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American Academy of Family Physicians
Wednesday Nov 26, 2008

Reforming health care insurance isn't enough

Liberals and conservatives alike seem to agree on one thing when it comes to President-elect Obama's health care reform proposal: It would succeed at reducing the ranks of the uninsured – by 26.6 million, according to one estimate.

Expanding health insurance coverage is a good thing, but make no mistake: It won’t fix our health care system. As blogger KevinMD noted in an open letter to Obama (and McCain), “Implementing your plan without a solid primary care foundation will doom your proposal to failure.”

After all, what good is it to insure more people if a) you don't have enough primary care doctors to care for them and b) the primary care doctors you do have are underpaid and overburdened? A recent ACP white paper explains the seriousness of the problem, citing a predicted shortage of 35,000 to 44,000 primary care physicians by 2025 unless immediate steps are taken to make primary care more attractive to medical students and more sustainable for practicing physicians. The white paper goes on to summarize 20 years of research demonstrating that primary care produces better outcomes at lower costs. (The AAFP also has an online summary of the literature.) The inescapable conclusion is that primary care is the key to a functional health care system and strengthening it should be the starting place for meaningful health care reform.

So how do we create a strong primary care foundation? For starters, we need to “pay more for what we want more of, and less for what we want less of,” to quote Newt Gingrich. In other words, pay more for primary care, particularly prevention and care coordination. FPM recently published a simple proposal from one family physician for moving the physician payment system in this direction. And the AAFP and other primary care organizations are working to bring about a medical home care management fee, among other ideas.

Of course, despite the evidence cited above, policymakers may not recognize the value of primary care until they have to – when the Boomers swarm Medicare and we really feel the sting of the primary care crisis. As blogger Dr. Bobbs warns, "When the tipping point is reached and the health care system finally cries 'Uncle!' and agrees to start properly reimbursing primary care docs, there isn’t going to be some vast repository of FP and IM docs who have been sitting around waiting to be called up. It’ll take quite a number of years to 're-primary care doctorize' American medicine."

Wednesday Nov 19, 2008

Increasing primary care shortage predicted for U.S. health care

Nearly half of doctors, most of them in primary care, plan to reduce the number of patients they are seeing or stop practicing entirely within the next three years, according to a  survey released yesterday by The Physicians' Foundation.

Approximately 12,000 physicians responded to the survey, which was mailed to 270,000 primary care physicians and 50,000 non-primary care physicians nationwide.

"Going into this project we generally knew about the shortage of physicians; what we didn't know is how much worse it could get over the next few years," said Lou Goodman, PhD, president of The Physicians' Foundation.

The Physicians’ Foundation was founded in 2003 as part of a class-action lawsuit settlement between physicians and private third-party payers.

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