Published: Monday, October 6, 2008 6:19 AM EDT
10/6/2008
Editor: In this world of skyrocketing health-care costs and financial
crises, some good news has finally come to the average American
consumer and taxpayer.
Last week, Medicare changed its rules to withhold payment for certain
“never events” — medical mistakes that should never occur, such
as administering the wrong blood type or leaving an instrument inside
a surgical patient. Medicare also says it won’t pay for serious bed
sores, injuries from falls and urinary tract infections caused by
catheters, among other things. Four state Medicaid programs, including
Pennsylvania, as well as several of the nation’s largest health
insurers, are following suit.
It’s about time. Unlike any other service we consume, we have been
living — and dying — with a U.S. health-care system that rewards
mistakes and profits by making patients sicker. Hospitals that fail to
prevent deadly post-operative infections, turning three-day stays into
three-month stays, get paid anyway. Doctors who operate on the wrong
body part get paid anyway. Poor quality control is a major contributor
to skyrocketing health-care costs, which are driving up insurance
rates and bankrupting Americans, as well as their employers.
Patients, insurance companies and employers shouldn’t have to pay
for medical mistakes any more than a homeowner should have to pay for
a plumber who was hired to fix a leak, but worked on the wrong pipe,
broke it and made the situation worse. Withholding payment for medical
errors and holding wrongdoers accountable won’t fully cure our
nation’s health-care ills, but it’s a sensible step in the right
direction.
ATTORNEY DAVID I. FALLK
THE COMMITTEE FOR JUSTICE FOR ALL
KINGSTON