4 March 2000
Government, Patients and Medical Profession
should all alert of the harms of HMOs
(Keywords: HMO, profiteering, middle man, mishaps)
Once again, the downside or harm of Health Maintenance
Organisations (HMOs) has hit newspaper front pages. This should
come as no surprise.
HMO was an invention of the United States some quarter of a
century ago. It mushroomed initially under the belief that it is the
saviour of rising health care cost, only to shrivel as problems after
problems surface. The harmful effects are obvious. In its country
of origin, some 14% Gross Domestic Product are spent on health
care. Yet, some 40 million Americans are still without health care
coverage.
During these 25 years in the States, countless patients have
not received the best of medical care that they expected; countless
doctors have their professional rights to properly treat their
patients usurped. Examples abound and a continuous flow appear
in the internet. Yet during these times, countless HMO chief
executives are acquiring their private jets and ocean couriers. It
has been said that these chief executives are amongst the highest
paid in the States.
What is the logistics? In the usual circumstances, when a
patient pays a doctor, he/she obtains that degree of quantifiable
service. In the case of the HMO, a profiteering business-oriented
middle man, the amount paid ends up in at best a three-way split:
to the chief executive or management of the HMO, the
shareholders of the organisation, and the serving doctor.
To the medical practitioners, there is another hardship. HMO
functions on a fixed contribution by the client and pledge a "total"
medical care during a designated period. In short, the less spent
on medical care for that client, the more will be the profit for the
HMO. High-tech, effective, but costly investigations are therefore
seldom allowed. Yet, when things get wrong, the doctor has to
bear the responsibilities. With one hand tied most of the time, the
service provider has to face the brunt of possible medical mishaps,
when the profiteering HMO gets away Scot free.
Regrettably, Hong Kong has not taken stock of other people's
blunders. Instead, with the usual belief that everything in the West
is glittery good, and with the fear of escalating health care cost
during our economic downturn, big corporations and individuals
are lured by the tinted belief that HMOs can and will cap the health
care cost. HMOs thus not only set foot in Hong Kong but begin to
flourish.
The sad issue is that to many human resources personnel of
major organisations, cutting health care budget becomes their
priority concern with no due consideration that it could be at the
expenses of denigrating health care standards for their employees.
The recent revelation of the saga of one HMO in Hong Kong
hopefully will wake up our corporations, our Government and our
medical profession in the deleterious effects of these profiteering
bodies disguised as health corporations before it becomes all too
late.
The harm is blatant. The client pays $180 and the doctor
gets $90. The rest goes to fatten the middle man. In this case, the
doctors suffer more. Not only do they have to provide the best of
care at a cut-throat price, even the meagre earnings are not due to
them. It is estimated that some $9 million are owed by the HMO to
the various serving providers.
What can we do? As a start, our corporations should take up
their health care policies with their eyes open. For whilst budget is
always an issue, a good employer has a responsibility to provide
the best health care for its employees. The ever increasing reports
on the harm of HMOs in the States should never be forgotten.
Evidence shows that our neighbour, Malaysia, has been for
some time conscious of the harm of HMOs. Whilst that government
realise they cannot legislate to stop a business venture, it has
specified in law that any such profiteering bodies cannot control
doctors' professional autonomy in exercising his/her expertise in
serving patients. Our government should take heed of this
direction.
The medical profession should not be complacent either.
There is no reason why the some 3,000 plus private practising
doctors could not form their own non-profiteering HMO to provide
comprehensive service. Every cent paid in by the client will be
used back to provide the necessary service. The doctors, now
directors of this body, will derive their income from the service
rendered.
This idea has been floated out a few times before, only to be
a victim of internal political bickering of the medical profession. It
is high time for the profession to be united and take this issue up
conscientiously before it is too late!
(Hongkong Standard)
|