Healthcare
- From: "Joan F \(MI\)" <jjfahl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 19 Jun 2009 16:09:47 -0400
Ken Dychtwald Ph.D.
Renowned Psychologist, Gerontologist and Author
Posted: June 17, 2009 10:29 AM
The Biggest Problem With U.S. Health Care -- And How To Fix It!
While most of the current healthcare debate has focused on how to cover the
tens of millions of uninsured Americans and who should pay (granted, these
are critically important issues), after thirty-five years working at the
intersection of gerontology and healthcare, I'm convinced that we have the
WRONG healthcare system for our aging nation. If your train is headed in the
wrong direction, it doesn't help to give everyone a seat. And, since the
U.S. currently spends nearly twice as much per capita on healthcare as all
the other modernized nations, while our national life expectancy ranks a
humiliating 42nd worldwide, it's not that we throw too little money at the
problem, but that we may not be spending it in the wisest ways.
The Age Wave is Coming
Until recently, most people died relatively young of infectious diseases,
accidents, or in childbirth. When the first US census was taken in 1790,
half the population was under the age of 16 and less than 2 percent of the 4
million Americans were 65 and older. As a result, society rarely concerned
itself about the needs of its aging citizens. The elderly were too few to
matter.
However, during the past century, advances in medical diagnostics,
pharmaceuticals, surgical techniques, and nutrition have eliminated many of
the problems that once caused most people to die young. And so, the irony is
that our medical successes have produced tens of millions of long-lived men
and women who now struggle for decades with debilitating chronic illnesses
such as heart disease, cancer, arthritis, osteoporosis, COPD and
Alzheimer's -- that our system is absolutely NOT prepared to handle --
causing immeasurable suffering and trillions of misspent tax dollars.
With the average life expectancy having vaulted to 78 (and rising), the 13%
of our population over 65 now accounts for: 44% of hospital care, 38% of all
emergency medical services responses, 35% of all prescriptions, 26% of all
physician office visits and 90% of all nursing home use. And, the first of
the 78 million boomers will become eligible for Medicare in only 18 months!
The Four-Part Solution
#1: Multiply the amount of scientific research needed to delay or eliminate
the diseases of aging.
In May 1961, President John F. Kennedy looked to the sky and stated, "I
believe this nation should commit itself, before this decade is out, to
landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth." In response,
we mobilized all of our science and energy to realize that dream a short
eight years later.
Similarly, in order to avert the costly chronic disease pandemics looming in
our future, we must bring about a commitment of sufficient intelligence,
creativity and resources to replace unhealthy aging with healthy aging.
The dollars that have been committed to the life sciences to battle the
diseases of aging, however, are woefully inadequate to get the job done. For
each tax dollar we currently spend on treating disease, only about one cent
goes to fund the scientific research that could delay or prevent some of
these dread pandemics in the first place. For example, it is estimated that
if we could postpone the onset of Alzheimer's disease by five years, half of
all the nursing-home beds in America would empty.
#2: Make disease prevention and self-care a national priority.
Let's be honest....we've become a nation of gluttons. We eat too much,
exercise too little and then get angry at the healthcare system when we're
sick. This lack of proper prevention, self-care and disease management winds
up being a key factor in many of our eventual struggles with illness. This
is even true among the elderly. For example, 9% of the 65+ population remain
chronic smokers, a third don't exercise regularly, 40% are overweight and
23% are considered obese.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, more than 50 percent of our
potential for lifelong health is determined by our personal behaviors.
Maintaining a healthy lifestyle can reduce heart disease, hypertension,
non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, colon cancer, and osteoporotic
fractures -- most of the most common diseases of aging.
Our healthcare system should be focused on helping and motivating us all to
compress the various diseases of old age into the shortest possible time at
the very end of life - and thereby raise the odds of living long and well
(which would please both Mr. Spock and Dr. Spock). (I wonder why Michael
Moore neglected to mention self-care in his otherwise provocative
documentary Sicko? Was it because it's far easier to "blame the system" than
it is to take responsibility for one's own role in the problem?)
#3: Replace medical incompetence with aging-ready healthcare professionals.
When the leading edge of the baby boom arrived in the mid-1940's, America
and its institutions were totally unprepared. Waiting lists and long lines
developed at hospitals across the country, apartments and homes didn't have
enough bedrooms for boomer kids and there was a shortage of baby food and
diapers.
With the coming age wave, we should be preparing armies of "aging-ready"
healthcare professionals. We aren't. Less than one percent of all the
physicians in America have been trained and certified as geriatricians.
However well-intentioned they may be, most primary-care physicians have
received little or no continuing education in geriatrics. The same holds
true in nursing, allied health, and pharmacology.
Every medical school in the United Kingdom has a department of geriatrics.
But with 130 medical schools, there are, amazingly, only thirteen such
departments in the entire United States. Because of limited geriatric
competency, every week our physicians make millions of costly mistakes:
misdiagnoses, inappropriate surgeries and punishing complications due to
faulty medication management (polypharmacy).
If AARP, the AMA, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and all
health insurers required physicians, nurses, and other health professionals
to attain basic geriatric competencies in order to be eligible for
reimbursement, mistakes and do-overs would shrink, and we'd have
better-cared-for older adults at a far lower cost.
#4: Palliative care: death with dignity.
A century ago, 75 to 80 percent of all deaths took place at home with family
and friends on hand. Roughly the same percentage of all deaths now occur in
institutions -- hospitals, extended care facilities, and nursing homes.
In fact, Medicare spends approximately 28 percent of its total budget on
patients in their last year of life -- sometimes when the attempt to prolong
life merely means an expensive, inhumane, high-tech death. And something
that no one seems willing to talk about is the fact that the extension of
dying in this fashion all too often becomes a capitalist feast as some
medical companies see their profits grow, the longer the dying process is
extended.
We'd be wise to shift the emphasis for the dying patient to "palliative
care" or hospice care -- which focuses on the relief of symptoms,
controlling pain, and the provision of emotional and spiritual support for
the patient and their family. Such treatment requires relatively little
apparatus and technology, is much less costly than the procedures currently
in place in most hospitals and provides for a far more humane and dignified
last stage of life.
The Challenge Ahead
On January 1, 2011, the first baby boomer will turn 65. Whether we grow old
sick, frail, and dependent -- or vital, active, and productive -- will
depend on our ability to dramatically alter the orientation, strategies,
skills, and financial incentives of our current healthcare system. And so,
while we're focusing now on the coverage and financing of our damaged
healthcare system, we should also focus on re-visioning healthcare's
purpose -- to create long-lived, productive and healthy men and women.
I welcome your thoughts and reactions!
Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D. is a psychologist, gerontologist and author of sixteen
books on aging, life transitions, and retirement-related issues including
Age Wave, The Power Years, Healthy Aging: Challenges and Solutions, and his
new book, With Purpose: Going from Success to Significance in Work and Life
(with Daniel J. Kadlec, Collins Life; 3/09). The founding CEO of Age Wave,
he lives with his wife and children in the San Francisco Bay Area.
.
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