By Sen. Bernie Sanders
Politico, May 7, 2013
The American approach to primary health care is one of the more glaring failures of a dysfunctional health care system that costs almost twice as much per capita as that of any other major country — often with worse results.
Instituting major reforms in primary care and enabling people to see a doctor when they need one will save lives, ease suffering and save billions of dollars in wasteful health care costs. What should we do?
First, we need to substantially increase the number of primary-care practitioners. In most countries, about 70 percent of doctors practice primary care while 30 percent are specialists. We have it backward. Only 30 percent of doctors in America practice primary care.
Second, we must implement a major change in the culture of our medical schools. Some medical schools do an excellent job educating primary-care physicians, but too many do too little and some — believe it or not — do nothing at all. In 2011, about 17,000 doctors graduated from American medical schools. Only 7 percent of those graduates chose a primary-care career.
Third, we need to greatly expand the Federally Qualified Health Center program which today provides high quality and affordable health care, dental care, mental health treatment and low-cost prescription drugs to 22 million Americans, regardless of income. This is a program that provides some of the most cost-effective health care in the country and serves as a medical home for millions with nowhere else to go.
Finally, we should greatly expand the National Health Service Corps, which provides loan-forgiveness and scholarships to students who are prepared to provide medical, dental and mental health care in underserved areas. Like the community health center program, the health service corps has expanded in recent years. In 2012, the corps provided financial help to nearly 10,000 clinicians, nearly three times more than in 2008. That’s a good step forward, but nowhere near enough.
The bottom line is that we need a revolution in primary health care services and accessibility.
(Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is chairman of the Subcommittee on Primary Health Care and Aging of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.)
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/05/doctors-physician-shortage-calls-for-intervention-91024.html
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D.
Every expert understands the pressing need to reinforce our primary care infrastructure – a need that grows more urgent with the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. The inevitable transformation into a single payer system will be much smoother if we already have a high-performance primary care infrastructure in place.
Sen. Bernie Sanders provides us with a framework for expanding that system. It’s too bad that we don’t have a Congress that is willing to support the reforms that we need. We need to keep Sen. Sanders and his allies and replace the rest of them.