Over the recent past there has been a lot of attention paid
to the sentence “if you like your plan you can keep it” which was a statement
repeatedly made by President Obama which many are now just realizing was
inaccurate. However, something that has
largely escaped scrutiny has been the second part of that promise which was “if
you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor.” Speech
to the AMA 2009.
Forbes and the Wall Street Journal have reported that
doctors in ten states are receiving termination notices as part of a cost
saving measure in which doctors and hospitals must accept a decrease in their
fees. The hardest hit group in this
regard are providers who participate in the Medicare Advantage Plans Forbes,
WSJ.
Not only is your doctor at risk of being cut for funding
reasons, but because of the insurance plan debacle it is possible that your
doctor will not be an in-network provider of your new plan.
Last month Kathleen Sebelius went on the Jon Stewart show
and tried to convince the American people that the healthcare marketplace was
revolutionary in that it provided a market where people could go and shop for
plans and prices and check to see if their doctors and hospitals were in the
plan that they want and went on to say that “you have never been able to do
that before” at which time Jon Stewart questioned her on the point that people
are not able to do that under the current system and Ms. Sebelius clearly replied
that people would never know what was there Stewart
& Sebelius.
I visited the websites of Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, and
Healthcare.gov. Is it a surprise to
anybody that I was able to do a doctor search from the home pages of Aetna and
BCBS but not healthcare.gov. It was
surprising to me that there is no mention of doctors anywhere on the home page
of healthcare.gov. I also watched a
video on the website touting the benefits of having insurance and the
marketplace Healtcare Marketplace
which again made no mention of comparing networks or finding your doctor.
There are times that world and domestic events are
relatively stable, no big news stories to be found. In this case with the healthcare rollout fiasco
there is so much that is being thrown at the people that is inaccurate that it
is impossible for the press to keep up with every one of the
inconsistencies.
It is clearly not true that you can keep your plan if you
were happy with it, the grandfather clause was always a misnomer because anyone
who has ever had insurance knows that your plan changes every year. It was also misleading to tell people and the
AMA that their patient doctor relationships would not be terminated. Provider networks are effected through changes
within the insurance plans themselves, as such there is no guarantee that you
can you can keep your doctor, even without doctors being dropped from plans because
of funding. Furthermore, this is not a
revolutionary concept, not only because Flo is already doing it through Progressive
in the auto insurance industry but because insurers have been providing plan,
premium, benefit and in network provider information to potential customers,
pretty much since they developed their own websites.

Such an excellent post, thank you. It's funny how much chaos surrounds this legislation and the misconceptions about it. To me, if our government believes that they have a better way of serving the people by providing insurance than the private sector, then they should do at least as good a job. They clearly have not so far, and the mass confusion even in the MEDIA, which is supposed to at least understand things before they do their spinning, is just crazy. As you pointed out, lost in all the hustle and bustle concerning this legislation is the impact it will have on the doctors themselves: unfortunately, they are getting a pretty raw deal. I'm personally hoping that some serious editing will be done on the Affordable Act to not only resolve discrepancies, but prove more fair to the doctors treating us. Excellent post.
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