Medicine: Private or Social Good?

by: Andrew Saal, MD, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Editor's Note: The following is from an essay that Andrew Saal, chief medical officer of North Country HealthCare, presented at a nonpartisan health policy forum. North Country is a community health center serving northern Arizona. Their medical team provides primary care to the people of thirteen communities, from Lake Havasu to Flagstaff to Springerville.

As a family physician, I love to teach. Last fall, I had a young medical student with me for rounds at the local hospital. When we dropped by the venerable doctors' lounge for a quick lunch, one of the newer physicians greeted us in the bustling room.

"Hey, we're circulating a petition to get our issue on the ballot. We need your help," he said. "We want to change the state constitution to prevent anyone from mandating health insurance or limiting someone's right to choose their doctor." An infinite millisecond lingered as I waited for the inevitable next question. "So, what do you think about health reform?"

I centered myself and spoke in calm, measured phrases, with a warm smile. "I believe that the status quo is unsustainable. I believe that caring for those unable to pay is a matter of civic duty and professional honor. And while a pinch of free enterprise may keep the system nimble and foster innovation, at the end of the day, medicine is a social commodity similar to police and fire services."

The faraway sounds of a television filled the great emptiness. At the main table, a few of the doctors looked up from their lunches; some nodded while others rolled their eyes. There goes Andrew again.

The new physician appeared to have had some sort of absence seizure. To bring him out of his fugue state, I continued speaking.

"Look, I'm not fond of Medicare reimbursement either. Two private practices dropped all of their Medicare patients this past year - and you know what, I understand their business logic. And good luck finding a primary care practice that is accepting new Medicaid patients."

His eyes widened and his lips finally moved. A rasping voice rose from inside his chest. "Did you say that medicine was a social commodity?" And thus we began.

"I slaved away ten years of my life to get where I am. I have earned the right to charge what the market will bear."

"Oh, I agree that we have all worked hard and should be able to care for our families. But are you sure that your medical knowledge is simply proprietary information that you can manipulate on the open market? I mean, if you had invented the iPad or written a novel, then you should be able to sell your idea for a million dollars. But did you really figure out how to deploy a cardiac stent or remove a brain tumor on your own? Aren't we all standing on the shoulders of giants?"

He looked at me as if I were a heretic in the inner sanctuary of the Temple of Medicine. "Medical research is underwritten by companies that need to recover their costs."

"True, but medical research is driven by federal dollars. While many for-profit companies invest heavily in university programs and private ventures, the base drivers are still the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other federal programs. The core of our modern medical knowledge was indirectly built by the American taxpayer."

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The new physician responded: "Thomas Edison invented the light bulb a hundred years ago. His inventions may have led the way, but we have no obligation to credit him every time we do a damn CAT scan. And if Medicare can't pay the market rate, then I have no obligation to treat those patients."

"Point taken on the technology," I conceded. "But are you so sure about having no obligation to serve the old and the poor? Didn't you take a low-interest federal loan during your medical school? I know quite a few docs who dislike Medicaid and the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) ... but they still take a few patients in their panels: The government helped me through school; I'm just doing my part to pay them back.

"Sure, I took some of those loans. But I've already paid them off. Besides, I probably could have financed it myself if I had really wanted to." I smiled, wondering how a middle-class kid with no collateral could ever float a loan for a quarter million dollars.

"Congratulations on paying off your loans," I offered. "That should free up some money for the next generation of students. But have you really paid back all of the money that your state and the federal government invested in you?" He seemed puzzled. "Medical education cannot exist without federal support," I continued. "Our university-based system relies on extraordinary state and federal support. Medicare provides reimbursement to a medical residency for every physician in training. The last time I checked, there was not a single American medical school operating by free market rules."

"Yeah ... whatever," he said. "But a social commodity? I don't expect society to cut me any breaks, and I sure as heck don't owe anything to anybody. I earned my diploma." The medical student shifted uncomfortably at my side, trying to blend in with the wall.

I asked them both: "Have you ever thought about what society gives us simply because we are physicians? We don't have to earn people's respect; they give it to us by default. People grant us authority over them solely because we are healers. They share their innermost secrets and trust us to make life and death decisions. You have responsibility and authority, whether you want it or not."

"I don't see your point," my colleague replied.

"Look, when you meet someone on the street and he says that he's a personal injury lawyer, you probably have some subconscious opinions about his character. If that same person were to tell you that they're a banker, you probably have a neutral opinion - unless they work for Goldman Sachs. But for the most part, bankers have a clean slate. Maybe they'll earn your trust and maybe not. Most people have a favorable opinion of teachers. But when someone identifies himself or herself as a police officer or a firefighter, they invoke some fairly positive responses. On some subconscious level, we all believe that this man or woman would be willing to lay down his or her life to save another person as part of their civic duty. When you say that you are a physician, you are invoking the expectation of the highest ethics and human service. You are held in high esteem, whether you've earned it or not. People will freely give you power and authority over them solely because of your occupation."

"Well, what about the military?" my colleague responded. "Not everyone likes a general, and he still has a lot of authority. And, more importantly, a general has to earn his way to the top."

"They still serve the community and protect the common good," I said. "So, if people are going to hand power over to you with no questions asked, doesn't that imply that you have some obligation above and beyond that of the average worker?"

My colleague was troubled for a moment ... but quickly shook off the thought. "Dude, we all worked hard to get where we are. We have to unite and do what's in our best interest in these troubled times."

"Yes," I replied. "Yes, we do."

Then he carried his petition to another doctor who has just entered the lounge. The medical student looked up at me and shrugged her shoulders.

"Will this be on the test?"

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Dr. Andrew Saal is chief medical officer of North Country HealthCare in Arizona.


Comments

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I don't agree that the

I don't agree that the doctors owe anything back. Health care however is a common good and everyone should have access to good health care. I believe we can pay good wages to doctors and still provide good health care. The affordable health care act probably will not do the job. If we went single payer we would get rid of the insurance company overhead and kill fraud. Another step would be to keep records of bad doctors and stop them from practicing, that will quickly reduce the malpractice insurance while keeping patients legal rights.



When I was friends with

When I was friends with several doctors-in-process in New York city - interns, residents, and the like - they used to moonlight in the city when they weren't on call at the hospital. I believe they had a radio of some kind, and were able to respond to calls from people who either couldn't afford to come to a hospital, or were unable for some other reason. These guys thought of it as a great adventure to get around the rules the establishment wanted them to follow, and to really practice the Hippocratic (sp?) Oath where it was needed.

Doctors are given respect because they perform a needed service. If they didn't, they'd be regarded as highly as insurance salesmen or fruit pickers. They do owe back for their high regard.



I couldn't agree more with

I couldn't agree more with this doctor's perspective.

Thank you Dr. Saal for telling it like is!



Carol, you got the point.

Carol, you got the point. Yet, as sad as it is, most of the medical students since 1980...are doing it for the money. Finding those surveys would be hard...yet my memory is good - every time I read a survey depicting this...it scared the daylights out of me, because it for-told the assembly-line specialists popular now - and sadly, the demise of the general family practitioner.



Sounds like most MDs should

Sounds like most MDs should be working at Goldman Sachs. I sure am glad I only winter in the USA,what a socially sick, greedy bunch of arrogant bastards you guys are. Dr. Salk who actually saved untold human misery would not take anything for it. The creepy drug pushers of today make me sick, real Americans & you wonder why you are despised around the world, it ain't just your military, I think the majority of the population are unhappy money sick goons.



Once I was sent to a certain

Once I was sent to a certain MD, who treated me kindly and ably. I was very satisfied with the results of his treatment. I tried to make an appointment with about a year later, and was told he had retired. He had moved out of the area and was spending his days playing golf and flying his private plane. He was around 40 years old! Sad, but true.
There are givers and takers in this world, and they pick their parts long before they enter medical school.

Jim of Olym



I was stunned by the open

I was stunned by the open absence of service or responsibility to the common good that Dr Saal's collegues seemed to have. I graduated from medical school in 1972, and am a family physician. While well aware that some of my collegues value income over all else, and that finding a lucrative procedure or niche in medicine is considered success by many; I still have at least been hearing some acknowledgement by my peers that our training is a responsibility we gained through social support systems such as the state government, federal research and public health funds, etc.
It sickens and frightens me that some physicians truly believe they are where they are purely because of corporate self-interest...and that they are entitled to whatever they can get from the system. How hollow.
The blessing of being a physician over the years has been that of being in the incredible postion where I can witness people's very personal lives, hopes and dreams played out while interpreting and bringing what Western medicine has learned so far to help them live to the fullest. To do so has taught me humility, respect for people's strengths and fears alike, understanding of Western medicine's limits..and my own; and the deepest appreciation that the most important things we have in this life aren't measured in dollars or power. And...I have experienced a financially stable and comfortable way of life.
All that said, I believe we physicians have experienced great privilege...and with it goes great responsibility to advocate for those who can't do as well for themselves. I completely agree with Dr Saal about our health care system, and the need for better universal care for all. If we who live by and with the medical system don't speak up, then who will?
Thank you, Dr Saal, for writing so clearly and eloquently about our dilemma. Sometimes, I feel like a dinosaur...and then I read this and feel less alone.



Dear Fellow Dinosaurs, Dr

Dear Fellow Dinosaurs,

Dr Saal deserves our thanks. It is too bad that so many doctors regard themselves as businessmen. Period. I agree that a culture of litigation and outrageous malpractice insurance rates account for a lot of the skyrocketing cost of medical care and the emergence of HMO's, whose service stinks, but Dr Saal is absolutely right that medicine is a social good and should be treated as such.

As someone who was denied any medical insurance because of a non-life-threatening and non-disabling condition (basal cell carcinoma) I have no love whatsoever for insurance companies. In Britain, one of the most popular private insurors excludes coverage for women's cancers from policies written for women who have an annual PAP smear. I couldn't believe this and made a point of double checking; it is true. It also helps explain the UK's disgraceful cancer mortality rates for women.

The US needs to put the insurance industry in its place. The Obama health reforms are flawed and in some ways a gift to this corrupt industry, but they have addressed some of the worst abuses.



Judith, Most people in the

Judith,

Most people in the UK do not have private health insurance. They do not need it since excellent health care is provided as a social service.



Look at Moores film of the

Look at Moores film of the medical "system" in this country and in others around the globe and notice that Dr's in these "socialized" countries were leading contented and affluent live's. Perhaps they're countries supported them thru out their training/education instead of cutting education funding. Perhaps their cultures put peoples "freedoms" first, and governments role as a protector of those rights. Or, perhaps, they are truly "christian" countries.



Doc Coyote is my doctor (he

Doc Coyote is my doctor (he is really called that), he is for real, he is one of the most honest, fair, sweet, competent doctors in Arizona, or in the US for that matter. Thank g-d for people like him. He fights for all of us, and I will have his back if he ever needs it.



Maybe I should have

Maybe I should have explained better, Dr Saal, is called Dr Coyote by many here in northern Arizona.



Of course, the profiteers

Of course, the profiteers are defining. As above Law/Seib said, why should be pay the insurance middleman for his paper shuffle when we can just buy care? TRUE market place rules would allow ONLY for paying the physician for when one is truly healed and cured--as for anything else--no uncertainties--if I buy a pound of apples, I walk out with a pound. And truthfully, an MD wasting time with this--as with other physicians who enter politics, become landowners, become mayors, etc--they are dilluting themselves and not great doctors.



If you have succeeded, you

If you have succeeded, you owe society. If you had not been given opportunities, you'd be in a cave digging for bugs and living a very short and boring life. Really, there is a spectrum of people between that extreme and whatever is the other blessed side. If you really succeed, you owe society.



People with the young doc's

People with the young doc's attitude are presently hopping on planes all over the Middle East trying to avoid losing their heads. That's where it ends.
Personally, I prefer civilized living in a community in which I *am* my brother's keeper.



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