Are Payers the Leading Cause of Death in the United States?

Are Payers the Leading Cause of Death in the United States?

Milton Packer wonders if people suffer and die because it is cost effective

https://www.medpagetoday.com/blogs/revolutionandrevelation/68935

On September 17, 2017 The New York Times and ProPublica collaborated on an interesting story. You may have missed it.

As everyone knows, we are in the midst of a horrific opioid addiction epidemic. Physicians are prescribing opiates for pain relief, and patients are becoming addicted to them.

One-fifth of patients who receive an initial 10-day prescription for opioids will still be using opiates a year later.

That is simply extraordinary.

Physicians are prescribing opiate formulations that are highly addictive. But they do not need to do that.

There are several newer formulations that relieve pain and are far less addictive than older agents. But they are prescribed uncommonly. Why is that?

It is not because physicians are uninformed.

It is because payers will not pay for the alternatives. The less-addictive opiates are more expensive, so payers have declined to support them. Patients get addicted because paying for highly addictive opiates saves the payers money.

The New York Times also noted that the treatment of opiate addiction is expensive. It is far cheaper for payers if physicians continue to prescribe opiates than if physicians enrolled a person into a drug addiction program.

What does that look like? Patients get more prescriptions for opiates instead of getting the help they need.

The Payers Are in Charge

If you are looking for someone to blame for the opioid epidemic, you can certainly blame physicians. You can blame pharmaceutical companies. But while you are at it, don’t forget to include payers.

This conclusion should not be surprising. We live in a world where payers — not physicians — determine what drugs and treatments patients receive.

If patients have a life-threatening condition, it is not unusual for a payer to demand that a physician first prescribe a cheaper and less effective alternative. Physicians know that the drugs they are allowed to use may not work very well, but frequently, payers demand that they be tried first anyway. 

What happens if the patient doesn’t respond to the cheap drug?

Often, the physician continues to prescribe it, because — to gain access to the more effective drug — physicians need to go through a painful process of preauthorization. For many practitioners, it isn’t worth it.

Don’t patients eventually get the drugs that they need?

No. All too often, physicians stop trying. Or patients get frustrated and give up. Often, payers says “No!” no matter how many times they are asked. And if the drug is for a life-threatening illness and enough time passes by, then the patient may no longer be alive to demand that they get the right drug.

So we spend more for healthcare than any other country in the world, but Americans do not get the care they need. There is a simple reason. Treatment decisions are not being driven based on a physician’s knowledge or judgment. They are being driven by what payers are willing to pay for.

How many people are affected by all of this?

Everyone.

That includes me and my family. That includes everyone that I know.

Medicine has made incredible progress in the last 20-30 years. But you are not likely to benefit from it.

Do you want to blame the high cost of drugs? You can do that, but if you do, you will be missing the point. We should expect better drugs to be more expensive than less effective ones. But we do not expect to have a company decide that we will get the inferior drug simply because they want to make a profit.

Are payers the leading cause of death in the United States? If you think this is a crazy question, please think again.

I wonder why no ones does a survey on people who are diagnosed with other chronic conditions (high blood pressure, A-Fib, Diabetes, High Cholesterol and started on medication and they are still taking that same, similar or more medication a year later ?

Should those people treating those conditions with medications a year later be considered “addicted” to those medications ?

Who believes that NO ONE technically start out with intractable chronic pain…   According to this website http://www.usacoverage.com/auto-insurance/how-many-driving-accidents-occur-each-year.html  there are 5.25 million vehicle accidents resulting in 43,000 deaths… and how many people in all those accidents SURVIVE but quickly becomes a chronic pain pt ?

They claim that there are 250,000 – 400,000 /yr deaths from medical mistakes… how many end up being chronic pain pts from a medical mistake that does not cause a death.

Not everyone moves from being pain free to dealing with acute pain that can be healed and resolved.. all too many make a quantum leap from being relatively pain free to being in 24/7 intractable chronic pain.

Those that have an AGENDA about the use/abuse of opiates seems to omit or overlook certain FACTS that doesn’t serve their AGENDA..

SHOULDN’T THE ENTIRE TRUTH PREVAIL ?

 

One Response

  1. BELIEVE ME MILTON PACKER IS NOT THE ONLY ONE WHO WONDERS THIS,,AS A MATTER OF FACT,,US CPP’s,,,,WE KNOW THIS TO BE TRUE.,….THEY WANT US DEAD,,,,”CHRONIC” IN THE INSURANCE COMPANIES NEW,,PRE-EXISTING,,,,,JUST KILL US,,,ITS CHEAPER AND BY ALL MEANS DOCTOS,,,,DO NOT HELP THE CHRONIC MEDICAL ILL,,EVER,,,DO NOT ACCEPT THEM AS NEW PATIENTS,,my x-primary,,,just did exactly that,,mary

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