Baucus Bill Is a Cure Worse than the Disease
by Gregory ConkoWith Democratic support coalescing around Sen. Max Baucus’s (D-Mt.) health care reform proposal, passage of a comprehensive overhaul now appears more likely than ever. Opponents had their summer of protests. But, Democrats have shown a renewed sense of energy since discrediting Sarah Palin’s “death panels” and Sen. Charles Grassley’s claim that ObamaCare would “pull the plug on grandma.” Still, while those charges may have been a little overwrought, there is plenty to be concerned about with the Democratic health reform effort.

As I explain in a new Competitive Enterprise Institute paper, “A Cure Worse than the Disease: Obama Care Won’t Cut Costs, But May Cut Quality,” most of the alleged cost-cutting measures in the Baucus bill merely shift costs from the federal government onto the states or private payers, without affecting long-term health care inflation. The only measures that could reduce the annual rate of growth in health care costs would erect government barriers between patients and their doctors, while jeopardizing long-term medical innovation.
Skeptics have made hay arguing that the so-called Sustainable Growth Rate can’t be counted on to cut $245-billion in Medicare spending. But Senate Finance Committee negotiators have designed a Medicare Commission—what the White House previously called an Independent Medicare Advisory Commission—to make similar cuts in physician and hospital payment rates in a more opaque way.
In an April New York Times interview, President Obama suggested that such a group, working outside of “normal political channels,” should guide decisions regarding that “huge driver of cost…the chronically ill and those toward the end of their lives.” That’s not exactly a death panel roving the country to pull the plug on innocent grandmas who’ve survived past their sell-by dates, but the effects could be equally pernicious.
What the Medicare Commission is likely to do is work with the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute also established by the Baucus bill to incorporate comparative clinical effectiveness recommendations into Medicare and Medicaid payment policies.
In theory, there’s nothing wrong with comparative effectiveness research, or what used to be called evidence-based medicine. Good research comparing the clinical effectiveness, risks, and benefits of two or more medical treatments can help doctors better understand the likely benefits of the treatments they prescribe and improve the quality of care they deliver. But patients vary substantially in their individual physiology, their response rates to drugs and surgical procedures, and their willingness to tolerate side effects. Doctors know this, and they realize that one size definitely does not fit all. That’s why, in practice, evidence-based medicine in the U.S. and abroad has produced incrementally useful information, but has failed to systematically change the practice of medicine.
Generally, we should encourage efforts to eliminate waste and reduce the use of ineffective treatments, especially when we’re talking about public programs and taxpayer money. But the CBO estimates that voluntary adoption by physicians of comparative effectiveness recommendations would reduce federal spending by just 1/100th of 1 percent, and that the Medicare Commission’s payment policies would save $22 billion over the ten year budget window. The only way these programs would result in significant savings–that is, “bend” the cost curve downward–is if legislation or subsequent implementation tries to force the square peg of comparative effectiveness research results into the round hole of clinical practice by requiring physicians to always pick the treatment deemed best for the average patient.
That’s not just bad for patients in the near term, it would also wreak havoc on long term medical innovation. If every new medicine were required, immediately upon gaining regulatory approval, to be effective and cheap enough to get the support of bureaucratic bean counters, research on the next generation of treatments for cancer, heart disease, and countless other serious conditions would slow to a snail’s pace.
Get used to the innovative medical treatments that we already have today. If these programs become part of our health care system, we’ll be seeing a lot fewer treatment innovations tomorrow.





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They will pull the plug on Grandma, count on it. They will be so close to bankrupting the system, they'll have no choice. Or they'll delay treatment for 6-12 months based on availability, the patients will expire before they can even see a doctor. Kind of like, oh, I don't know…..ENGLAND?….CANADA?
Yep, the scariest phrase you'll ever hear. Run the other way as fast as you can.
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France?
Cuba? China? well let's not look there, those are communist countries and they don't operate like us. Mmmmmm
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This is not about healthcare, this is about gaining control over more of the economy and using it to:
A) repay our debt to the world because we are bad, wasteful people
B) destroy capitalism because with this system people can do what they want and the government is not relevant
C) create dependency so the idiocracy can tell us all how to live thereby fulfilling their need to feel smart and exercise power
Now the donks are gleefully proposing that states that do not want the public option can opt out. Understand one thing, the democrat cretins never do anything for the benefit of the public, So why would they support an opt out for states? because the residents of that state will still be paying into a national healthcare system without benefiting from the service.
It's a sham, but since we live in the Age of Stupidity™ the bedwetting donks can peddle this nonsense with a straight face without being mercilessly mocked and ridiculed.
i think that our elected official's should be very conserned about voteing in favor of this socalled healthcare bill because if they are voted out of office in 2010 chances are that they will be put on the same insurance as the rest of us will be on because obama isn't going to let them keep their current healthcare plan's and he most likely will take away their retirement plan's also if he doesn't. we the tax payer's may. so i ask all of you polititions is this the kind of healthcare that you want for your selves and your familie's and friend's if you have any friend's.
[...] post: Big Government » Blog Archive » Baucus Bill is a Cure Worse than … Tagged as: baucus-bill, culture, Display, economics, environment, featured-story, health, mac, [...]
Here is a video of Harry Reid discussing opting out of the government option:
http://motorcitytimes.com/mct/video-harry-reid-an...
If the current word on NY-23 is true, with Hoffman taking the lead…
You can bet your Obama leftover pocket change that Health Care Reform is on its way out…
A sea shift in political tide like that is going to force incumbents on both sides of the aisle to hunker down and go into "salvage my political career mode", which always incorporates rocking the boat as little as possible…and health care is WAY too much boat-rocking for anyone trying to stay afloat against an angry constituency…
HOFFMAN IN NY-23?
YES WE CAN!
I've always wondered what will happen to the people who prefer alternative medicine such as Naturopathy. Will they now have to purchase government insurance or pay a fine?
Oh, wait! That was a stupid question! Of course they will! Isn't it grand that we have a government that is so willing to make our decisions for us. I really don't know how I got along without the government. One less decision I have to make in my life. What a relief.
[...] “Baucus Bill Is a Cure Worse than the Disease,” Gregory Conko, Big Government [...]
Here's what I've been wondering about. Robert Reich said in his Berkeley Talk, that government health care would not provide treatment to people in the last two years of their lives just to extend them 2 more months.
How will they know it's the last two years? Will somebody who is, say, 85 just be judged to have only two years left? And if the treatment will keep them alive for two months, then won't the government be cutting off 22 months of their lives?
Watching these politicians is like watching a bunch of elementary kids on a playground. I have to talk up the website http://www.Dearpolitician.org. The site totally rocks! You want to write your politicians without the hassle of looking for all their addresses, printing them off, buying paper, envelopes and stamps, then you need to check http://www.Dearpolitician.org. Not only are they FREE and non-partisan, they will even deliver your letters to all the politicians you choose the same day. You can even send your letter to complete Senate and Congressional committees. Check these guys out!
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