Dr. Philip Lee Miller
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Dr. Philip Lee Miller

news and views for your optimal health and wellness

Trying to Please Everyone and No One – part 2

Trying to Please Everyone and No One – part 2

November 30, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

Where is this train wreck headed?  Wending its way through the various Senate and House subcommittees, the health care reform debate of 2009 is approaching a crescendo.    What do we have to show?   The question I posed in a previous post still has yet to be answered – just what is the problem?  Is the problem greater access?  Is the problem escalating insurance premiums?  Is the problem stratospheric and ruinous hospitalization bills?  Is the problem rapidly declining quality of care?  Or is this simply become a matter of whose team wins?  The bill fails — the president sinks.

Andrew Weil concludes:

But what’s missing, tragically, is a diagnosis of the real, far more fundamental problem, which is that what’s even worse than its stratospheric cost is the fact that American health care doesn’t fulfill its prime directive — it does not help people become or stay healthy.

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Trying to Put Genie Back in the Bottle

Trying to Put Genie Back in the Bottle

November 19, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 1 comment

We have seen the emergence of “evidence-based medicine” in the last 10 years.  This has been an effort to further legitimize and give scientific basis to common medical therapies.  A medical version of “show me the money.”  I have always thought this was rather inane, since it presumed that all medicine for the last 2000 years has been unscientific and irrational.  Although the reality is medicine is not nearly as scientific as asserted.  Only 10-20% of medical practice is based on sound scientific principles.   This rankles most physicians who believe that conventional medicine is scientifically-based.  The highest form of medicine is the practiced art using scientific principles and technology.

A series of US Task Force recommendations are being rolled out by the Department of Health and Human Services.  These are well-intentioned and rational.  Examining the literature and epidemiology of medical practices in an effort to determine what is safe, sane, practical and effective.   The trap is “effective” as you will see.

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Health Care Reform: Pleasing Everyone and No One

Health Care Reform: Pleasing Everyone and No One

November 5, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

After countless months the debate marches on.   Congressional House and Senate bills proliferate.  I have lost track.  It is beyond our comprehension trying to read through each of these bills.

There have been many lost opportunities.  This has never been about health care reform.  This is about health insurance regulation.  If you carefully sift through all the heartache stories and testimonials, you will see the real drama – unexpected hospitalizations.   So the real crisis is coverage of catastrophic loss – astronomical hospital bills.  Routine appendectomy — $50,000.  Complicated heart attack — $250,000+.   Catastrophe loss should have been the starting point.

Insurance is not the answer.   It is the problem.   Insurance subsidizes high costs.

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Healthcare Focus: Quality or Quantity

Healthcare Focus: Quality or Quantity

October 4, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

What is the message?    What do you want?

The World Health Organization definition of health has not changed since 1949.  We were asked this the first day of medical school.  No one answered correctly:

Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.

Political strategists play with focus groups to achieve Machiavellian goals.  Issues can be framed positively or negatively.  In a recent series of  soundbites with Republican and Democratic response tracks, Republican strategist, Frank Luntz,  found the political segment that was most effective for both Republican and Democratic viewers was the one that featured a female physician.  She was real, conveying substance and legitimacy.   See Luntz explanation of focus and metaphors.  For an even more revealing look at looking at mind-control watch  The persuaders — one of the most eerie documentaries FrontLine ever produced.

This week the President met with “selected physicians” to shore up his support.

This entire public debate would have had been far more successful with tighter focus and goals — health insurance reform and regulation.  We may be on the verge of another government giveaway.

John Podesta,  President Clinton’s Chief of Staff, was interviewed on the Charlie Rose show last month.  His words were quite prescient.

“We’re very close to finally doing what for 60 years presidents and congresses have been trying to do which is to produce quality, affordable health coverage for every American.”

And therein lies the killer paradox.   Affordability implies universal access.   Universal access implies quantity.   Quality and quantity are mutually exclusive.  You don’t go to Costco or Target or Wal-Mart for quality service.  If you’re lucky, you may find quality merchandise.  But not service.

Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) were heavily promoted by the Nixon administration in 1973 to contain costs — Managed Care.  We physicians had another name for it — “mangled care.”   The largest of all HMO’s today, Kaiser Permanente, demands minimalist, algorithm-based, cost-driven medicine.  Lonnie Bristow, a former President of the AMA, recently called this “a work in progress” at a town hall meeting here in Northern California.  Indeed, a work in progress.

Want to know the simple formula for HMO Medicine?   And by extension the cost-savings approach to medicine?  It is a very simple formula.

Lives x Capitation = Revenue

That’s it.   It’s all a numbers game.  Notice what drops out?   Quality!   Not even factored into the equation.   Using a simple mathematical model you can see that cost-driven medicine (managed-care)  is incompatible with quality of care.  And that is what we all experienced, those of us who have practiced in HMOs in the past.  All of us.

The administration and congress is using the same old arguments proffered over 30 years ago.   We will be saved by the cost-cutting gods.  The Green Visor man.  The guy that eventually wraps up every car deal.   Read Dr. Bernadine Healy.   Then from Kip Sullivan of Labor Notes:

Biemiller went on to say that HMOs ‘can provide better quality medical care at lower cost than the fragmented fee-for-service system’ and that the savings HMOs could achieve were ‘enormous.’  His only significant reservation about Nixon’s HMO bill was that it would have subsidized for-profit HMOs.  But because there is no evidence that managed care is less toxic in the hands of nonprofit than for-profit HMOs, this reservation was of little significance.

Harvard and Stanford trained Dr. Margaret Hansen aired this short segment on KQED radio — the lost art of medicine.   Ancient voices from Andalusian Spain, Maimonides, echo similar sentiments every bit as fresh today as when written in the 12th century.

Medical practice is not knitting and weaving and the labor of the hands, but it must be inspired with the sole filled with understanding and equipped with the gift of keen observation; these together with accurate scientific knowledge are the indispensable requisites for proficient medical practice

The ancient wisdom of the Greeks was lost to Western civilization for 1000 years after the fall of the Roman Empire that had succumbed to endless corruption, incompetence and sybaritic excesses.  Greek culture and knowledge passed to Byzantium and Islam.   I appear as either a dinosaur/curmudgeon like Paul Muni in the Last Angry Man or a messenger from the future.  We were taught the “laying on of the hands” was essential to diagnosis and healing.   Great medicine is the accomplished art, intuition and inductive logic of the physician with the wise use of modern technology. Attributes of the 15th Century Surgeon should still be emulated: the eye of an eagle, the heart of a lion and the hands of a woman, the gentleness of a lamb and the patience of a saint.

Service, expertise and time.   That is the challenge.   Will you receive necessary and deserved time, expertise and personal service or simply a 10 minute expedient and tangential encounter? Is this the face of medicine?

Robots of the future
Robotized Doctors

The new medicine awaits — like the Phoenix rising — the paradigm shift.

Political Health Endgame: You Deserve Better Solutions

Political Health Endgame: You Deserve Better Solutions

September 27, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

Post-war Britain, and Londoners in particular, had suffered mightily after two years of punishing aerial bombardment.  The East End of London had been reduced to rubble.

Winston Churchill, arguably the greatest leader and politician of the 20th century, was turned out of office.  A new day dawned.  Anuerin Nye Bevin, a “firebrand” Socialist, was determined to remake the British health care system.  On July 5, 1948 he became the first Minister of Health.   Out of his uncompromising efforts was born the National Health System.  Bevin became known as the father of the NHS.  The pride and joy of Britain today.   Out of crisis comes opportunity.   And so it is today.   With crisis, opportunity comes aknocking.

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The Law of Unintended Consequences

The Law of Unintended Consequences

September 18, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

As I wrote many weeks ago, the health insurance industry will not lose this battle …  any more than the too-big-to-fail Banks have … all at immense public expense.

Max Baucus‘ political contributions from the health care and finance industry are well documented.  Now they have enlisted Tom Daschle and Bob Dole.   What a pair — Tweedle Dee and Tweddle Dum.   I have never understood what qualified Tom Daschle as a health care expert?   His ties to the industry?  A deposed ex-Senate Majority Leader?

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In Memorium … Mary Travers

In Memorium … Mary Travers

September 17, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

change the metaphor

change the metaphor

September 14, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

Joseph Campbell first offered this sage aphorism:

“If you want to change the world, you have to change the metaphor.” – Joseph Campbell

The president subtly changed the metaphor this morning in a major financial address.  Instead of the phrase health care reform he used the phrase health insurance reform.  Ah , now we are framing the right debate. Was this metaphorical or strategic?

We have argued for months now that this is not about health care reform.  Want real health care reform — you change the paradigm.  Read Deepak Chopra’s OpEd this morning in SFGate. Then read all our past and future posts.  The advent of the 21st century is quickly evolving.  Old paradigms, companies, and entire industries are vanishing.

The current debate is about economic reform.  And economic reform is about insurance reform — catastrophic economic reform.

If health care is central and vital to the health and well-being of the nation, then health insurance should be regulated as a utility.   As if Dr. Howard Dean had been following our very advice, just yesterday on Meet the Press, he offered the same prescription:

There’s another way.  There’s two countries in Europe that have universal health care without–and it’s entirely run by insurance companies.  But they treat the insurance companies like regulated utilities.  If the insurance companies would prefer to be treated like regulated utilities, we’d drop the public option in a heartbeat.

— Howard Dean

This graphic from the morning’s news even better.  Shows that the administration may be serious about the fundamentals of a healthy economy first.  [Graphic removed]

… Waiting for Merlin

… Waiting for Merlin

September 8, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 1 comment

And now we wait for the speech of a lifetime.  The make or break — defining speech.  We wish this unreal set of expectations on no one.

Medicare for all?

Let me renew this debate with trilogy of  blogs over the next week.    First with a set of charts and diagrams laying the foundation for the daunting statistics that face us.

First consider this simple chart plotting the inexorable rise in yearly total health care expenditures from 1960 to 2016  (estimated).  There is barely a perceptible sag at about 1995 .   To imagine an external force (the government) having any measurable effect on this curve stretches the imagination.

National health care expenditures Statistical Abstract of the US
National health care expenditures Statistical Abstract of the US

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Wither Now Health Care?

Wither Now Health Care?

August 30, 2009 Philip Miller Comments 0 Comment

[originally posted on Huffington Post]

The Patriarch of the Kennedy Dynasty has passed.   Whither now health care reform?  Why is this important?

For the last 40 years Edward Kennedy was the voice of the under-represented.  His lifetime goal was a more perfect and accessible health care system in the United States.   He worked tirelessly to achieve these goals.  We are told that he counseled Barack Obama in the early days, “I will support you openly under the condition that you make health care the centerpiece of your administration.”  Wise counsel.  But this may have been a strategically and untenable position.  Like the myth of Sisyphus, since the days of Franklin Roosevelt every president has aspired to a more perfect health care system.

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