Primary Care Doctor Explains: “Obamacare Isn’t The Problem…It’s The Insurance Companies”
Posts by cpowell
Blue Dot Daily
July 15, 2017
With premiums increasing for those with coverage through
the ACA marketplace, a lot of people are criticizing Obamacare. But many
doctors and healthcare professionals are saying that isn’t really the
problem.
Cathleen London is a primary care physician in Milbridge, a rural
town in Maine. She claims the problem isn’t Obamacare itself, but
rather, the entire health insurance system and insurance companies are
to blame.
Writing for the
Portland Press Herald, London explains she is a
a
primary care physician who is on the front lines every single day, as
her town is very remote, which means it takes 30 to 40 minutes to get
to the emergency room, which is why her office operates as an urgent
care facility as well as a family medical practice.
It’s takes an ambulance about 20 minutes to get to her clinic and specialist care about 2 hours away, so Dr. London is trained to handle about 90 percent of medical problems.
Dr. London explains the following, which will show you exactly what’s wrong with health care:
One evening I was almost home after a full day’s work. Around
7:30, I got a call on the emergency line regarding an 82-year-old man
who had fallen and split his head open. His wife wanted to know if I
could see him, even though he was not a patient of mine.
Instead of sending them to the ER, I went back to the office. I
spent 90 minutes evaluating him, suturing his wound and making sure that
nothing more sinister had occurred than a loss of footing by a man who
has mild dementia. When I was sure that the man would be safe, I let
them go.
I billed a total of $789 for the visit, repair, after-hours and
emergency care costs. Stating that the after-hours and emergency
services had been billed incorrectly, Martin’s Point Health Care threw
out the claims and reimbursed me $105, which does not even cover the
suture and other materials I used.
I called them about their decision, said that it was not right
and let them know they’d lose me if they reimbursed this as a routine
patient visit. They replied, “Go ahead and send your termination letter”
– which I did.
The same day, Anthem Blue Cross kept me on the phone for 45
minutes regarding a breast MRI recommended by radiologists on a woman
whose mother and sister had died of breast cancer. She’d had five months
of breast discharge that wasn’t traceable to anything benign (and it
turns out the MRI is highly suspicious for cancer).
Anthem did not want to
approve the MRI unless it was to localize a lesion for biopsy, even
though the mammogram had been inconclusive! This should have been a
slam-dunk fast track to approval; instead, dealing with Anthem wasted a
good part of my day.
Then Aetna told me there is no way to negotiate fees in Maine. I
was somewhat flabbergasted. I do more here than I did in either
Brookline, Massachusetts, or New York. The rates should be higher given
the level of care I am providing. I have chosen not to participate with
them. This only hurts patients; however, I cannot keep losing money on
visits.
I do lose money on MaineCare – their reimbursement is below what
it costs me to see a patient. For now, that is a decision that I am
living with.
I had thought those losses would be offset by private insurance
companies, but their cost shifting to patients is obscene. I pay half of
my employees’ health insurance, though I’m not required to by law – I
just think it is the right thing to do.
My personal policy costs close to $900 a month for me and my sons
(all healthy), and each of us has a $6,000 deductible. This means I am
paying rack rate for a policy that provides only bare-bones coverage.
Something is wrong with the system. In one day, I encountered
everything wrong with insurance. I am not trying to scam the system. I
am literally trying to survive. I am trying to give care in an
underserved area.
This is not the fault of Obamacare, which stopped the
most egregious problems with insurance companies. Remember lifetime
caps? Remember denials for pre-existing conditions? Remember the
retroactive cancellation of insurance policies? Returning to that is not
an option.
Indeed it is not an option, Dr. London. If Republicans get their way
eventually by repealing Obamacare, it may be where we end up again. If
Republicans really get their way, it’ll be even worse than it was
before.
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