IN DEFENSE OF INSURANCE COMPANIES
by Dr. Pamela A. Popper
There is so much wrong with health care that it is
almost impossible to fix the existing system. And, in my opinion, we are
focusing on the wrong things and blaming the wrong organizations for some of
our problems.
For example, health care reform often involves
criticizing insurance companies for not paying for certain types of treatments.
For the record, I'll state that insurance companies are guilty of many things
and do their part to contribute to the poor state of health care today. But
forcing these companies to pay for any treatment offered by drug companies and
desired by patients may be causing our problems to worsen, not get better.
For example, I have written before about Avastin, originally approved for colorectal and lung
cancers, and recently granted "accelerated approval" by the FDA for metastatic breast cancer. It's actually almost worthless
for all cancers. Avastin extends life by a few months
for colorectal and lung cancer patients, and about 5.5 months for metastatic breast cancer patients. The side effects,
according to an article in The New York Times, include death. Offered by
Genentech, the drug costs $92,000 per year. Genentech acknowledged in an
editorial that it "does not claim that the drug is cost-effective for
advanced breast cancer but believes it will be clearly worth the cost if shown
effective in earlier stages of breast cancer."
In spite of this, Avastin
has already been prescribed off-label to over 11,000 cancer patients with
advanced breast cancer, and the recent FDA approval would increase the number
of patients who qualify for it to 43,000. Genentech acknowledges that the drug
only extends life for only a few months. Using half of the $92,000 annual cost
of the drug (since patients are almost always dead within a few months), the
revenues to Genentech for this drug have grown to a
potential of close to $2 billion dollars per year. Where does the money to pay
for this drug come from? Insurance companies and
Medicare/Medicaid. And if some of our political candidates get their
way, we will add universal health care coverage, meaning more taxpayer-financed
reimbursement, to the pool of available funds.
This is not the only example. Billions of dollars
are spent annually on unnecessary back surgeries and other procedures,
mammography and other useless diagnostics, as well as drug treatments that are
completely ineffective, and often hurt people. Can you blame the insurance
companies for refusing to pay for this?
Unfortunately, the insurance companies also deny
reimbursement for treatments that do work, such as dietary intervention.
They've thrown the baby out with the bath water, attempting to deny coverage
for anything different or progressive.
Insurance companies are in a great position to be
innovators in the health care field if they decide t do so. They could develop
policies for people who choose to practice dietary excellence and optimal
habits, and reimburse these people for the counseling and other support needed
to learn how to do so. There is evidence that this will work, and can save
enormous amounts of money. The average patient who gets bypass surgery spends
$86,364 over a 5-year period; the average patient who has angioplasty spends
$63,897 during a comparable period of time. A consultation with Dr. Esselstyn (who has an excellent track record reversing
cardiovascular disease through dietary intervention) costs $500; a membership
to The Wellness Forum, complete with books, CD's and DVD's costs only $221.
Reimbursing for these types of services and refusing to pay for bypass surgery
and angioplasty unless the need is clearly demonstrated (it rarely is) would
result in huge savings for both private carriers and Medicare.
I'm not upset with the insurance companies for
saying enough is enough as it pertains to reimbursement for medical services
that do not work. And I do not think universal health care, which will result
in all of us as taxpayers shouldering more of the burden for useless
diagnostics and treatment is the answer either. The answer is to continue to
educate people to make different choices, and to target the purveyors of
misinformation as the real culprits - our government, national health
organizations, medical schools, unenlightened doctors and others who continue
to promote ineffective and harmful treatment.
Article
printed with permission from Dr. Pamela A. Popper and taken from Newsletters Volume 6 Issue 24.
Dr. Popper is the founder and Executive
Director of The Wellness Forum, a
chain of health and wellness centers located throughout the United States and
the Far East.
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