Hollywood on the Potomac (our U.S. capitol) has
in many ways shut down politically in preparation for the November elections.
The unpopularity of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), even if based on sound bite
political conjecture, is really complicating things for the Administration and
the Democrats. The Tea Party is all about shrinking federal spending and
entitlements, which would in a megatrend-sense mean that physicians would have to collect more and more of their compensation
from patients as cash on the line. Historically, that didn’t work too well
– doctors got a lot of chickens and farm produce in those old days before
insurance reimbursement.
On the other hand, a different kind of pressure is
building to pay doctors through the mysterious and as yet undefined “accountable
care organization” (ACO) model. ACC plans to be at the table and very much
involved in helping to define what the ACO is, and how to position physicians
to lead in implementing them, presuming this will be a new pathway to higher
reimbursement incentives for improving quality.
We won’t hear much about ACOs on the campaign
trail in the next 6 weeks, but we will hear a lot about the need for cost
containment. The Democrats should rightly brag about the importance of expanding
access to uninsured Americans, and about needed insurance reforms and about
their at least framing in the law the importance of increased prevention,
chronic disease management and some means of incentivizing improved quality of
care.
But let’s face it; the dirty little reality is that the pressure is
really about cost containment in health care. ACC knows the real secret here is
that improving quality is the only sure way of reducing costs in the long run,
but I don’t think that has fully sunk in to the Congress or the public.
The current prediction is still that the
House is likely to shift to the Republican side of the aisle. But it is amazing how much the predictions
change EVERY week! What does that mean for health care? In a word: more gridlock. The Senate will
gain a few Republican seats, but likely stay in Democratic control, but even that looks more up in the air this week than last. There
is NO WAY the Senate will have a 60 vote majority for the Republicans or veto-proof
majority, so the seated president will surely veto any attempt by the House of
Representatives to completely overturn the ACA.
A very likely Republican-dominated House
could clearly mess up the authorizations for funding in the bill in a big way.
For those who might rejoice over the gridlock scenario, I wouldn’t get too
excited. The market forces that are making health care completely unaffordable for
American families, small businesses and even organizations like ACC will
relentlessly push us toward massive change. Rather than just girding our loins
or looking in the rearview mirror and wishing the good old days would come
back, we better roll up our sleeves and get busy to protect the integrity of
health care for patients, the viability of the profession of medicine and the
ongoing potential for innovation here.