Guest guest Posted March 29, 2007 Report Share Posted March 29, 2007 THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING (http://www.boston.com/news/globe/) PERSPECTIVE " Hippocritical " Doctors When they work for health insurers - and help deny care - physicians are kicking aside the oath they pledged to uphold. By ADAM J. WOLFBERG | March 25, 2007 My 5-year-old daughter has mild cerebral palsy that affects the strength and dexterity of her right hand. With the help of her physical and occupational therapists, she has made tremendous gains in her ability to accomplish routine tasks. She swung from the monkey bars for the first time recently and can now use her right hand to drink chocolate milk. But in 2005, the prospect of having her therapy paid for seemed unlikely when my health insurance plan at the time refused to cover it. I filed an appeal, only to have it rejected weeks later. At least two physicians reviewed my appeal before it was denied – physicians paid by the health plan to review claims when there is a dispute about what is covered and what is not. While one of these doctors has no expertise with cerebral palsy, the second one does. In his other job, he cares for children with severe physical disabilities and is a proponent of therapy for disabled children. As he wrote to me in an e-mail, “my personal view is that children with [cerebral palsy] benefit from therapy services.†However, in his review of my appeal, he wrote a careful explanation justifying why the health plan should not pay for the therapy. (Although the monkey bars know differently, the health plan asserted my daughter’s right arm would not improve significantly in 90 days – a requirement for coverage.) This doctor and others like him are making money denying care – and they might as well hang up their white coats. They may believe that their administrative decisions are medically justifiable. However, it often appears that they are hired because their MD degrees lend a patina of legitimacy to administrative decisions that are based on interpretation of a health plan’s policies, not a chart, lab test, or CT scan. Much has been made in recent years about medical researchers whose science is tainted by their financial relationships with large pharmaceutical companies, and about physicians who consult for investment banking firms (and are occasionally caught passing along inside information). However, as unethical as these relationships are, the damage they cause is to society, not to individual patients. Individuals are harmed when medical care is withheld. Many of these health plan doctors, whose job it is to reject claims, end up being paid to violate the Hippocratic oath they took when they graduated from medical school – to “ first, do no harm.†The American Medical Association’s position on physicians ’ behavior outside the exam room is very clear: “Physicians in administrative and other nonclinical roles must put the needs of patients first .. . . . The ethical obligations of physicians are not suspended when a physician assumes a position that does not directly involve patient care.†Some of the doctors on the health plans’ payrolls are young and seeking administrative experience, while others are mid-career or even retired from clinical medicine and are drawn to these administrative positions because they provide a steady paycheck and are an alternative to seeing patients. They believe that they serve health plan members by making sure patients receive appropriate care and by providing medical oversight of the plan’s administrative decisions – particularly when the decision is to deny care. A physician who works for the health insurance industry told me that these doctors view themselves as having “an advocacy role for patient care.†Health plan physicians will argue that without them consumers would have no voice within the company’s walls. But I say let the businesspeople be the ones to withhold care in the name of cost savings and profit margins. Physicians are needed in the clinic and at the bedside, advocating for more care, not less. A few weeks ago, the large insurance companies in Massachusetts announced their 2006 profits. Physicians like me may bemoan this drain of resources from our health care system, and we may even envy the insurance executives’ salaries. But as tempting as it is for physicians to join the health plans’ payrolls, we must not step into roles that place us at odds with those who need us most – our patients. Dr. Adam J. Wolfberg is a Boston obstetrician. Send comments to _magazine@..._ (mailto:magazine@...) . © _Copyright_ (http://www.boston.com/help/bostoncom_info/copyright) 2007 The New York Times Company © _Copyright_ (http://www.boston.com/help/bostoncom_info/copyright) 2007 The New York Times Company ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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