Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Price of Being a Patient

Whatever benefits modern medicine has for patients, I've experienced first-hand its power to undermine your ordinary life. In the spring, I switched primary care providers when I became frustrated with my long-time PCP's sluggish response to several urgent medical problems. When I gave my new PCP a sticky note listing a few medical concerns of mine at our first meeting, however, I inadvertently triggered an avalanche of medical appointments. She gave me a few referrals to specialists, including physical therapy to resolve some old injuries, and as I dutifully worked my way through the list I watched my time slip away. Add to that several medical checkups for my children, and the time drain was enormous.

Perhaps unwisely, I added it all up: six medical appointments in April (one of them for a child), and nine in May (one for a child). Some were mercifully clustered around a medical campus in the north part of city, some in the south part of the city, and two were east or west of the medical campus. Some providers collected co-pays on the spot, and others sent a big fat bill later on ("What's this?" my husband asked, waving an itemized list of co-pays in the air recently). To complicate things further, my insurance company periodically sent me bills for provider visits recommended by my PCP that they only covered partially.

My experience was typical, according to a poll of women's views of health care released today by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP). The Harris Interactive poll of 1,270 women, commissioned by the AAFP, found that cost and time constraints were the top challenges women faced in obtaining health care for themselves and their families (in San Francisco, I would add "parking"). The AAFP used the poll's data to advocate for a medical home model, where all medical care is coordinated through a primary care physician and streamlined through technology such as electronic medical records, e-prescribing, and emails between patients and providers.

Considering the number of uninsured Americans, I'm supposed to write that I'm grateful to have decent medical insurance -- which I am, of course. I'm also grateful, however, for the new clients I gained in May, whose work, out of necessity, took up many nights and weekends this month as I juggled interesting new assignments with a relentless march of medical appointments. I'm equally grateful, as these appointments wind down at last, that I'm not coping with a chronic condition that requires frequent provider visits, and co-pays or bills for visits, prescriptions, or durable medical equipment.

At the end of May now, I have finished my assignments and met my target number of work hours, although I spent less time than I wanted to with my children. Luckily, I managed to squeeze in a weekday off to play hooky with my older daughter recently, who had a rough month at school. We both needed the break.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

The VA and Soldier Suicides

Yes, here I am dipping my toe into health care policy once again. But I can’t help but react to the announcement this week from the National Institute of Mental Health that suicide rates among soldiers and veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan might exceed combat deaths. As of May 7, 2008, the Department of Defense casualty statistics state that 4,071 soldiers have died in the Iraq conflict, and 492 have died in the Afghanistan conflict. Veterans Affairs secretary Dr. James Peake admitted to Congress this week that there are probably over 1,000 suicide attempts per month by patients within the VA system. In 2007, a VA official said that only 790 soldiers attempted suicide that year; the VA has been accused of under-reporting suicide rates.

Technical and medical advances have greatly improved survival rates for soldiers injured on the battlefield, but as a result there are more seriously injured veterans to treat within the VA system, according to Government Executive.com. A RAND Corporation study estimates that about 300,000 returning Iraq and Afghanistan soldiers have post-traumatic stress disorder (only half receive treatment for PTSD), and 320,000 have a traumatic brain injury.

I remember that in 2006, the VA was widely praised as a model health care system. In fact, I assigned a story on this very topic to a freelance writer I worked with. The VA boasted an efficient, timesaving electronic medical record (EMR) system, geographically widespread facilities, access to and support of new medical treatments and techniques, and lower prescription drug costs than many private health plans due to bulk drug purchases. The VA has been considered a possible model for a nationwide universal health care plan.

Its image has been tarnished more recently, with the mismanagement and neglect at Walter Reed Army Medical Center reported by the Washington Post in 2007, for example. There is currently a class-action lawsuit against the VA in San Francisco, contending that the VA provides inadequate mental health services. Furthermore, many middle-income veterans and their families are ineligible for VA coverage, due to enrollment restrictions imposed by the Bush administration in 2003, Physicians for a National Health Program told Forbes.com last year.

The fundamental problem is limited funding, which threatens the VA every year. This problem will only get worse as soldiers continue to return home with complex and expensive mental and physical health problems. The suicide rate is a stark reminder that the VA has failed to help these people.