McAllen, Texas Docs Defend Region's Healthcare Spending
The border town of McAllen, Texas wasn't on the tip of anybody's tongue before this month. But a few weeks ago, an article in The New Yorker offered it up as exhibit A of all that is wrong with the country's healthcare system, the ground zero of medicine run amok.
In recent weeks, the president himself reportedly carried the magazine into conference rooms announcing that the article, which was called "The Cost Conundrum", was mandatory reading for anyone who was serious about joining the health reform conversation.
But yesterday, the doctors of McAllen began to fight back. In a news conference in Washington, D.C. directed at President Barack Obama and Congress, they said The New Yorker and the article's author, Atul Gawande, MD, got it all wrong.
Gawande, who visited McAllen some months ago, attributed his statistics on McAllen to the Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare's compendium of Medicare spending costs throughout the country. It showed, he wrote, that McAllen has the second highest per capita spending of Medicare dollars in the nation, next to Miami where the costs of practicing are much greater. In McAllen, the $15,000 annual spending on medical expenses is twice that of the national average, Gawande said.
A surgeon at Harvard Medical School's Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Gawande blamed McAllen's expensive tab on an assortment of McAllen's physician entrepreneurs who have set up large medical practices that perform a lot of imaging and other tests, and formed hospital companies that keep patients longer than average. In effect, Gawande accused McAllen's medical system of over-utilizing and overcharging the federal government.
But yesterday, at the start of a Border Health Caucus in Washington, officials from the Texas Medical Association and the Hidalgo-Starr County Medical Society, explained that is hardly the case.
And they asked that the president come to McAllen to see for himself.
McAllen is different than any other place in the U.S. It provides healthcare to an extremely needy and poor population, they said, and is just more expensive because the healthcare needs are so great.
In effect, they said, Gawande used statistics that were not risk-adjusted for the severity of health problems in McAllen.
For starters, said society president James Stewart, MD, a McAllen internist, Hidalgo County has the lowest average income of any county in the nation, which means it is the poorest. Because of that, as well as its proximity to the border, it is beset with more than its share of health challenges. It has high numbers of uninsured, high numbers of undocumented immigrants, and a high percentages of people who, when they are diagnosed with an illness, their providers learn they have never seen a physician.
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Doug (9/12/2009 at 1:21 AM)
This is bunk, Lets risk adjust and we will find the same result. They keep members in the hospital longer because of a home environment, right, do they ask or know the home environment ? This doesnt make since because Medicare pays by DRG which is a case rate based on the diagnosis of the member. The expense is not for inpatient hospital it is for unneccessary radiology such as pet scans which dont have a set rate so doctors rip off health plans. recently we just forced vendors to do a case rate for Pet scans to avoid this problem. Doug Corson, CPC and Director of Financial Analysis in arizona
Jay (8/22/2009 at 1:41 PM)
I grew up in the McAllen area or "The Valley" and have a mother who is an LVN who has worked for a doctor in private practice, a hospital, and now in home health. Just off hand I can think of people I know who are used like cattle for revenue. My father in law who hates going to his doctor because he knows that he is going to send him to take test after tests. My 79 year old aunt go just got into it with her Dr. because she is using homehealth (he doesn't get a cut I guess) yet every two week he re-runs un needed blood work and re-runs the test done by the homehealth nurse. My sister-in-law who had to change Dentist because they only accept Medicaid/care (insurance is for suckers). I still remember how shocked my mother-in-law was when she came to visit us in Austin and my son had a fever and they sent him home without any tests, pills, or shots. It wasn't always like this, I had a great Family Dr growing up, but when you make is so easy to "abuse" the system it is hard to leave cash on the table.
Kirk in Kansas City (7/3/2009 at 11:07 AM)
McAllen Doctors have taken the sickcare system and made it their golden goose. They have figured out how the system works and take full advantage of it. I lived in Edinburg and worked in Mission, shopped in McAllen and know 1st hand what I'm talking about. Kudos to the New Yorker for exposing this fraud. That whole region opertates above the law in so many ways, not just health or I mean sickcare.