Are There Enough Doctors for the Newly Insured?
Apr 27th, 2010
Are There Enough Doctors for the Newly Insured?
Stateline.org
After
Even before President Obama signed the health bill, there already was a shortage of primary care physicians, who usually are the first person a patient goes to for treatment.
These generalists — usually family physicians and internists (who focus on adults) — are dwindling in number, as older doctors retire and younger medical students opt for more lucrative specialty fields. A surge of as many as 32 million new patients — many of whom are poor and haven’t seen a doctor in a long time — could make the scarcity even worse.
“The fact that all these people are going to have insurance is wonderful,” says Dr. Barry Izenstein, an endocrinologist and primary care physician in
Izenstein, until recently the head of the
The
The
Since
Still, the addition of 400,000 newly insured patients also caused backlogs in doctors’ waiting rooms.
The wait to get to see a primary care physician is far longer in
On paper, at least,
At a meeting with
“That’s exactly what I think we are going to experience in 2014 when we have an expansion of people who have insurance,” Heim says. “There are going to be patients who now have insurance but, depending on their geographic location, they may have a hard time finding a primary care medicine practice that is open to new patients.”
Dr. Mario Motta, president of the Massachusetts Medical Society, largely agrees. But he says patients in
Federal Incentives for Primary Care
Nationally, a larger portion of the population is now without health insurance than was the case in
According to the
The federal law does offer some help for primary care physicians. For two years, it increases payments for seeing Medicaid patients to the same amount doctors get to see patients insured by Medicare, the federal insurance program for the elderly. That amounts to a significant pay raise. A recent study by the Kaiser Family Foundation showed states only paid primary care physicians two-thirds of the Medicare rates.
“(The increase) is a good thing because Medicaid rates are so low that most family physicians would be unable to accommodate significantly more Medicaid patients,” says Heim. Depending on the state, Medicaid patients often cost doctors more to serve than they are reimbursed for.
Other parts of the law give other help to primary care physicians, too. There’s an extra 10 percent Medicare pay hike for physicians in certain areas from 2011 to 2015. There’s also more funding for community clinics.
Is It Enough?
But Izenstein, the doctor from
There are steps states can take to ease the strain on primary care services, Heim says. State officials need to start working immediately with primary care networks to increase efficiency and effectiveness. Her home state helps administer a program, Community Care of North Carolina, that has developed ways to improve primary care by coordinating patient care with doctors, pharmacists, health clinics and social service agencies, she says. “We can save costs. We can reduce admissions. In some practices, we can increase efficiency so, therefore, be able to take care of more patients.”
“These states that are trying to simply stonewall this, they are going to lose valuable time,” she says of states that are suing to stop the federal law or not taking steps to carry it out.
Vernon Smith, a consultant and former Michigan Medicaid director, urges policymakers to keep a little perspective on the expansion of Medicaid. During the 1990s, he says, Medicaid enrollment grew by 75 percent; during the past decade, the rolls increased by another 50 percent. “So what we’re contemplating here in terms of health reform,” he says, “is not unprecedented in terms of size of increase.”
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