Matthew Hahn is the author of two new books, Distracted: How Regulations Are Destroying the Practice of Medicine and Preventing True Health-Care Reform and Staying Alive: The Signs That You Have to See a Doctor Right Now (and the Ways to Avoid Having to See One Again). He is a family physician and owns River Bend Family Medicine in Hancock, Maryland.
Q: In your book Distracted, you write, “I am witness to a tragedy.
The once great American health-care system has fallen seriously ill. Millions
of Americans are suffering the consequences.” From your perspective, what are
some of the most important possible remedies to this situation?
A:
Number one is a commitment to fixing the most basic three issues that affect
patients. One is giving every person in the country open access to care. Two is
making sure there is a reasonable hard cap on out-of-pocket expenses. Number
three is making sure people have comprehensive coverage, access to medical
goods and services, without impediment to access.
Once
that’s part of it, my book goes into different approaches to make that possible
no matter how you look at the political process.
With
the traditional approach, we all talk about who pays for health care. It pits
government against the private sector. What the book gets at is there are
details we are not talking about that would make or break any of the approaches
we’re talking about.
Q:
So what are some of those details?
A:
In general we just don’t have the building blocks of health care success. The
system is fighting doctors, and patients from getting care. In my practice,
it’s incredibly difficult to get paid for work in health care.
The
first two chapters go through how a doctor gets paid for a basic office visit,
how many places you can get denied or fouled up in the pursuit of $75.
Having
a system like that creates distractions for physicians and creates
inefficiency. The medical billing system has an array of people trying to
administer basic payments.
Another
is computerization in American medicine. In the early 2000s, people thought it
would solve problems. Through government’s ignoring the issue and then
destroying the issue, it turned out to be the exact opposite.
Most
doctors using the system [feel it makes] it harder than when we had paper
records. The demands made on our time [using this system] is another huge
distraction…
The
focus of Obamacare was to get more patients to insurance. It was moderately
successful. The problem is that modern insurance policies make it difficult for
people to get care. Some have huge deductibles, some reasonable care is not
covered. Insurance companies try to limit liability with all these prior
authorization processes.
It
can take my staff hours to order a CAT scan. I tell a story of a gentleman who
came in with signs of a stroke. Twelve hours later I couldn’t get a picture of
his head. I had to get on the phone and scream.
Usually
the fix is quite simple. The devil is in the details. If you know the details,
it’s easy to fix the system. We could get to a system where everybody is happy,
there are fewer regulations and better, less expensive health care.
Q:
What do you see looking ahead given the current debate on replacing the
Affordable Care Act?
A:
I see that if you look at recent history, Republicans and Democrats are going
to fight tooth and nail and the system is not going to get fixed. Millions of
Americans are going to suffer and die because we deny them health care.
What
I’d like to see is people exerting pressure on elected officials so that they
finally commit to fixing the system and not to partial solutions or complete
reversals.
The
thing we see in the office—it isn’t a vague political thing, we see people’s
lives affected every day. It’s hard to take care of patients in a system like
this. It’s difficult to watch from a human perspective.
One
hundred years ago, we didn’t have the treatments, the diagnostics. [There were]
differences across the income spectrum, but we were largely in the same boat.
Today,
we have treatments and doctors, but we’re withholding readily available care.
It’s a choice we’re making, a horrible…choice.
For
me to sit in the office and know that despite the medicine to treat patient’s
diabetes, we can’t get [it]—it’s extraordinarily demoralizing. It hurts in my
soul to watch people suffer when the remedy is in my hand and I’m not able to
give it to them. That’s what our politicians are perpetuating.
Q:
What do you see as the impact of the Affordable Care Act on your patients?
A:
It changed the winners and losers, the nature of the problems people are
having. It didn’t solve them for many people. It’s harder to practice today
than 10 years ago, despite the fact that people have insurance who didn’t
before.
Modern
health insurance isn’t the equivalent of having health care. It once was, 20 or 30
years ago…
That’s
how it’s changed. It’s an interesting point that people don’t get. I see people
defending Obamacare—more people have insurance. It’s not the proper way to look
at it.
Q:
You also have another new book called Staying Alive, in which you advise people
on preventive care and describe symptoms that indicate someone should see a
doctor immediately. What are some of the reasons people resist getting the
right medical care, and how do you think your book might motivate them?
A:
The middle section of the book is about the miracles of modern preventive
medicine. As I was writing the book, a patient came in and said, Isn’t all
medicine poison?
It’s
complicated. I feel that to be treated for a disease, especially a chronic
disease, is an admission of our own fallibility and mortality. The baby boomer
generation was the first generation to be taught to expect a long, healthy
life. Getting diagnosed with a disease like high blood pressure--this may not
be true for each of us, but it makes a lot of people very uncomfortable.
You
throw into the mix legitimate reasons not to trust every pharmaceutical company
or medicine on the market—there have been controversial issues in health care
including immunization. A lot of people are affected by controversies. They
lean toward not wanting to risk the medicine.
When
I started out in medicine, I told patients, take good care of yourself so you
don’t have to go on a medicine. [Then] I saw you treat adults for [various
problems and] stop seeing strokes. I take care of hundreds of patients with
diabetes, and see few [facing] losing their limbs--the treatments are so
effective.
I’m
treated for blood pressure—I’m a runner, I exercise seven days a week, I’m a
healthy eater. Despite that, I realized I can take medicine in addition to
[following] a healthy lifestyle. It lowers the risk of a heart attack.
I
saw a lot of patients who do not take wonderful care of themselves, despite my
urging, but take their medicines and do [well]. The treatments exist and are
miraculous. It’s a shame to see people not taking advantage of these things and
suffering the consequences. I feel badly when someone does not get their cancer
screening or have their blood pressure treated.
Q:
Will you be writing more books?
A:
I have to get through putting out Distracted. I have ideas. This is a completely
new and unique experience for me. I suspect I will—I’m jotting down ideas now.
The
push to put these out took hold of my soul. In November ’14 I was so despondent
over the election results I had to do something positive and get my mind off
what was happening in the country.
Staying
Alive was on my mind for a while, and it just started pouring out of me. Then
the other topic, fixing health care, bubbled up to the surface. I was writing
in all my spare time, especially weekends, for two straight years. I need a
little bit of rest!...
It’s
so hard to live in this time when it’s so hard to take care of patients. I’m
concerned about our kids’ generation—when they need health care. That’s the
focus now. I’d be surprised if I didn’t write again…
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
Did he mean November '16, about the election results?
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