Knowing the price of drugs is a very useful first step. It
allows you to make a direct comparison between branded and
generic products. This saves you money, it can save the health
service money (not everybody pays for their own medicines), and
in the aggregate it helps to curb price rises in the pharmacy
industry.
To my mind, the value of knowing prices is not necessarily in
being able to make choices. At a basic level, it helps to inform
the public debate about healthcare. How can we possibly
understand and appreciate the figures being thrown about by
experts and politicians if we have no idea what procedures cost?
Knowing how much it cost to treat your own myocardial infarction
will improve your level of understanding about the cost to the
healthcare system in general of bad health choices (all those
cigarettes, all that poutine...) and their consequences, as well
as making it easier to spot the exaggerations and miscalculations
that will always be spouted on the topic.
>
>> At the very least, transparency of prices will let us make comparisons and begin to
>> ask questions -- the foundation of true accountability. "Why is
>> it that the cost of one intensive-care bed is C$250,000 in
>> Toronto but only C$175,000 in Quebec" is a good way to start
>> forcing both patients and healthcare administrators to think
>> about how, where and why they allocate resources.
>
> That's an interesting question by itself, and it should be throughly
> investigated. However, when strapped to a bed facing death (me), or
> dealing with a bizarre kidney ailment (my girlfriend) or a rather rare
> form of cancer (my mom), cost effectiveness is the least of your
> concerns, knowing that, all in all, from what one's heard about the
> system, they treat you with the best treatment available.
Which may or may not be true. If you have the money, US
healthcare will give you the absolute best care in the world,
with all the trimmings and every single possible treatment at the
highest level known to medical science. In a national system
like Canada or the UK, that is impossible. Certainly in Britain,
considerations of cost-effectiveness can mean that certain drugs
or procedures will not be offered because they are considered to
offer not enough benefit for the expense. What we get is good
care, the best that can reasonably be expected without going to
extreme and silly levels.
>
>>>
>>>> which introduces at least the glimmerings of transparency.
>>>>
>>>> It may also deter patients from frivolous use of the system,
>>>
>>> What's that? IMO, you can only judge if it's �frivolous� after the fact.
>>
>> Heavens, no. When someone comes into the surgery demanding a
>> full course of antibiotics (and possibly antivirals as well)
>> because they have a cold, that's clearly frivolous.
>> When someone insists on a CAT scan every time they have a headache, that's
>> frivolous.
>
> But does that happen often?
>
> I know that there are people abusing the system, but that's not
> significant overall.
You think, you hope.
When there is no control and no awareness, there is a lot of
abuse. Any system that is open to abuse will experience it. No
cost awareness and cost control means the system is wide open.
Nor does this mean strictly the intentional abuse, knowingly
obtaining goods or services wih the intention of gain. This may
be as simple as wastage due to ignorance. Every time someone
tells their doctor they insist on antibiotics for their cold or
on a branded product rather than the generic equivalent, it
constitutes abuse.
>
> I might add that in my case, if I were to have a long and miserable
> cold, or a severe headache, I'd ask for every test in the books, because
> I never experience any of those ailments.
Any competent doctor should throw you out on your ear for making
such demands because they are so meaningless and minor.
Unfortunately, it is far easier to write out a scrip or referral
and get the person out the door than to fight it out with the
patient.
>
>> When someone has persistent backache but rather than
>> losing 50lb of weight from around the midriff insists on x-rays,
>> osteopathy, acupuncture, massage and painkilling injections --
>> that's frivolous.
>
> Is it? You seem to draw your conclusions and opinions from known frauds
> or stories you've heard about.
If you happen to know an orthopedic chap, next time you see him
(or her) ask them how many patients they could strike off their
books if only they'd lose weight. The answer will prove my
point.
>
>> All of these, I am citing from personal
>> knowledge, and I would be willing to bet next month's cigar
>> allowance that any doctor will be able to give you 50 more
>> examples without having to think.
>>>
>>>> which is really where so much wastage occurs. People do NOT need
>>>> a full course of antibiotics for every cold and 'flu. They do
>>>> NOT need x-rays for every sprained ankle.
>>>
>>> That's for a *doctor* to determine that.
>>
>> Doctor yes, full workup no.
>> But the power of doctors to resist is not unlimited, and when
>> faced with 20 patients a day of whom a fair proportion will make
>> persistent and extra demands (sometimes on the back of threats
>> like "... or I will sue you"), many give in and order the
>> procedure or write the scrip, just to shut up the bugger.
>>
>>
>>>
>>>> When patients have
>>>> private insurance and see the bills they incur, they ten to be a
>>>> bit more careful about the services they use, even if they get
>>>> most or all of their money reimbursed.
>>>
>>> People are not doctors.
>>
>> They are not, but they are responsible for their own decisions
>> and actions. That is why a doctor cannot order any procedure on
>> his own, he needs the consent of the patient (or a relative).
>
> But that's only about legal matters, not about medical knowledge.
One slides into the other.
The legal principle of patient responsibility means that private
individuals are expected to take clinical decisions.
>
>> That is why we choose our doctors (this service may not be
>> available in your jurisdiction)
>
> Of course we can chose our own doctors. But that's not always possible
> and not always the best course of action.
The British NHS operates a "gatekeeper" system: all patients have
to go first to their GP who decides whether to refer them on to a
specialist, and who to send them to.
>
>> and why it is our decision
>> whether to see the doctor or not (hmmm, funny lumps on my
>> testicles, I wonder what that means).
>
> It means you like to play with yourself. Willing to tell that to your
> doctor?
>
> ;-)
I would be, actually. Testicular cancer is a major killer,
mostly because men are as unwilling to drop their trousers for
their doctor as examining themselves for lumps.