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Part I. America's commercially profitable healthcare system is wasteful, inefficient and exceedingly harmful. Medical interventions are the third Leading cause of death.
The
headline in The New York Times
(Friday, Sept 21) “Reversing Trend, Life Span Shrinks for Some Whites,”reports
that the life-span of uneducated, poor white women has regressed dramatically
since 1990.[1] “We’re used to looking at groups
and complaining that their mortality rates haven’t improved fast enough, but to
actually go backward is deeply troubling.”
The
focus of this Infomail is America’s acute healthcare crisis that affects
average Americans—not just the poor. Specifically, our focus is the critical
safety issues that plague US healthcare which are neither acknowledged, much
less, addressed by ObamaCare, its progenitor, RomneyCare, nor any
healthcare overhaul proposal being kicked around in Washington. Those who
formulate healthcare policy seem to be oblivious to the alarming decline in the
performance of US healthcare when compared to the rest of the industrialized
world.[2]
Is
their vision obscured by propaganda pronouncements? —i.e. “The United States
has the best healthcare system in the world”[3] Or do they pretend not to see the
magnitude of harm produced by preventable hazards that are imbedded in
America’s profit-driven healthcare system—as a defensive corporate political
strategy whose goal is to maintain control?
The “see no evil…” monkey
strategy has been coined “strategic ignorance”[4] by a British sociologist. It has
been used effectively by executives of major corporations, academic
institutions, and government agencies—as a defense against wrongdoing in public
hearings and litigation.
Is US Healthcare
Really the Best in the World? JAMA (2000)
We have compiled a list of more than 100 current
books by prominent physicians and knowledgeable academic and independent
healthcare analysts who confront the real healthcare crisis from varying
aspects. Not only are commercially-driven
medical practices—such as over prescribing new, not better drugs, overuse of
diagnostic radiology tests, and invasive interventions--bankrupting American
taxpayers, the treatments are causing an epidemic of preventable, iatrogenic
injury and death.
See, Medicine Hijacked AHRP compilation of
100 books.
The following are inconvenient truths about US
healthcare that are obscured from public awareness by stakeholders in the
business of healthcare:
I. America’s healthcare crisis is
demonstrable:
·
America’s health ranking has plummeted compared to
the industrialized nations of the world.
·
Americans have the lowest life-span and highest infant
mortality rate.[5]
·
Americans spend the most on healthcare—who
benefits?
· Millions of Americans are seriously
harmed by preventable medical errors, and unnecessary and poorly tested,
dangerous medical interventions.[6] [7] [8]
·
Our commercially-driven healthcare
system is harmful, wasteful,
inefficient and costly—resulting in sacrifice of human lives.[9]
·
Fraud
and conflict of interest undermines the integrity of medical research, FDA’s
approval process, and the performance of healthcare institutions.[10]
An analysis in
the New England Journal of Medicine (2010):
“The
big picture—the poor and declining performance of the United States, which goes
far beyond the challenge of universal insurance —will inevitably get lost if we
do not routinely track performance and compare the results both among countries
and among states and counties within the United States.”[11]
America
has been falling behind the industrialized nations of the world on the two most
important indicators of well-being and healthcare quality, namely; life
expectancy and infant mortality. [2] [5]
Life
Expectancy: In 1975 the US ranked 3rd among other nations. In 2012 the US ranks 50th
Americans’ life expectancy is 78—compared to Japan (83.9); Singapore
(83.7) Australia (81.9); Italy, Canada and France (81.5); Israel (81);
Germany, UK, and Ireland (80).
A
study by the Mailman
School of Public Health, Columbia University [3]
compared US life expectancy rates and per capita healthcare spending to
12 other rich countries—Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
Their findings show that despite American’s extraordinary high expenditure for
healthcare, the system is failing to provide Americans with comparable health benefits
that citizens of other wealthy countries enjoy.
Peter Muennig, MD, the lead author stated:
“It was shocking to see the U.S. falling behind other countries even as costs
soared ahead of them. But what really surprised us was that all of the usual
suspects—smoking, obesity, traffic accidents, homicides, and racial and ethnic
diversity are not the culprits.”
“The findings suggest that
life expectancy rates are tied to challenges in the current U.S. health system
itself—specifically, its reliance on unregulated fee-for-service and specialty
care, and lack of care coordination—which may explain both rising costs and
deteriorating relative life expectancy.”
[12]
America’s infant
mortality rate highest compared to other industrialized countries. [2] [5]
Infant Mortality
measured by the number of deaths per
1,000 live births:
In 1960 the US infant mortality rate ranked 12th among
nations. But with each passing decade, as other nations’ infant mortality
rates improved, the US infant mortality rate ranked less and less favorably
compared to other industrial nations.
In 2012, the US ranks 49th among nations of
the world6 with 6 infant
deaths per 1,000 live births. According to the US Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC, 2009)[13] the US
international ranking in infant mortality has been falling from 12th
in 1960, to 23rd in 1990, to 29th in 2004, and 37th in 2005.
Another
CDC report concludes: ‘‘The relative position of
the United States in comparison to countries with the lowest infant mortality
rates appears to be worsening.’’[14]
A contributing factor
to the high infant mortality rate is the high rate of premature births in the
US—one in 8 compared with 1 in 18 in Ireland and Japan.
Since
1984 the percentage of preterm births in the US rose 36%.
However,
it is not the only factor. The CDC acknowledges that: “infant mortality rates
for infants born at 37 weeks of gestation or more are higher in the United
States than in most European countries.” [14]
An insightful analysis by Dr.
Starfield [8] specifically refuted
a specious claim to explain America’s poor performance:
"The long existing poor ranking
of the US with regard to infant mortality is not a result of the high
percentage of low birth weight and infant mortality among the black population,
because the international ranking hardly changes when data for the white population
only are used."
II. The
third leading cause of death in the US is not a disease, but medical
intervention which ranks after heart disease and cancer.
Although
the Centers for Disease Control does not include iatrogenic (treatment caused)
deaths in its list of leading causes of death tabulations, authoritative
studies have estimated the number of deaths attributed to treatment in
hospitalized patients. [6] [7] The study
by Barbara Starfield MD, of Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, was most perceptive and notable for
identifying the specific causes of iatrogenic preventable annual deaths in US
hospitals:
12,000
deaths from unnecessary surgeries; 
7,000 deaths from medication errors in hospitals;
20,000 deaths from other errors in hospitals;
80,000 deaths from infections acquired in hospitals;
106,000 deaths from FDA-approved correctly prescribed medicines.
The total number of deaths caused
by medical treatment every year is 225,000—
in ten years, 2.2 million people will be killed by medical treatment.
Dr.
Starfield's findings are not disputed. Indeed, subsequent studies found the
number of preventable deaths due to medical intervention to be higher.
The
Institute of Medicine acknowledged (2001):
“Health care today harms too
frequently and routinely fails to deliver its potential benefits. Americans
should be able to count on receiving care that meets their needs and is based
on the best scientific knowledge. Yet there is strong evidence that this
frequently is not the case…. Between the health care we have and the care we
could have lies not just a gap, but a chasm… there is substantial evidence
documenting overuse of many services—services for which the potential risk of
harm outweighs the potential benefits…”[15]
No one tracks the total annual deaths from hazardous or
malfunctioning FDA-approved medical products. No one tracks the
number of non-fatal, severely disabling injuries.
III. A Commercially Profitable, Wasteful, Inefficient and
Exceedingly Harmful System:
The US healthcare
budget FY-2010 was $2.3 Trillion.[16]
The three highest expenditures were: 31% for hospital care, 20% for physicians,
and 10% for pharmaceutical drugs. Health analysts at the Kaiser Family
Foundation note that “for several years, spending on prescription drugs
and new medical technologies has been cited as a primary contributor to the
increase in overall health spending.”
The
latest Institute
of Medicine report[17] (September 2012) estimates that in 2009
alone, $750 billion were wasted on unnecessary health spending.
“The costs of the system's current
inefficiency underscore the urgent
need for a systemwide transformation. The committee calculated that
about 30 percent of health spending in 2009—roughly $750 billion—was wasted on
unnecessary services, excessive administrative costs, fraud, and other
problems. Moreover, inefficiencies cause needless suffering. By one estimate,
roughly 75,000 deaths might have been averted in 2005…”
However,
the IOM report fails to identify the specific industries that engaged in fraud,
manipulated medical research and medical practice guidelines, and profited from
costly unnecessary interventions that wasted resources. For example, the
inordinate influence of the pharmaceutical industry has penetrated public,
private, academic and government institutions, and has led to the adoption of
medical practices and healthcare policies that have greatly enhance industry’s
profit margins by sacrificing public safety. As
will be discussed below, prescription drugs have attained the dubious
distinction of being the fourth leading cause of death in the US. The worst
offenders are drugs that have been aggressively marketed.
See, List of
drugs
recalled for safety issues from 1980-2011.
Dr.
Starfield raised the concern US reliance on specialists rather than primary
care physicians—which contrasted sharply with other countries—may be a factor contributing
to America’s comparative poor ranking in overall health and survival. The following demonstrates how US medical
treatment guidelines are determined by medical specialists whose self-interest
may not coincide with patients’ medical need.
Medicare treatment guidelines are established
by a powerful, little known group of medical specialists who are unaccountable
to the public. Regulatory oversight for the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid (CMS)—including determination of physician reimbursement rates—is
entrusted to one little-known panel of specialists of the American Medical
Association—the Relative
Value Scale Update Committee (RUC).[18] Its influence is enormous: since
1991, the CMS accepted 94% of the 7,000 recommendations submitted by RUC. The
RUC panel does not comply with transparency requirements under the Federal
Advisory Committee Act—the membership is not disclosed and they vote by secret
electronic ballot.
The
RUC is clearly motivated by self- interest, as acknowledged by RUC‘s
chairwoman, “We assume that everyone is inflating everything when they come in.
They are wanting to fight for the best possible values for their specialties.”19 As a result, the
CMS reimbursement scale favors use of high priced specialists who order prescribe
costly, often unnecessary treatments that expose patients to increased risks
without clinical benefit.
Congress can
change this indefensible set-up—if they can wean themselves from Big Pharma.
Part I of IV.
See Part II: What Do We Get for All That Money?
Part III: The Untouchable Third Rail of Healthcare: Vaccine Controversy
Part IV: Vaccine Injury Compensation
Part V: FDA the Duplicitous Gatekeeper
REFERENCES
[4] McGoey, L The Logic of Strategic Ignorance, British
Journal of Sociology, 2012, Vol. 63:533-76.
[6] A 1998 review estimated that more than 2.2 million
hospitalized patients suffered an adverse drug reaction--of these 106,000 to
137,000 died. Lazarou J, Pomeranz BH, Corey PN. Incidence of Adverse Drug
Reactions in Hospitalized Patients: a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies,
JAMA, 1998.
[9] An example of wasted human resources: 4,700 people
awaiting a kidney transplant died while 2,600 available kidneys were discarded
because of systemic inefficiencies. See, Sack, K. In Discarding of Kidneys, System Reveals Its Flaws, New York Times, Sept. 19, 2012.
[12] The Commonwealth Fund, News Release.
“Despite Highest Health Spending, Americans' Life Expectancy Continues To Fall
Behind Other Countries'.” October, 7, 2010.
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