Dr. David Grulke, a 54-year-old internist in Norfolk,
saw only two choices ahead of him: quit medicine
or reinvent the wheel. Continuing the way he was
going seeing close to 30 patients a day and
coming back to the office until midnight to complete
the paperwork was simply not an option. Medical
care has deteriorated in the past 10 years, primarily
because of managed care, he says. So Dr. Grulke
stopped accepting insurance payments. As of June,
patients who want to see him pay a monthly fee and
in return receive unhurried personalized care.
Dr. Grulkes reaction was an atypical one
to the increasingly common backlash against managed
care. A decade ago, managed care was seen as a promising
way to control costs and, to a large degree, it
was successful. Health care premiums stayed fairly
steady for most of the last decade. Yet these days,
theres just not a whole lot left to squeeze
even while businesses are hit with double-digit
premium increases, which they often pass on to employees.
To cut costs, HMOs still insist that they control
access to specialists, while drugs cost more and
hospital labor is more expensive. Even so, physicians
such as Grulke earn less money for an increasingly
unsatisfying experience.
Dr. Grulkes radical move underscores the
frustration of primary care physicians, who feel
they need to see more patients to keep up their
incomes. Dr. Grulke doesnt charge very much
for his plan, so it is sort of the common mans
version of the concierge care for the
well off. Yet as more people seek to get out of
what they see as a broken health care system, the
end game could be that the well off buy the best
care or there are fewer physicians available for
the rest of us or both.
However, paying more for health care doesnt
necessarily get you better health care, says Paul
Lombardo, director of a program in law and medicine
at the Center for Biomedical Ethics at the University
of Virginia. Some people buy extraordinarily
expensive cars even though they wont get them
home any faster. Its hard to say how
many doctors are doing the same thing. Dr. Grulke
said he got the idea from Seattle physicians, and
there are several firms in the U.S. who are working
to franchise similar practices. None responded,
however, when asked if theyve made headway
in Virginia. If this is a trend, says
Lombardo, what it points up is the general
disaster of our non-system of health care. We have
40 million people who have no regular health care.
Id lose sleep over that rather than the fact
that a few very wealthy people will be able to buy
their own care.
So far, more than 800 patients have been willing
to pony up the monthly fee ranging from $28
to $68 depending on age to get care from
Dr. Grulke or his partner, Dr. Stuart L. Shepheard.
Some have increased their insurance deductibles
so their net increase in cost is slight. They still
keep insurance to cover hospitalizations, lab tests
or visits to specialists which serves to
protect Dr. Grulke from being financially swamped
from having to care for extremely sick patients.
However, Dr. Grulke insists hes not cherry
picking only the healthiest patients. His
practice includes patients who have chronic illnesses
and see him regularly. Plus, Dr. Grulke believes
his way of doing things can ultimately reduce health-care
costs. Well order less tests and provide
more thorough care. I dont have to order each
test at the first visit. I can wait until the second
or third visit to see if they need it. That can
save hundreds in co-pays for tests these patients
might not need, he says.
Drs. Grulke and Shepheard capped their patient
base at 600 each; they used to have 2,000. If more
patients want to get into the practice, theyll
consider adding more doctors. Patients who are with
the practice get, in essence, a return to the old
days. They have their doctors phone number;
if they need to go to the hospital, the doctor will
meet them there. When they come to the office, theyre
not told to wait in a crowded reception area, but
are typically ushered to an exam room. And theyre
not pushed out the door seven minutes later.
Nearly everyone can point out something that is
wrong with the health-care system. Physicians will
say theyre being paid disproportionately well
for more expensive services. For example, the fee
for a Caesarean section is higher than the one for
attending an all-night labor. Others say patients
need to take more financial responsibility. Paul
Ginsburg, president of the Center for Studying Health
System Change in Washington, D.C., says businesses
sharing costs with employees is the most important
trend in health care. While it could help
drive down costs, it will increase the hassle factor
for physicians. Physicians are going to have
to collect these payments, and will ultimately be
paid more slowly and with more difficulty,
he predicts.
Blaming all the health care problems on managed
care, however, is just piling on, says Mark C. Pratt,
executive director of the Virginia Association of
Health Plans. Were it not for managed care,
the premium increases would be higher still. Traditional
fee-for-service plans are on average 25 to 30 percent
more than HMO products. Even so, he admits
that managed care helped create the perception
that health care comes with a $10 co-pay. When you
buy automobile insurance, you dont expect
to get oil changes with it. But with health care,
patients expect everything.
Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA
in Washington, D.C., says the term consumer-driven
health plan is a misnomer. These are
systems of choice, but they are created in such
a way that consumers need to pay more in deductibles
or co-payments. That enables fragmentation
in insurance pools. In other words, younger or healthier
workers will hedge their bets with high-deductible,
low-premium options, putting less money into the
system. The whole notion of an insurance system
is predicated on spreading risk between those who
make claims and those who dont. The more its
fragmented, it leaves the people with the greatest
need without the ability to spread their risk.
Pollack argues for greater investment in public
programs.
Whatever policy changes come about, Dr. Bill Hazel,
president of the Medical Society of Virginia, empathizes
with Dr. Grulke and other primary care physicians.
Hes an orthopedist, so unlike primary care
doctors, most of his profits come from his surgical
business. Lower fees and increasing costs have put
a real burden on primary care physicians, he says.
For his part, Dr. Hazels practice in Herndon
is trying to beat the system by joining it. It has
grown to include about 30 medical partners and 300
employees. But its different strokes for different
folks, he says. I absolutely can sympathize
with what these doctors are doing. Do I completely
understand the ramifications or is it the right
thing to do? Weve got a lot to find out still.
Yet as far as Dr. Grulke is concerned, theres
no doubt it was the right thing to do. Im
so much happier. My patients say I look healthier.
Im ready to go another 20 years.