Articles by "Higher Cost of Delivery"
Showing posts with label Higher Cost of Delivery. Show all posts
health is wealth, fitness is beauty, dieting is inspiration, weight loss is recreational learn how to..
Health care in the United States is notable for being the worst when comparing health care among wealthy nations. A Commonwealth article was published in NEJM highlighting four areas that need to improve. Interestingly an improvement in primary care finances would address all four areas, but this discussion was avoided. Fitz Mullan had another article promoting the social mission just published in JAMA. Once again addressing bankrupt primary care finances would contribute to the social mission. Lofty ideals are easy to discuss, but the hard work is missing when it comes to addressing access barriers, disparities, and most Americans falling farther behind. You cannot get from last to first by failing to address areas that must be reformed - areas that actually shape insufficient access, insufficient primary care, insufficient team member support, and disparities. 

Goals, Aims, and Missions must be replaced with specific actions.

True Reform Is the Beginning

The foundation, institution, association, government-associated authors can begin to address four areas and the social mission by a true reform focus - equity in payments for basic services compared to most specialized and compared across the nation.



The authors fail to indicate the one most important area for improving primary care, mental health, and basic access services - 


more payment for cognitive, office, basic services. 

This must be the top priority even if less goes for procedural, technical, subspecialized. This is the only way to balance generalist MD DO NP and PA vs non-generalists. 

Primary care is the best distributed of all workforce and therefore is the best route to distributing health care dollars.
  • About 70% of local services where needed in 2621 counties lowest in physician concentrations are primary care services. 
  • Lowest paid basic services are 90% of local services. 
  • Only 6% of spending goes for primary care which involves 55% of services and also covers 50% of mental health services.
  • Where hospitals are missing, are threatened, or have closed - primary care is even more important.
  • Distributions of dollars also help to distribute improved outcomes as outcomes improvements require dollar improvements in areas such as education, economic development, housing, local resources, and other areas. Designs that concentrate create disparities. Designs that distribute can help address disparities.
Procedural, technical, subspecialized services are rewarded the most and are most concentrated where physicians are most concentrated. These are also the places where the institutions, largest systems, corporations, foundations, and associations are most powerful and are most willing to oppose this top priority reform. Primary care and basic services are a small proportion of local services and workforce where there is immersion in highest concentrations. The academic/research/workforce consultant/payment policy gurus are not going to support true reform.

Will academic, foundation, association leaders identified with social mission, access barriers, primary care, and disparity reduction stand up - perhaps at the risk of their jobs and reputations?

Authors that move in the most powerful circles have to stand up and promote this true reform even if other academic, association, foundation, institution colleagues oppose this reform. 

Other nations have better balance involving higher levels of generalists. Higher concentration counties in the US rank well among other nations. Half of the US population ranks far below all developed nations in generalist to population ratios. 

Despite the wondrous and expansive rhetoric regarding training interventions as a solution for generalist deficits, it has long been clear that generalist MD DO NP and PA workforce has been prevented by payment design. Few enter and even fewer remain - by financial design. The primary care design also results in a less experienced primary care workforce that may not perform as expected. Higher functions such as integration, coordination, outreach, and community partnerships are more likely with better designs that result in better retention and improved continuity.

No MD DO NP PA school or program or special training design can address gaps in primary care, mental health, and basic surgical services until this true primary care payment reform is addressed.


Once again this is about the limitations in primary care with revenue too low overall and specifically in places where half of the US population most needs care.

The US Health Care Design Is Specific to High Cost and Low Yield Outcomes
 

The runaway health care costs have been fueled by overutilization of highest cost services. These are services typically provided in higher to highest physician concentration counties. These services offer the least improvements in outcomes for the highest costs.

Expansions of subspecialty, administrative, and micromanagement costs continue to drive lowest yield for highest cost. These changes over the decades have acted to increase disparities.


Disparities are widened by overspending where services are concentrated and by underutilization involving most Americans.

Expansions of MD DO NP and PA workforce have been successful in one area - increasing non-primary care workforce. The expansions of the NP and PA programs have been ideal for a more efficient financial design - for non-primary care practices. Replacing as many most costly subspecialist physicians as possible is essential to lowering costs of delivery - of non-primary care services. This also boosts profit margins for higher to highest concentration providers.

True Reform Needs a Solid Financial Design
  • A universal coverage for primary care with 20% higher payments would be a start. Universal coverage for primary care is more palatable and more affordable. It is already a best value at 55% of services for 6% of spending.
  • Universal coverage for primary care with a 20% boost would be a 25 or 30% improvement for places with lower collections and greater challenges in billing, delays, and denials of payment. There would also be benefits in terms of less turnover and productivity losses.
  • A universal payment scale paying the same for office codes across the nation would bring equity to primary care payments for another 20% boost for those paid lowest - where services are most impaired by the current design.
The recommendations above would likely provide 45% more revenue for primary care where primary care is lacking - especially in lowest concentration counties. This redistribution of dollars would be a best match to the counties and practices most in need of workforce. Efforts specific to It also avoids the very costly and compromising issues of the current overproductions of MD DO NP and PA graduates.

Best Timing for True Reform

The time to do this was 2010 to allow at least 30 years to be able to address the populations most left behind that are increasing from 40% to 50% of the population by 2040. Sadly the US has not been moving from 40 to 60 billion to expand access as the insurance expanded pays too little and requires too much innovation, regulation, and certification cost. Economic improvements have also avoided these counties resulting in further deficits where turnover costs are highest and are increasing most.

Basic health access deficits bad and worsening are about patients with lowest paying insurance plans concentrated where deficits of workforce are greatest, where costs of delivery are increasing fastest, and where complexity is increasing most in multiple dimensions.

A reasonable understanding of the social and other non-clinical determinants of health that dominate in shaping health, education, and other outcomes...

...leads to the conclusion that billions taken away from lowest concentration counties by each of HITECH, digitalization, MACRA, and Primary Care Medical Home results not only in a decline in access but also a decline in health outcomes - as the non-clinical determinants are worsened. Education has a similar discriminatory design and a similar loss of billions from these counties by measurement focus. Measurement focus is ridiculous when these are counties that need to retain dollars to retain workforce and improve outcomes.

The designers underestimate the disparities caused by the health payment policies including worse outcomes due to dollars 3 times greater spent in 79 top physician concentration counties with over $30,000 spent per capita and 3 times less or less than $3000 per capita spent in lowest physician concentration counties that should have 50% of Americans by 2040.


Further Decline By Design Impacting More Americans

Demographic and other changes insure worse to come. This is because of housing collapse, closures of small hospitals, and meaningless costly micromanagement and other non-delivery costs accelerated. Housing collapse drive more financially and medically vulnerable populations to lowest concentration counties, closures of small hospitals add 10 - 12 counties a year to the ranks of lowest concentration counties, and micromanagement steals billions more each year from areas such as primary care that only get a minimal 35 - 40 billion for primary care. 


This is officially half enough in raw numbers of dollars required and only one-third enough given the higher concentrations of poor, elderly, fixed income, disabled, veteran, poor child, diabetic, obese, smoking, and mentally ill populations in these counties.

You can add the latest research indicating concentrations of populations with lower health care literacy, nonadherence, high risk, and high cost.

Runaway health care costs are fueled by overutilization in higher concentration counties, highest payments for the highly specialized services that do the least for health outcomes, decades of increasing administrative costs, decades of increased profits distributed to a few Americans. Runaway health care, military, and prison costs together with austerity focus compromise the personal, state, federal, employer, and local investments needed to change outcomes. Better investments in people, local resources, environments, and situations is required for better outcomes. This was noted but was not emphasized.

Much of the recent confusion, distraction, and inefficiency added is about the insertion of micromanagement into health care design - a bandwagon assumption that cannot improve outcomes as noted in evidence based reviews.

If you stand for access then you must stand up for true payment reform. If we cannot get foundations with a mission for access to support access improvements specific to the needs of most Americans, we will not make progress in access, costs, or outcomes.
no image
health is wealth, fitness is beauty, dieting is inspiration, weight loss is recreational learn how to..
Discussions of state or federal budgets draw much attention, but it is the American people who make America work, fill in the gaps, and accomplish far more than the dollars expended. 

Ideally the designs for dollars, people, and services all align for best result. A divided nation will accomplish far less, and this will often result in a widening gap impacting most people. M Scott Peck wrote a book on "community" and noted that you knew community existed when it happened. Happening worth having is togetherness.

We are not together. Our inefficiency rocks the core of our nation, what we hope to accomplish, and how we can accomplish it. Infrastructure is a popular word. Embedded in infrastructure is the ability to facilitate more efficient and effective function. There are multiple types of infrastructure in a nation. America is made up of physical infrastructure, spiritual infrastructure, and human infrastructure. Rarely have these all aligned except for major wars and for a period of time after 9/11. 

A great nation requires a proper balance between all three types. Some attempts at balance resulted from the tragedies of the early 1960s with attempts to address widening divisions. Changes in the decades since 1980 have seen marginalization of the human infrastructure. The nation continues to be divided along political/spiritual lines and the consequences are seen in the lack of investments in physical and human infrastructure. 

Not surprisingly this has required more Americans to step up and do even more. Their efforts would be more efficient and more effective if our designs supported their important work across communities, people, patients, students, and children. Their contributions are outstanding, but this is also because they stand out. Even more important would be many more of us stepping up, so many that it would be hard to seen any standing out. The results would be most important, not the players.

Readers of this blog will commonly see my posts about the wasted 100 million dollar grants by CMS and by various foundations. These grants are often about areas that people are already addressing. Dollars are best spent to support people doing what needs to be done and there is certainly plenty that needs doing in the area of health access.
Health and education are areas that are difficult to reduce to dollar values. There are so many sacrifices made by so many. The best sacrifices are made with few noticing. This is quite common in teachers and health care team members. 


On principle alone, health and education should resist the reduction into dollar values. 

Clearly efforts to measure these areas have worsened matters by consuming dollars that are needed to support team members - and by transferring scarce dollars away from where needed.

The messages of the media are commonly about dollar contributions, high costs, or lack of investment. Volunteer and other contributions can be given a dollar value although some contributions do rate the term "priceless."

These following contributions represent a collection that is a work in progress. Government health and education data were converted to estimates. These are measured in terms of additional teacher, nurse, parent, caregiver, and community efforts. Experts in education, public service, and other areas of health care could add even more support by many more Americans.

Health Care Is a 3 Trillion Dollar Expenditure but Actual Contributions Exceed
4 Trillion Dollars When Including Unpaid, Underpaid, and In-Kind Efforts
  • 500 billion is contributed by Caregivers - In a recent annual report by CMS, the 1 trillion dollar budget sum from Medicaid and Medicare was listed along with the contributions estimated to arise from caregivers. Caregivers providing for family, friends, neighbors, or those in the community contribute at least 500 billion dollars a year or right between what Medicaid and Medicare contribute to health care at 600 billion and 400 billion - and without one hundred billion in waste, fraud, and abuse. This compares to 3 trillion dollars for overall health care contribution equal to about 16 to 20% of health care. Additional contributions from nurses, physicians, and other team members easily reach over 500 billion dollars.
Hospital Care Is 1 Trillion Dollars of Expense But Actual Contributions Are Greater
  • 182 billion - One of the problems not addressed is what happens when professionals are trained to do a job, and then receive less support to do that job. They still do the job, but are more strained in doing the work. Nurses have been devalued since the 1980s. They still do the job but with fewer while forced to do it in a shorter time. Changes in payment design accelerated the compromise. Diagnosis Related Group payment changes resulted in a fixed and lower payment to hospitals. This forced hospitals to get by with less and send patients out faster, in some cases too fast. The patients and families have often been unprepared for the discharge - resulting in greater efforts outside of the hospital. Inside of the hospital, nurses were put on the chopping block due to their prominent role as the largest hospital cost. Too few nurses have been forced to do too much for too little for decades. The calculations of their additional contributions include the additional efforts beyond hourly pay (quite priceless actually) rated at the figure of at least $25 more per hour for 38 hours a week for 48 weeks a year. 
  • The nursing figures compare to hospital spending at 1 trillion a year for a value of 18% of hospital spending. Consequences of the design include nursing shortages and less experienced nurses. Inclusion of more personnel would result in 25 - 30% for the contribution. 
  • Volunteers easily contribute 10 - 30 billion in efforts and additional billions in fund raising.
With over 200 billion in revenue cut since 2010, hospitals will continue to face more challenges. Those doing the health care designs have decided to do more for less cost - a design that most compromises those that deliver the care. The additional strain placed on hospitals has long resulted in more overwhelm for patients, families, caregivers, outpatient resources, and primary care clinics. 

Primary Care Is a 170 Billion Expenditure But 70 Billion in Additional Contribution Is Required

Primary care has been in decline for decades with lowest payments kept stagnant and accelerating cost of delivery. It might have collapsed but for the efforts of dedicated advocates who have preserved and protected this basic access care asset across America. This has not been an easy task because of the seriously flawed payment design. The underpayment and the overwork is most likely found in the places where 50% of Americans are most left behind. 

  • 20 billion - The calculations of additional contributions include 20 billion for primary care team members undersupported and overworking by $10 per hour and 
  • 20 billion more for primary care physicians due to stagnant payment plus another 
  • 20 billion for the additional uncompensated time to do electronic records plus at least 
  • 10 billion in additional adjustment efforts during this time of rapid change of regulations, changes in regulations, reorganizations, switching payment, and insurance barriers to needed care. 
This 70 billion compares to 170 billion or a contribution equal to about 40% of primary care delivery capacity. More detailed contributions involving the broader community, families, and others could indicate 90 billion. One of the true threats to basic health access is burnout. Morale continues to worsen.

If primary care personnel delivered care based on the level at which they were compensated, primary care would collapse. Primary care and other basic health and education functions actually require substantial human supplementation just to continue the effort.

Considering the declines in mental health, public health, and general surgical specialties plus increasingly complex patients, the challenges of primary care will be even greater.

Other Health Care Contributions In Lieu of Adequate Support
  • 100 billion - This is the requirement to invest in sufficient mental health care 
  • 50 billion - General surgical services require substantial increases to maintain the active workforce and team members - now shrinking at 2 to 3 percentage points a year by national designs
The period since 2010 has been one of the costliest in health care with regard to rapid changes, adjustments, additional duties, and various distractions to address with government and payers driving this costly train. In addition to the 30 billion above, about 50 billion additional has been required from non-primary care physicians and their team members to address EHR and measurement focus. Many estimates would be much higher.

Education for Primary and Secondary Education - 620 Billion Costs in 2016 Exceeds 1 Trillion Effort For All Source Contributions
  • 115 billion - Teachers have suffered the same austerity cuts as seen across those who serve where most needed. An additional 5 hours a day for 180 days a year should be paid at $50 for 115 billion. 
  • 92 billion - Raising teaching pay to $50 per hour would be 92 billion. Based on other nations this would still be small in comparison. 
  • 50 - 100 billion - The additional contributions of parents of the 50 million students add another 50 - 100 billion. 
  • 48 billion -  Homeschooling contributions of parents involve about 3 hours a day for 200 days at 40 dollars an hour.
  • 5 - 20 billion - Before and after school and weekend contributions 
  • 2 - 10 billion - community, church, and other organization contributions
  • This 340 billion compares to 620 billion for formal education spending for primary and secondary education.  for a contribution equal to half, or one-third of the total education contribution. This would be much higher considering contributions by teachers and parents prior to formal education and the contributions of community and church groups. The contribution of the federal government is only about 25 billion dollars and is limited to efforts in the early years of life and for special needs students - another area where half of the contribution may be provided by in-kind efforts.
Tax Day or Tax Break Day

The stimulus for this blog is the upcoming tax day - or tax break day for the Americans doing best. The studies clearly indicate that you cannot count on the wealthy for contributions, but you can count on those lowest income to give the most of their few remaining dollars. 

Your tax dollar goes for the following. Those in Green Contribute more per dollar for outcomes. Those in red do not contribute as much. Social Security contributes to outcomes but is taxed and paid differently. Health care spending is high cost for little improvement in outcome. It has the double effect of collapsing other spending.

29.1 cents Medicaid, Medicare, Child Health 
23.4 Military and Pentagon
13.2 Debt
7.5 Unemployment and Labor
6 Veterans Benefits
4.5 Food and Agriculture
4.2 Government - Jobs on the border via Border Patrol can contribute, other spending not so much
3.2 Transportation
2.8 Education
2.1 Housing and Community
1.6 Energy and Environment
1.3 International Affairs
1.0 Science

Health outcomes as well as education and other outcomes proceed from patient and population situations. They are not shaped from clinical interventions and certainly are not reflected in the usual health data. Health care spending is so much that little remains for investments in younger to youngest humans or investments in resources to help the elderly through the most challenging decades of their lives. Too much spent for too little in too few settings is a bad design for best outcomes for most Americans. 

Humans must be supported from the earliest months and years of life. Human infrastructure should reinforce the local influence of parent, school, and community. So much of a life course is set by age 8 when the velocity of learning slows. The focus soon changes to environment and social interactions. Environments are too often least supportive for young humans to learn to interact as well as they need for their health and the health of others.

Senior Corps Provides 78 Billion in Support  “As local organizations experience increased demands with fewer resources, older Americans are stepping up to fill in the gaps, and their service is more important now than ever,” said Erin McGrath, acting director of Senior Corps. Celebrating Seniors who Serve


The Least Healthy Counties point the way as they have least investments despite needing the most - and they involve the most Americans and those increasing the most. 

Austerity Focus Magnified by Runaway Health Costs are compromising most Americans
health is wealth, fitness is beauty, dieting is inspiration, weight loss is recreational learn how to..
Context matters in health care. This is because outcomes are about the patient, community resources, social determinants, environments, situations, behaviors,  housing, and other personal and community factors. Outcomes are predominantly not about clinical interventions. This is a very difficult to understand but most important concept. Clinical interventions are small change regarding health outcomes.

The context for this blog response is a recent Commonwealth Review of PCMH. There were changes in a few outcomes, but overall there was little change. "PCMH initiatives were not associated with changes in the majority of outcomes studied, including primary care visits, emergency department visits, inpatient visits, and four quality measures." The article claims that context matters, and may explain the lack of outcomes for primary care medical home. 



High Cost for Little Change Via PCMH - the Opposite of Value

Primary care medical home costs run about $80,000 to $100,000 per primary care physician (Annals FM). This is about 20% of the typical revenue generation of a primary care physician. Spending 20% to return a few % or no percent in change is not sustainable in primary care. Primary care is already in decline with stagnant revenue and increasing costs for areas beyond primary care medical home costs, and many can ill-afford any additional costs much less major costs.

Fire, Aim, Ready Innovations

An incredible amount of time, effort, grant funding, and promotion has gone into primary care medical home. There is little explanation for PCMH other than
  • Innovation Worship after decades of stagnation in primary care
  • The need for marketing primary care in locations where enough primary care is present to result in competition. 
The massive outlays have always been questionable with primary care finances so marginal.

Studies have demonstrated serious issues with PCMH from the start such as lack of a uniform definition and variations in application. Recent studies and reviews have indicated variations in the outcomes measured, problems with comparison groups, and one huge issue.

Innovation and Accountable Care Has Much To Be Accountable For
  • The lack of value due to high cost of PCMH without significant outcomes improvements
  • The lack of PCMH where most Americans most need care
  • The poor assumptions made by those who push innovation without understanding most Americans in need of care and those who serve them.
  • Primary care associations that support innovative policies that make practice difficult for most of their members.
  • Rapidly rising cost of delivery
  • Accelerating morale, productivity, and turnover problems
  • Innovations that lack an evidence basis for significant outcomes improvements such as PCMH and Pay for Performance
  • Regulations such as MACRA that exceed the design specifications of Congress and the consultant for the regulation (RAND)
Serious Consequences from Innovation Dysfunction

Primary care medical home and other innovative changes have clearly contributed to the increasing levels of burnout and morale problems.

Turnover is already over $300,000 per lost primary care physician and turnover is another problem when team members are so stressed by the primary care financial design. Training for PCMH is most difficult when team members trained in primary care are lost.

Poor Primary Care Medical Home Distribution May Have a Reason

PCMH has had poor penetration into lower physician concentration counties. PCMH has often involved those most organized who can lobby for grants and special funding.

The practices that have had lower payments and higher costs of delivery have not been in a position to consider a much higher overhead model such as PCMH. Small practices and practices where physicians are nearing retirement face many challenges involving PCMH, EHR, and measurement focus.

The cost to change billing and payments has been substantial. Obamacare did temporarily increase Medicaid payments to the level of Medicare, but then this expired after two years. Dr. David Sundwall estimated that the cost of these changes negated the extra revenue. Once again the designers underestimated the consequences of their design.

Despite the problems, there are articles that tend to label physicians not very progressive for not embracing new innovations. More understanding is needed by those who do not understand primary care facing the most challenges with the least support - for decades.

The innovators are asking for costly innovations from people who know their practices, their situations, and the sad financial design that most impairs what their team members can do already.

Financial  Compromise Via Decades of Payment Designs

Large practices and systems have been receiving increasing revenue via higher payments from two methods - greater negotiating power and annual contracted escalation clauses. Smaller practices, primary care practices, and practices in locations with few insurers have been falling behind decade after decade.

The risks are much greater for smaller practices with patients that have greater challenges and lesser outcomes.

More Complex Patients in Primary Care, Especially Lower Concentration Settings

For decades physicians have been paid based on the assumption that subspecialized care was more complex. Studies have now demonstrated the complexity of primary care. Fellowship training may take more years but this is no reason to send so many more dollars for services that take little time. Complex care needs support, not punishment.

The most complex patients are found in lowest physician concentration counties where there are higher concentrations of disabled, diabetics, elderly, poor to fair health status, and deficits in health literacy and local resources to go with lesser concentrations of health care workforce.

These local, population, and community factors set outcomes at lowest levels such as 48% of preventable deaths for this 40% of the population. Pay for Performance is clearly discriminatory, resulting in even lower payment for those least paid already.

The deficits are the result of decades of lowest payments for primary care plus even lower payments where care is needed plus lower still because small practices have no negotiating power with regard to payers.

Higher Primary Care Functions Are the Goal of All Primary Care Practices

Primary Care Home Advocates act as if primary care practices desire to function poorly This assumption is wrong. This assumption is a major problem for a number of reasons.
  • Studies indicate better outcomes from small practices of 9 or less physicians (Casalino, Health Affairs). 
  • Small practices know their patients and their community. 
  • Small town practice facilitates working with the community in ways that can impact outcomes not available to those in larger, more concentrated settings
  • Numerous family medicine doctors of the year and rural health awardees demonstrate outreach, coordination, services integration, Community Oriented Primary Care, and other endeavors.
  • Payment changes are needed to support primary care higher functions. 
  • Primary care offices need to be doing higher functions, not doing the administrative work that should be done by insurance payers


This rural family physician in the 1980s was working with the health department, a weight control group, local social workers on teenage pregnancy prevention, and was a part of the local ministerial alliance as well as other community group efforts. He proposed one of the first assisted living operations - despite being paid the least by state, by Area 99 codes for the state, and by being a new physician via ReaganCaree. Reasonable support would have facilitated a longer stay and more interactions. From this perspective, the claims and promotions make primary care look bad as if it is lacking in more than just finances.

Higher primary care functions such as integration, coordination, and outreach require more team member support. In primary care, the largest budget item is personnel and the team members that deliver the care are essential. When supplies, computer, EHR, health info maintenance, and other costs increase by necessity or regulation, the team members that deliver care are compromised. This is clearly seen with declines in productivity and morale with increasing burnout.

Rapid Change Often Favors Those Already Doing Well

Primary care medical home is not established, has substantial variation, is costly at a time when primary care margins are too thin already, places greater challenges upon team members, and requires substantial changes.

One theme to remember in this time of innovation worship is that the only insurance companies, systems, practices, and hospitals that are able to decreased costs and improve outcomes are those
  • that were paid well (or overpaid) 
  • that had the least complex patients with inherently the best outcomes, and
  • that generally have had the ability to figure out that they can do well financially with an innovation.
The innovation bandwagon works against those that are not well paid, that have the most complex patients, and that have the highest costs of delivery

Actual Compromise of Health Outcomes - Follow the Money

Designs that ship scarce health care dollars outside of lowest concentration settings compromise team members and also outcomes. Health, education, economic, and other outcomes are dependent upon dollars that stay in a community.

Dollars shipped in to communities and dollars retained in communities for human interactions and for support of humans are dollars that improve outcomes.
Dollars shipped out of communities in most need of dollars
help shape disparities. 

Dollars shipped out for certifications and regulations, dollars shipped out to practice consultants, dollars shipped to mail order pharmacies by innovative designs that compromise local pharmacies, dollars redirected by school consolidations, dollars not sent by states to lowest property value school districts, dollars concentrated in highest concentration settings by paying more for highly specialized care with least payment flowing to primary care and lowest concentration settings, payment designs that have compromised small practices and hospitals, and various innovations all steal dollars from places in most need of dollars for a widening of disparities and a worsening of outcomes.

It is important to examine the context of health care dollar distributions with over $30,000 per person expended in 79 top physician concentration counties and less than 3500 dollars sent to 2621 lowest physician concentration counties - a 9 times disparity.

Improvements in health, education, economic, and other outcomes
require disparities in a wide range of areas to be addressed
specific to patient, student, worker, and community.

Increased Costs Have Consequences - Especially in Health Care

Two Forces Shaping Declines in Outcomes indicates that spending billions more for innovations adds to health care costs and fuels across the board cuts, austerity focus, and compromise of domestic discretionary spending - contributing to worse outcomes.

Most Needed Health Access Requires a Better Design, Not Poor Assumptions

There are many poor assumptions regarding primary care. My son at age 3 had a saying, "Sometimes it just be's." Basic health care services need not be fancy, but they should exist. The fact that many if not most Americans lack for basic health access is indication for different payment designs to support this foundational care.

People want basic services and primary care provides these services.
Primary care exists for basic services.

Why Castigate Higher Volume?

Even former insurance CEOs indicate that office services do not break the bank. With 55% of services for just 6% of annual health spending, primary care is a great bargain. Higher volume is actually indicated as it is the only solution for resolving access to care barriers.

Volume of care is both a friend and an enemy
  • Higher volume for primary care where needed is a friend
  • Higher volume where patients can access care and can overutilize care is an enemy 
  • Four times greater volume of specialty services in a number of metro areas is an enemy shaping concentrations of workforce, greater competition, and increased numbers of such services to support concentrations of workforce
  • Higher volume of highest paid services that are multiple times more likely in populations without access barriers may well be responsible for cost overruns.
In places where most of the US population resides in counties with lowest concentrations of physicians, volume is not the enemy. About 90% of the local services are basic generalist and general specialty services - primary care, mental health, basic surgical services. The lack of volume in these areas is a huge problem.

When you see primary care leaders pontificating about volume as a problem in primary care and basic services - you are seeing them repeat academic and policy designer concepts. They are not passing on information important for

Restoring Basic Access to Care.

Jumping on bandwagons, innovation worship, and assumptions from designers immersed in highest concentration settings are killing access, local health workforce, health outcomes, and human beings where Americans remain behind in lowest concentration settings.