Because the Medicare
prescription drug coverage requires public disclosure of how much and what
type of medicines doctors are prescribing, it is now possible to determine
exactly which medicines are being prescribed.
The results according to a Washington
Post and ProPublica report are that some physicians are prescribing massive
amounts of dangerous and sometimes ineffective medication.
Medicare Part D in 2010
- 27.5MBeneficiaries with Part D Claims
- 1.1BPrescriptions (Including Refills)
- $77.7BRetail Price of All Prescriptions
- 1.7MNumber of Prescribers
An analysis of four years of Medicare prescription records
shows that some doctors and other health professionals across the country
prescribe large quantities of drugs that are potentially harmful, disorienting
or addictive for their patients. Federal officials have done little to detect
or deter these hazardous prescribing patterns.
Now the charge that the Feds have done nothing to
regulate in this area is a meaningless one, because the Feds do not have the
authority or mission to do that.
But
officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services say the job of
monitoring prescribing falls to the private health plans that administer the
program, not the government. Congress never intended for CMS to second-guess
doctors — and didn’t give it that authority, officials said.
“CMS’s payments don’t go to physicians,
don’t go to pharmacies. They go to plans, which is how our oversight framework
has been established,” Jonathan Blum, the agency’s director of Medicare, said
in an interview. The philosophy “really has been to defer to physicians” about
whether a drug is medically necessary, he said.
Also it is unclear why this problem of prescriptions is happening. It may be a differences of opinion within
the medical community, it may be ignorance on the part of doctors, or it may be
the marketing efforts of the drug companies which provide huge benefits to
physicians who prescribe a lot of a certain drug.
No one, surely absolutely no one, wants the Federal
government to engage in massive regulation of who should get prescription drugs and in what dosage. The medical profession itself is supposed to
be self-regulating, and it should be since only the profession has the
technical knowledge and enforcement power to do so.
But contrary to conservative claims that the
government is regulatory active, regulation in the United States happens only after
terrible abuses in the private sector.
So the message to the medical profession is clear and loud. Clean up your own act, do it now and do it
well, unless of course you want government officials second guessing your every
move.
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