care is a right, and 70%
- said they would be willing to pay higher taxes to ensure that
- all Americans have coverage. Last week the National Leadership
- Coalition for Health Care Reform, a group of big companies and
- labor unions, put forth a proposal to require all employers
- either to provide health insurance or to pay a new 7% federal
- payroll tax to fund public coverage.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. can do a much better job with the money it is
- spending by balancing compassion with realistic notions of what
- can be done. It is not possible to offer unlimited medical care
- to everyone, nor fair to cushion the well-to-do with vast
- public-health-care subsidies while millions of American children
- and their parents go without. It's time for a cure.
- </p>
- <p> On the following pages, TIME looks at 10 of the most
- important problems in the American way of medical care. Here are
- some suggestions on how to fix them.
- </p>
- <p>1. THE BASICS
- </p>
- <p> About 1 out of 9 American working families, a total of 37
- million people, has no health insurance at all. Most of the
- uninsured are the families of workers in small firms that do not
- offer such coverage. Among the uninsured are an estimated 8
- million American children growing up without adequate medical
- and dental care. About 17% of all Americans suffering from
- diabetes and high blood pressure are going without treatment,
- according to Robert Blendon of the Harvard School of Public
- Health.
- </p>
- <p> Medicaid is supposed to insure those who cannot pay for
- coverage, with each state making that determination according
- to its own means test. But even this voracious state-and-federal
- system--which cost $2.3 billion in 1967, the first full year
- after it was launched, and now costs 69 times as much--can
- barely afford to help 40% of the poor. In 1980 the figure was
- 65%. As hard-pressed states have found it increasingly
- difficult to pay for the program (they put up 68% of the total
- money), they have tightened eligibility standards. As a result,
- more and more working Americans earn too much money to qualify
- but too little to afford care. In Alabama a family of four
- cannot qualify for Medicaid if it earns more than $16,584 a
- year.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Establish a universal health-care plan covering
- basic preventive treatment for all Americans who cannot pay for
- their own insurance. Nearly two-thirds of the 500 senior
- executives surveyed last summer by the consulting firm Noble
- Lowndes said they support such a plan. To help pay for it,
- Congress should eliminate the $53,400 income cap on the payroll
- tax that funds Social Security. While this would sharply
- increase payroll taxes for the wealthiest, such a change
- represents a more equitable way of apportioning the burden,
- which now falls more heavily on lower-income workers. Removing
- the cap would provide an estimated $25 billion in new funds for
- the universal plan. Congress should then shift the entire
- federal Medicaid budget to the universal-health program, which
- would give it a generous $115 billion in its first year.
- </p>
- <p> To control costs, care must be delivered through tightly
- managed private systems, such as a network of health-maintenance
- organizations (HMOs) or cost-conscious doctors and hospitals
- that provide moderately-priced services. Patients must have a
- financial stake in making sensible use of the system. They would
- benefit based on their ability to pay; deductibles and
- co-payments would sharply rise as one's income increased.
- High-cost medical procedures would be closely screened for their
- anticipated value in extending life and health.
- </p>
- <p>2. MEDICAID
- </p>
- <p> The fastest-growing spending program in the U.S., Medicaid
- will dispense $158 billion in federal and state funds this year
- to provide health care to 27.3 million Americans. Costs are
- careering out of control. Medicaid pays for half of all
- nursing-home patients--or 250,000 Americans--at an average
- annual cost of $34,000 a person. Medicaid also looks after the
- 158,000 severely impaired crack babies born every year ($1.8
- billion a year), the 35,000 AIDS victims who have run out of
- money, the poor single mothers and pregnant teens, the
- hardest-pressed Americans.
- </p>
- <p> It doesn't do a very good job because the rules governing
- the delivery of care are unrealistic and wasteful, often
- requiring hospitalization, for example, where out-patient
- treatment would suffice. Moreover, many doctors refuse to treat
- Medicaid patients because of rock-bottom reimbursement and the
- snarl of bureaucratic rules. The program is also a sitting duck
- for thieves because of poor administration. Medicaid pays
- billions in fraudulent insurance claims for nonexistent
- patients.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Shut it down. Medicaid patients can receive
- better care, and the federal contribution would be better spent,
- under the simplified universal plan proposed above.
- </p>
- <p>3. MEDICARE
- </p>
- <p> This $110 billion program--which started out 26 years
- ago with a budget of $5 billion--was designed to provide
- decent care for the elderly. But the program gives the same
- benefits to those who are well-off as to the elderly poor.
- Though the elderly do pay some of the costs--and staunchly
- resist bearing more of them--nearly 90% of Medicare funds come
- from payroll taxes on workers. As a result, the burden falls
- partly on laborers who have no health insurance of their own and
- may have trouble making ends meet.
- </p>
- <p> The burden on younger Americans is growing more onerous as
- the U.S. population ages, bringing with it the responsibility
- of caring for millions of elderly with enormously expensive
- medical needs. There are now about seven Americans under the age
- of 65 for every person over that threshold, compared with 11 to 1
- in 1960. One of those younger Americans is unemployed, and two
- are children. That leaves about four workers to support each
- elderly American. And one of those doesn't even have his own
- health insurance.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: To slow its runaway growth, return the program
- to its original goal: taking care of people who need financial
- help. People who can afford to pay more for their own health
- care should do so. In addition, subsidies should be more
- carefully rationed when it comes to extremely complex and costly
- medical procedures for very old patients. "Most of the elderly
- would probably accept that idea," says Dr. Perry Stafford, a
- surgeon at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland. "It is usually
- their families who have this tenacious hold on anything that
- will prolong life. It is hard for people to see that at some
- point, you are prolonging death, not life."
- </p>
- <p>4. FRAUD AND ABUSE
- </p>
- <p> How does an insurance company know whether a patient
- really got the care for which it picks up most of the tab?
- Doctors and hospitals are on the honor system, but some of them
- cheat. Fraud may account for as much as $75 billion of annual
- U.S. health-care expenditures, according to the National Health
- Care Anti-Fraud Association. Last June California officials
- uncovered the biggest single medical fraud to date, a $1 billion
- rip-off carried out by thieves operating clinics on wheels.
- Investigators say the clinics offered patients free tests and
- exams, then used their insurance information to generate a huge
- number of fake bills. In a similar scam in New York City, a
- doctor billed Medicaid for $50,000 worth of lab tests for a
- single patient.
- </p>
- <p> Innumerable smaller crimes are committed daily in labs,
- hospitals and doctors' offices to inflate the costs of care,
- often under the guise of doing patients a favor by circumventing
- cumbersome insurance regulations. Some doctors and dentists give
- patients inflated bills in exchange for slightly higher than
- normal fees. The patient collects his own kickback in the form
- of a bigger insurance refund. Some hospitals and doctors bill
- for treatment they did not provide. In a survey of Aetna Life
- & Casualty customers, 4 out of 10 consumers said their doctors
- had cheated insurance companies.
- </p>
- <p> Physicians also have conflicts of interest that contribute
- to vast waste, reformers say. In a study released in August,
- Florida officials reported that doctors owned 93% of the
- diagnostic-imaging centers surveyed, 78% of the radiation-therapy
- centers, 60% of the clinical labs and 38% of the physical-therapy
- and rehabilitation centers. Miami doctors prescribe MRI scans
- (cost: $800) and various lab tests about twice as often as
- doctors in Baltimore, where very few own the equipment. Lab
- charges are more than twice as high at facilities owned by
- doctors.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Tougher enforcement. Insurance companies and
- public authorities should pool information on fraud via computer
- networks. At the very least, this would prevent thieves from
- simply repeating their crimes later in fresh territory, as many
- now do, thanks to lax record keeping by program administrators.
- In addition, physicians and hospital officials must police their
- own ranks and blow the whistle on dishonest billing practices.
- Stricter policing will cost more, but it should pay for itself
- many times over.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, doctors should be required to disclose
- to patients their investments in testing centers and
- laboratories and offer an alternative in which the doctor does
- not have a financial interest. (That proposal has already been
- recommended by the American Medical Association's Council on
- Ethical and Judicial Affairs.)
- </p>
- <p>5. DISAPPEARING DOCTORS
- </p>
- <p> More than 570,000 physicians practice medicine in the U.S.
- today, almost double the number 20 years ago. Yet huge areas--18 counties in Texas alone--have none. Rural America, like
- many inner cities, is facing a crisis in primary care.
- Communities need about 35,000 more general practitioners,
- according to most estimates. Doctors typically prefer more
- lucrative practices as specialists and surgeons (who can earn
- more than $300,000 a year, compared with the average family
- practitioner's income of $96,000). The shortage of general
- practitioners leads to wasteful use of medical resources.
- Without a family doctor to keep track of their overall health,
- people are left to find their way through a costly medical
- system ache by ache, often seeking high-priced help where the
- skills of a generalist would more than suffice.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Federal money pays for half of graduate medical
- education. Redirect as much as 50% of that $3.6 billion federal
- contribution to students who aim to practice primary medicine.
- </p>
- <p> Expand a three-year pilot project authorized by Congress
- last year. The program provides up to $50,000 in matching funds
- for communities that finance medical education for physicians
- (cost of training: about $75,000) as well as other medical
- professionals. This plan was prompted by the experience of Dr.
- Roger Pelli. A resident of Ashland, Me. (pop. 1,800), a town
- without a doctor, Pelli promised in 1982 to care for the people
- in the Ashland area if they would help send him to medical
- school. Six local towns raised $15,000 a year for his education.
- Today Pelli takes care of 3,000 people scattered over the
- surrounding area, making house calls, handling everything from
- chain-saw injuries and cardiac arrest to births and
- vaccinations. Says Ashland town manager Nancy Farris: "He's
- always there, and he always greets his patients with a smile,
- no matter how tired he is. The only thing is, he's working too
- darned hard."
- </p>
- <p> Pelli's emotional commitment is all the greater because
- his patients are his friends. Not long ago, a young woman in
- town was fatally injured in an auto accident. Recalls Pelli: "I
- couldn't revive her. All the time I was trying, I could hear her
- two young children, her husband and her parents crying. It was
- just heartbreaking." Says selectman Ray Beaulier, who doubles
- as the town mail carrier: "Roger is as close as you can get to
- the old country doctor."
- </p>
- <p> As an additional incentive for doctors who have already
- finished school, waive taxes on the first $40,000 in income for
- those who treat patients in designated neglected areas. Expense
- to the U.S. Treasury: approximately $9,000 a year for an
- unmarried doctor with no dependents. As well as being worthwhile
- in itself, this investment in basic medicine would also produce
- other kinds of savings by preventing unchecked chronic disease
- and producing healthier and more productive citizens.
- </p>
- <p>6. PHYSICIAN COMPENSATION
- </p>
- <p> Back when doctors were paid out of patients' pockets,
- there were natural brakes on the amount of medical service
- prescribed and the charges levied. For one thing, doctors knew
- their decisions could devastate a family's finances. And
- patients who paid their own bills yelped at high prices. But
- concerns over costs diminished over the past 40 years as vast
- insurance pools were created through company benefits plans and
- the huge Medicaid and Medicare systems.
- </p>
- <p> Under the circumstances, insurance is like a blank check.
- Research has shown that doctors paid in fee-for-service programs
- order 50% more electrocardiograms (about $27.50 each) and 40%
- more X-rays ($62 for a frontal-lateral chest X-ray) than
- physicians in managed-care groups. Says Edmund Kelly, group
- president of Aetna: "The problem with our medical financing
- system is that most doctors get paid for doing things to people,
- not for keeping them healthy."
- </p>
- <p> Medicare and insurance companies have tried to make sense
- of medical charges by establishing maximum fees for hundreds of
- surgeries, tests and procedures. But the medical establishment
- is winning the accounting war. Some doctors attend seminars on
- "creative billing," learning how to describe medical treatment
- in terms that will yield the highest prices. A $2,900
- gastrectomy, the removal of all or part of the stomach, can be
- billed a la carte as several procedures for a total of $6,900.
- When auto-repair shops or lawyers do that, we call it padding
- the bill. Doctors call it "unbundling." Some maintain that they
- do it in the spirit of Robin Hood, overcharging people with good
- insurance in order to charge less for the treatment of poorly
- covered patients.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Managed care. Providers of group insurance
- should insist that doctors treating their patients be paid
- salaries or flat fees. Such a system is already employed by many
- HMOs, which charge group-insurance plans an annual fee for
- treatment and produce often dramatic savings. Treating 40
- million Americans last year, HMOs cost an average of $2,683 per
- person, 17% less than the $3,214 cost of traditional indemnity
- plans, according to a survey conducted by the Foster Higgins
- consulting firm. Doctors bound by such strictures would still
- be free to earn extra income by treating other, higher-income
- patients in private practice.
- </p>
- <p>7. UNNECESSARY CARE
- </p>
- <p> Fear of malpractice lawsuits drives doctors to perform
- many extra procedures to protect themselves against accusations
- of negligence. The A.M.A. estimates that defensive medicine
- adds $21 billion to the U.S. health-care bill every year. Other
- experts, including former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop,
- believe the cost is several times that high. Some reformers
- think juries in malpractice cases share the blame by punishing
- doctors not only for shoddy practice but also for their human
- limitations. "Medical care is not always successful," says
- Aetna's Kelly. "But that doesn't mean the doctor should have to
- pay huge awards for pain and suffering."
- </p>
- <p> Then again, many doctors and hospitals overtreat patients
- simply because they have a blank check to do so under many
- insurance programs. As much as 20% of all medical procedures and
- treatment is completely unnecessary, contends Dr. Robert Brook,
- director of health sciences for the Rand Corp. Cost of the
- waste: $132 billion a year. Aetna estimates that as much as 30%
- more ($198 billion) is discretionary care that may not solve the
- problem under treatment.
- </p>
- <p> Rand studies have found that in some regions of the
- country as many as 44% of coronary bypass surgeries and 64% of
- artery-clearing carotid endarterectomies were either unnecessary
- or highly questionable. In a separate review for the
- Philadelphia Professional Standards Review Organization, Dr.
- Allan Greenspan found that about 25% of heart-pacemaker implants
- performed in the Philadelphia region were inappropriate. Many
- doctors challenge such findings, arguing that it is better to
- err on the safe side.
- </p>
- <p> In the same vein, some extremely expensive technologies
- are used even before it is clear that they're needed. That may
- be the case with at least one new biotech drug, Centoxin, which
- is available on a limited basis to treat hospital-acquired
- infections that can cause fatal septic shock (estimated cost:
- $3,800 a dose). Trouble is, since the condition can kill so
- quickly, doctors will have to decide whether to administer the
- drug before they are sure the patient needs it.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: For malpractice cases, cap noneconomic awards
- for factors like pain and suffering at about $250,000.
- California placed a limit on such awards in 1975, and it now has
- some of the lowest malpractice premiums in the U.S. One reason:
- ambulance-chasing lawyers have less incentive to bring
- questionable claims.
- </p>
- <p> Another wise investment: devote more research to finding
- out which procedures and drugs are most effective. If doctors
- can be supplied with better, consensual guidelines about what
- works in treating various ailments, they will feel less pressure
- to do things on a just-in-case basis. They also will be better
- protected against unwarranted litigation. It is important,
- though, that such standards be viewed as guidelines, rather than
- rules that might impinge upon a doctor's best sense of what a
- patient needs. "Judgment is an important factor in medicine,"
- says Dr. Robert Heyssel, president of the Johns Hopkins
- Hospital. "Doctors disagree all the time about whether a carotid
- endarterectomy or a coronary bypass will offer a patient the
- best shot at recovery. There are no absolutes around these
- things."
- </p>
- <p> Finally, set maximum reimbursement levels for high-cost
- pharmaceuticals. Drug firms are among the most profitable in the
- U.S. And $3,800 a dose is too much.
- </p>
- <p>8. THE HOSPITAL GLUT
- </p>
- <p> America has too many hospitals. On average, U.S. hospitals
- are operating at 64.5% capacity. To fill their beds, some
- hospitals buy physicians' practices and then pay the doctors
- under so-called census-based compensation, which is geared to
- the number of patients the physicians send to the mother ship
- and the number of procedures they perform. Some hospitals pay
- doctors in other ways--through honorariums or appointments to
- hospital boards--as a reward for referring patients.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Remove the more blatant conflicts of interest
- governing the relationships between doctors and hospitals.
- Outlaw census-based compensation for doctors. Require physicians
- to disclose their financial relationships with the hospitals to
- their patients.
- </p>
- <p> Companies as well as federal and state programs should
- encourage doctors to refer those patients who do not need the
- full range of hospital services to less costly outpatient
- clinics. Simple fractures, for example, often can be treated in
- this way. Pay doctors and hospitals less for clearly wasteful
- practices.
- </p>
- <p> Eliminate tax subsidies for underused and obsolete
- hospitals. Together with the discipline of managed care and
- physician disclosure requirements, this change will help weed
- out vestigial institutions so that taxpayer support for health
- care can be put to better uses.
- </p>
- <p>9. FAIRNESS
- </p>
- <p> Taxpayers, even those who have no insurance, spend an
- estimated $84 billion a year to subsidize medical care for
- mostly middle- and upper-class Americans. That is because
- companies can write off every dollar they spend on health care
- as a business expense, which may help explain why corporate
- America did so little to contain the costs until they got out
- of hand. At the same time, employees who enjoy generous benefits
- plans pay no taxes on the thousands of dollars in health-care
- coverage that their companies provide for them.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Reduce the corporate write-off for medical costs.
- And impose a tax on employee health benefits at a moderate rate
- for well-compensated workers.
- </p>
- <p>10. WASTE
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has more than 1,500 different health-insurance
- programs, each with its own marketing department, complex forms
- and regulations. Doctors, nurses and clerks are buried in the
- paperwork needed to keep track of whom to bill for every aspirin
- tablet. It's a massive waste of time. U.S. health-care providers
- will spend as much as $90 billion this year on record keeping,
- according to a Harvard study.
- </p>
- <p> SOLUTION: Standardize insurance fees. Maryland did so 20
- years ago. Partly as a result, the cost of a hospital stay at
- top-rated Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, which was 25% above the
- national average before the system was put in place, is now 7%
- below the average. Louis Sullivan, the Secretary of Health and
- Human Services, proposed a national plan earlier this month to
- standardize health-insurance forms. If his program is carried
- out by the end of the decade, Americans could save as much as
- $20 billion a year. Just as important, eliminating wasteful
- paperwork would leave doctors and nurses more time and resources
- to care for patients.
- </p>
- <p> Cleaning up the health-care system will be an epic
- adventure in compromise. No one wants to give up his share of
- medicine's glittering promise, whether it comes in the form of
- pills or paychecks. But the problems won't wait: health care has
- emerged as the most important domestic issue of the '90s. "At
- some point," says Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt, "no one
- will be able to afford health care. We have got to act."
- </p>
- <p> While no treatment manual for American medicine should
- focus purely on its price, controlling costs is critical. If the
- medical experts are right, the U.S. could save at least $200
- billion a year simply by curbing fraud and unnecessary practice.
- We know where the problems lie. Doing something about them is
- at the very least our moral duty and is profoundly in our
- self-interest as a nation. Depriving millions of Americans of
- health care is wrong. Wasting billions of precious medical
- dollars on paperwork, dead-end procedures and outright theft is
- stupid. Undermining the health of our workers and children for
- lack of political gumption is suicidal. It is time to make the
- hard choices.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-