I have been asked a few times why I have made the decisions I have made with my care for giving birth. Well, one of the number one reasons is Doctors just can't all be trusted now-a-days. Here is yet another example of why. I will preface this by saying Josh and I have yet to make any decisions on the vaccination of our babies, but this doesn't help the process at all.
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Do Doctors Have a Financial Incentive to Get Their Patients Fully Vaccinated? by: Dr. Sears
Friday, May 29, 2009
I get a lot of emails from people who wonder if doctors have any sort of financial incentive to get their patients vaccinated. Do we get any sort of bonus from the insurance companies that pay us? I’ve always thought that the answer to this question was no. I recently found out otherwise.
Now, if you count the fact that part of the income for a doctor’s office comes from providing vaccines themselves, and the checkups that go along with the vaccines, you could argue that that’s a financial incentive. Yes, doctors’ offices do make a little money on vaccines. But I don’t really count that as an actual incentive to try to talk any patients into getting vaccines or as a reason to kick a patient out of a practice if they don’t vaccinate. I don’t think any doctor would kick someone out just because the doctor isn’t going to be able to make as much money on an individual patient who doesn’t get vaccines.
But I recently talked with two physicians in different states that told me the HMO plans that they contract with do chart reviews and patient surveys at the end of each year. If their office scores high enough on these reviews, the HMO plan gives them a several thousand dollar bonus. This bonus varies depending on the number of patients the doctor sees. One of the requirements for a patient’s chart to pass the test is that they are fully vaccinated.
Now, I can somewhat understand the logic behind this. The insurance wants to make sure all their clients are fully vaccinated so they don’t catch any particularly severe disease that might result in an expensive hospitalization or disability that would cost the insurance company a lot of money. Oh, and they probably also care about their clients overall health and wellbeing too. So, why not give their doctors a bonus for meeting this goal?
Here’s why. This policy gives any doctor who contracts with such HMO plans an incentive to NOT want any unvaccinating families in their practice. Maybe a few such families wouldn’t make them fail the chart reviews, but if they have too many, there goes their year-end bonus. One colleague here in southern California told me that he happily gives up this bonus because he wants to serve these families. Good for him! But I bet that many doctor across the U.S. refuse care to these families solely because they don’t want to lose this bonus. They make so little from the HMO plan as it is that losing this bonus could make them actually lose money caring for these families. In fact, this bonus isn’t actually a bonus at all. It is actually money that should be paid to the practice anyway month by month, but it is held back until the year-end surveys are done. I don’t know of any PPO plans that do this, fortunately.
I’ve always wondered by so many doctors are so adamantly hardcore about demanding all their patients fully vaccinate, and why they kick patients out of their office who refuse. I’d always just assumed it was because the doctors felt that the vaccine protection was so important that they don’t want any children to be at risk, so they draw a line in the sand for the good of the child (in their minds). BUT some doctors, especially those large groups who rely heavily on large HMO contracts, may actually be doing this because of money. Do they have the right to do so? Of course. But is it right? I don’t know. The American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Bioethics makes it very clear that the official AAP policy is that doctors NOT kick patients out of their office over this issue. But when money talks, some people don’t listen.
So, knowing this information doesn’t really help parents one way or another. But I thought you’d find it interesting to know why you might be having a hard time finding a vaccine-friendly doctor.
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Click HERE for a list of Vaccine Friendly Doctors (list provided by Dr. Sears).
Friday, December 20, 2024
2 days ago
2 comments:
Shana(and Josh), your statement of "Doctors just can't all be trusted now-a-days" as your number one reason for a major decision really, really worries me. Of course, no huge group of people can ALL be trusted, but it sounds like you're implying a substantial percentage of doctors are bad. If that's so, I think that you're believing a lie. I'm a little closer to the subject because of pursuing medical school, and then we have friends that are physicians, but I do not believe money could be their motivating factor in decisions about anyone's healthcare. I hope you are able to find wise counsel and find a doctor that you trust to help you make decisions. I personally think you should revisit the choice on the birth as well, especially considering our experience with Sullivan. Ultimately however, you two are the parents, and I hope that you make your decisions covered in prayer with the child's best interest in mind, not emotional responses to comfort, pain, fear, etc. Sorry if this offends you, it was just bothering me, Chelsea and I feel strongly about the birth and vaccine issues.
What are the decisions you have made in relation to your care while giving birth? Since this article was about vaccinations (which doesn't have to do with you giving birth) what are those decisions. Mark and I are on a delayed shot schedule with Hamilton and are not giving him every shot - so I'm with you on that mentality.
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