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Strapped Doctors Offer Less Charity Care
AP ^ | LAURA MECKLER

Posted on 12/05/2002 8:27:08 AM PST by anniegetyourgun

WASHINGTON- The portion of doctors providing charity care is falling, a sign of tight times that make it harder for the uninsured to get health care.

Most doctors do some charity care but in most cases it represents a small fraction of their work. The portion spending more than 5 percent of their time with these patients is falling, however.

"Physicians are under a lot of growing financial pressures," said Peter Cunningham, who wrote the report for the Center for Studying Health System Change, a health policy think tank that conducts the ongoing survey of doctors. "This may be making it more difficult to serve uninsured patients."

Its survey found that in 2001, 71.5 percent of doctors provided free care. That's down from 76.3 percent in 1997.

The results are similar to those found by the American Medical Association, which also saw a drop in charity care between 1994 and 1999 in a survey it conducted of doctors.

The result is less care for people who can't afford it.

A companion survey by the Center for Studying Health System Change found that between 1997 and 2001, the portion of uninsured people who had seen a doctor or who had a usual source of medical care dropped.

Specifically, in 1997, 51.5 percent of the uninsured had seen a doctor in the last year. That fell to 46.6 percent by 2001. Over the same period, the portion of patients with Medicaid and with private insurance who had seen a physician stayed even or rose.

The report suggested that doctors are facing the financial squeeze from several quarters, leading them to do less for free. Payments for Medicare, which serves the elderly, and Medicaid, which serves the poor, aren't keeping pace with the rising cost of health care, and health insurance companies have kept a tight rein on reimbursements through managed care.

Doctors also complain about the rising cost of malpractice insurance.

The situation for Medicaid may get even worse in coming months as states facing budget shortfalls look to Medicaid, which generally makes up one-third of state budgets.

The survey of doctors found that the portion seeing Medicaid patients dipped between 1997 and 2001, from 87.1 percent to 85.4 percent. But it also found an increase in the number of practices that derived more than 20 percent of their income from Medicaid, suggesting the Medicaid patients are concentrating among fewer doctors.

Not so for those providing charity care. In this case, the portion of high-volume providers fell, while the portion of low-volume providers rose. That means that doctors who do provide charity care were providing less of it - and fewer total doctors were providing any at all.

The survey also found that doctors who are heavily involved with managed care - receiving more than 75 percent of their income from health maintenance organizations and other plans that cap payments - are more likely to have closed their practices to new Medicaid and Medicare patients. These same practices were still taking new privately insured patients.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: doctors; healthcare; socializedmedicine
More evidence that government interference destroys good things.
1 posted on 12/05/2002 8:27:08 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: anniegetyourgun
I think the trial lawyers are responsible for this problem.
Two ways to overcome this are (1)Loser Pays and (2)All Medical Charity work should be paid for by the various Bar Associations.
2 posted on 12/05/2002 8:33:49 AM PST by scouse
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To: anniegetyourgun
No good deed goes unpunished.

Houston, TX - A good samaratain MD did some charity work at a homeless shelter, where he met a man who had stepped on a nail. After cleaning the wound, and wrapping the foot, the good Dr. then gave this individual anti-biotics.

2 weeks later, the Dr. returned to the shelter only to find the individual had sold the anti-biotics, bought cheap booze, and fell asleep in the gutter. The foot cast had disintergrated and the wound had re-infected to the point of gangrene. The homeless man lost his foot, then sued for mal-practice.

Fortunately, the Dr. won the case; but a harsh lesson had been learned. For his desire to help, his career had been threatened. For donating his time and money (anti-biotics are not free) his reward was to pay for his own legal defence (malpractice suits through a hospital are covered by work insurance, this activity was outside of the hospital, this he was on his own).
3 posted on 12/05/2002 8:34:47 AM PST by Hodar
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To: anniegetyourgun
How do they quantify what docs do how much charity care? They can't.

Mostly it happens by docs forgiving medical bills, and that won't get reported anywhere.

4 posted on 12/05/2002 8:38:06 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: scouse
Those are great solutions. But we really need to curtail efforts by the pols to interfere with the marketplace here. We've tried tinkering with socialized delivery and it's failing. And we could have easily learned that from our socialized education system, where trial lawyers are only a minor annoyance.
5 posted on 12/05/2002 8:38:29 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Mamzelle
You're right that lots doesn't get reported. However, there are mandates for hospitals (and some others) to report charitable care.
6 posted on 12/05/2002 8:41:08 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: anniegetyourgun
Docs don't do as much direct billing as when we were younger...they work as employees, and their bosses do the billing. There has been an increase in Free Clinics in many communities, really cool charitable coops where docs rotate through taking care of the "working poor" that don't qualify for Medicaid. This reporter, I belive, is lazy and relying on the most obvious of stats gathering.

Perhaps it's hospitals that don't do as much charity care...? Not a chance. Any hospital that runs an emergency room is engaged to a huge extent in charity. They only collect 40-50 percent of billings. In most states, hospitals are not required by law to maintain an emergency room. Yet, most hospitals do. Why is that? (rhetorical question)

7 posted on 12/05/2002 8:46:05 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: anniegetyourgun
Of course I agree with you but we should work on driving a stake through the heart of whole mish-mash.
8 posted on 12/05/2002 8:48:54 AM PST by scouse
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To: Mamzelle
The result is less care for people who can't afford it.

Or those who refuse to pay for it(they don't do without expensive cars). I doubt this so-called reporter checked any of their books to see how much debt they are forced to "forgive". I doubt either that she checked with the local Community Hospice or Interfaith Clinic to see how much time they dedicated to free services on their time off. How could they possibly know any of this? So, IMO, it's a totally false story.

If doctors accept assignment for Medicare(the same for Medicaid) they are also giving away free services. Doctors are not reimbursed for the total cost of the service. Only what some bureaucrat decides is a fair price. ha! As if they would know anything about it.

How would you like to have someone(who has no clue) decide what part of your bill the government is willing to pay? Socialized medical care is not as far away as many would like you to believe.

It makes me so angry when people like this try to beat up on "rich doctors" just because they don't understand that most of them AREN'T RICH! Overworked and underpaid is more like it.

And NO...I'm not a doctor nor do I play one on tv.

9 posted on 12/05/2002 9:03:18 AM PST by kcvl
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To: *Socialized Medicine
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
10 posted on 12/05/2002 9:52:12 AM PST by Free the USA
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To: kcvl
re:). I doubt this so-called reporter checked any of their books to see how much debt they are forced to "forgive". I doubt either that she checked with the local Community Hospice or Interfaith Clinic to see how much time they dedicated to free services on their time off. How could they possibly know any of this? So, IMO, it's a totally false story. )))

Unfortunately, docs cannot possibly quantify what they donate, so they'll never be able to "catch a break" for the good that they do.

Ironically, lawyers often get credit for "pro bono" work when in fact they end up getting paid for that work--one example is the ACLU, which collects "reasonable and customary" fees on a regular basis, awarded to them by judges.

11 posted on 12/05/2002 10:09:01 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: anniegetyourgun
Many doctors have ended up treating so many charity cases with either very little pay from the gubmint, or no pay, that they are discouraged from even accepting them. An orthopaedic office I worked for accepted Medicaid, and the Vietnamese ladies driving Mercedes Benz cars would bring their parents in for charity care. The illegal aliens would come in for treatment, give false information, and had no intention of paying for anything.

These cases took up a lot of time for the doctors, so I can't blame them for not wanting to take too many charity cases. All the while, the docs would have to pay 50 grand a year or more for malpractice insurance to protect themselves from the very people they tried to treat.

12 posted on 12/05/2002 11:01:45 AM PST by janetgreen
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