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re: CBO: GOP health plan would cut deficit $337 Billion

Posted on 3/14/17 at 10:56 am to
Posted by a want
I love everybody
Member since Oct 2010
19756 posts
Posted on 3/14/17 at 10:56 am to
You should have kept reading
quote:


A major reason that hasn't happened is there simply aren't enough primary care physicians to handle all the newly insured patients, says ACEP President Mike Gerardi, an emergency physician in New Jersey.

"They don't have anywhere to go but the emergency room," he says. "This is what we predicted. We know people come because they have to."


Also, where is the part where the GOP tried to improve on that situation?
This post was edited on 3/14/17 at 10:59 am
Posted by BigJim
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2010
14543 posts
Posted on 3/14/17 at 11:12 am to
quote:

You should have kept reading


quote:

Emergency room usage is bound to increase if there's a shortage of primary care doctors who accept Medicaid patients and "no financial penalty or economic incentive" to move people away from ERs, says Avik Roy, a health care policy expert with the free market Manhattan Institute.

"It goes to the false promise of the ACA," Roy says, that Medicaid recipients are "given a card that says they have health insurance, but they can't have access to physicians."

Complicating matters, low-income patients face many obstacles to care. They often can't take time off from work when most primary care offices are open, while ERs operate around the clock and by law must at least stabilize patients. Waits for appointments at primary care offices can stretch for weeks, while ERs must see patients almost immediately.


Posted by NC_Tigah
Carolinas
Member since Sep 2003
124713 posts
Posted on 3/14/17 at 12:22 pm to
quote:

A major reason that hasn't happened is there simply aren't enough primary care physicians to handle all the newly insured patients
There is more to it than simply not enough primary care physicians. Prior to the ACA there was more primary care capacity. The obamacare role out enabled and even encouraged shady ACA carrier activity targeting provider networks with unnegotiated, unannounced rate cuts.

Primary care docs were left in a precarious situation d/t falling reimbursement rates. Falling rates were coupled with overhead practice pressure including ObamaAdmin EMR forcing.

Under the ACA, facilities did much better. Facilities and healthcare systems had long angled to buy up as many primary care practices as possible. Control of PCPs enables direction of referrals to facility assets. As an aside, control of PCPs obviously entails system self-referral, healthcare system monopolies, and higher costs.

The combination of pressured PCP practices with healthcare systems' desire to acquire them, led to a wave of PCPs fleeing risk of private practice ownership, to the shelter of facility employment, and guaranteed salary.

With that change went incentive to see as many patients as possible. In private practice, increased patient volume would have resulted in significant expansion of work weeks, clinic efficiencies, and relative income. The same incentives don't apply to salaried employee MDs. In the employed setting, work weeks not only did not expand, efficiencies waned. Fewer patients were seen. Capacity declined.

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However make no mistake, the main reason for a rise in ED visits is medicaid expansion. There is little medicaid incentive to seek care IAW cost. It shows. Another problem is obamacare policyholders often exhibit behavior identical to the uninsured. Unfortunately obamacare's high deductibles leave folks de facto uninsured. Their behavior matches.
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