Published in CommPRO.biz 2013.08.22
Greedy Hospitals
Nothing illustrates the runaway cost of medical care in America
quite as starkly as the rush to build proton therapy centers. Hospitals and
even private entities are racing to build these facilities that run better than
$200 million bucks, $100+ million on the cheap. While it is true that for some
cancers proton therapy shows real promise, the number of patients who might
benefit is tiny. None are in need of this treatment at the emergency room
level.
So why are hospitals across the land rushing to invest this
kind of money when it doesn’t serve many patients? Well, it turns out that
while there are only a few that can really benefit, there are lots of patients
who can be convinced that this latest most-up-to-date medical gadget will help
them. Patients that impartial studies show can be as effectively treated on
existing proton radiation equipment at half the cost.
There is certainly a need for proton therapy. Studies show
it is “Promising” for youngsters with rare tumors in their brain and on their
spine. Its focused beam is not as likely as standard radiation to damage their tiny
developing organs near the cancer. Beyond that, proton therapy has not been
shown to be better than proton radiation. That has not stopped hospitals across
America
from rushing to sink hundreds of millions into proton therapy centers.
Nothing illustrates better why America spends more on
healthcare than anybody and we still rank way down the list in almost every
measurable. According to the World Health Organization we rank first in
expenditures per-capita and 38th in outcomes. The latest (2008) per-capita
number comes in at $7,538.00 and rising; close to double in the eight years following
2000. Growth in healthcare costs has slowed over the last two years; some see
the effects of the Affordable Care Act -others see the recession. In either
case we are still spending tons of money and not getting our money’s worth.
The proton therapy issue illustrates the cause perfectly.
The Washington, DC
– Baltimore
area has three proton therapy centers on track at a cost of well over a half
billion dollars. One in Baltimore
is already under construction, a football field sized dome that will house a
90-ton machine. The docs there have offered to share their proton therapy
monster with the docs in the Washington
area just 40 miles away. Not a chance. Why? Could it be the estimate by one of
the hospitals in DC that their proton center will generate nearly $16 million
dollars a year in profits by the end of this decade?
Take a look at NY City; with a vastly larger population base
they will have one proton therapy center, more than enough to meet the need.
There, the NY State Hospital Review and Planning Council held the region to a
single unit. In the Washington area two
hospitals three miles apart and 40 miles from the proton therapy center in Baltimore, are adding
unneeded and unnecessary treatment equipment. Disgusting! Ethically
inexcusable.
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