Dayton Daily News

Changes to health care spurred by virus might be here to stay

- By Julie Rovner

The U.S. health care system is famously resistant to government-imposed change. It took decades to create Medicare and Medicaid, mostly due to opposition from the medical-industrial complex. Then it was nearly another half-century before the passage of the Affordable Care Act.

But the COVID-19 pandemic has done what no president or social movement or venture capitalist could have dreamed of: It forced sudden major changes to the nation’s health care system that are unlikely to be reversed.

“Health care is never going back to the way it was before,” said Gail Wilensky, a health economist who ran the Medicare and Medicaid programs for President George H.W. Bush in the early 1990s.

Wilensky is far from the only longtime observer of the American health care system to marvel at the speed of some long-sought changes. But experts warn that the breakthrou­ghs may not all make the health system work better, or make it less expensive.

That said, here are three trends that seem likely to continue.

Telehealth for all

Telehealth is not new; medical profession­als have used it to reach patients in rural or remote settings since the late 1980s.

But even while technology has made video visits easier, it has failed to reach critical mass, largely because of political fights. Licensing has been one main obstacle – determinin­g how a doctor in one state can legally treat a patient in a state where the doctor is not licensed.

The other obstacle, not surprising­ly, is payment. Should a video visit be reimbursed at the same rate as an in-person visit? Will making it easier for doctors and other medical profession­als to use telehealth encourage unnecessar­y care, thus driving up the nation’s $3.6 trillion health tab even more? Or could it replace care once provided free by phone?

Still, the pandemic has pushed aside those sticking points. Almost overnight, by necessity, every health care provider who can is delivering telemedici­ne. A new survey from Gallup found the number of patients reporting “virtual” medical visits more than doubled, from 12% to 27%, from late March to mid-May. That is due, at least in part, to Medicare having made it easier for doctors to bill for virtual visits.

It’s easy to see why many patients like video visits — there’s no parking to find and pay for, and it takes far less time out of a workday than going to an office.

Doctors and other practition­ers seem more ambivalent. On one hand, it can be harder to examine a patient over video and some services just can’t be done via a digital connection. On the other hand, they can see more patients in the same amount of time and may need less support staff and possibly smaller offices if more visits are conducted virtually.

Of course, telemedici­ne doesn’t work for everyone. Many areas and patients don’t have reliable or robust broadband connection­s that make video visits work. And some patients, particular­ly the oldest seniors, lack the technologi­cal skills needed to connect.

Primary care doctors in peril

Another trend that has suddenly accelerate­d is worry over the nation’s dwindling supply of primary care doctors. The exodus of practition­ers performing primary care has been a concern over the past several years, as baby boomer doctors retire and others have grown weary of more and more bureaucrac­y from government and private payers. Having faced a difficult financial crisis during the pandemic, more family physicians may move into retirement or seek other profession­al options.

At the same time, fewer current medical students are choosing specialtie­s in primary care.

“I’ve been trying to raise the alarm about the kind of perilous future of primary care,” said Farzad Mostashari, a top Health and Human Services Department official in the Obama administra­tion. Mostashari runs Aledade, a company that helps primary care doctors make the transition from fee-forservice medicine to new payment models.

The American Academy of Family Physicians reports that 70% of primary care physicians are reporting declines in patient volume of 50% or more since March, and 40% have laid off or furloughed staff. The AAFP has joined other primary care and insurance groups in asking HHS for an infusion of cash.

“This is absolutely essential to effectivel­y treat patients today and to maintain their ongoing operations until we overcome this public health emergency,” the groups wrote.

One easy way to help keep primary care doctors afloat would be to pay them not according to what they do, but in a lump sum to keep patients healthy. This move from fee-for-service to what’s known as capitation or value-based care has unfolded gradually and was championed in the Affordable Care Act.

But some experts argue it needs to happen more quickly and they predict that the coronaviru­s pandemic could finally mark the beginning of the end for doctors who still charge for each service individual­ly. Mostashari, who spends his time helping doctors make the transition, said in times like these, it would make more sense for primary care doctors to have “a steady monthly revenue stream, and [the doctor] can decide the best way to deliver that care. Unlimited texts, phone calls, video calls. The goal is to give you satisfacto­ry outcomes and a great patient experience.”

Still, many physicians, particular­ly those in solo or small practices, worry about the potential financial risk — particular­ly the possibilit­y of getting paid less if they don’t meet certain benchmarks that the doctors may not be able to directly control.

But with many practices now ground to a halt, or just starting to reopen, those physicians who get paid per patient rather than per service are in a much better position to stay afloat. That model may be gain traction as doctors ponder the next pandemic, or the next wave of this one.

Hospitals on the decline?

The pandemic also might lead to less emphasis on hospital-based care. While hospitals in many parts of the country have obviously been full of very sick COVID patients, they have closed down other nonemergen­cy services to preserve supplies and resources to fight the pandemic. People with other ailments have stayed away in droves even when services were available, for fear of catching something worse than what they already have.

Many experts predict that care won’t just snap back when the current emergency wanes. Dr. Mark Smith, former president of the California Health Care Foundation, said among consumers, a switch has been flipped. “Overnight it seems we’ve gone from high-touch to no-touch.”

 ?? LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? Dr. Ryan Klitgaard, right, speaks with a patient during a telemedici­ne appointmen­t online at the MaxHealth Family, Internal & Sports Medicine clinic in Colleyvill­e, Texas, on March 20.
LYNDA M. GONZALEZ / DALLAS MORNING NEWS Dr. Ryan Klitgaard, right, speaks with a patient during a telemedici­ne appointmen­t online at the MaxHealth Family, Internal & Sports Medicine clinic in Colleyvill­e, Texas, on March 20.

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