(Circulation. 1998;97:1895-1896.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Managed Care and Patients With Cardiovascular Disease
W. Bruce Fye, MD, MA
From the Cardiology Department, Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, Wis and
University of Wisconsin.
Correspondence to W. Bruce Fye, MD, MA, Medical Director, Marshfield Heart Care, Marshfield Clinic, 1000 N Oak Ave, Marshfield, WI 54449. E-mail fyew@mfldclin.edu
Key Words: Editorials managed care programs patients
Physicians and other
healthcare professionals must become more active advocates for patients
in this new era of for-profit managed care. We must, for example, add
our voices to those of organizations such as the AHA and the ACC that
speak out on behalf of persons with cardiovascular
disease and institutions that advance knowledge through education and
research.1 2
During the early 1990s, for-profit managed care swept
over the American landscape like a flood, washing away medical
traditions and disrupting doctor-patient relationships. By now, the
fast-moving currents of managed care have reached virtually every heart
specialist and every cardiac patient in the nation. The unique
doctor-patient relationship, built on a centuries-old foundation of
altruism and trust, has been undermined.3 Individual
patients seeking personalized care are sometimes pushed around like
pawns on a chessboard. Meanwhile, doctors sometimes confront hastily
constructed but effective barriers that disrupt or destroy
long-standing relationships with their patients and their peers.
Most readers of Circulation would agree that
American cardiology is a brilliant achievement based on
the integration of research advances, technological and pharmaceutical
innovations, and highly trained clinicians.4 Heart patients
are living longer and better lives as a result of this fertile union
and enhanced emphasis on risk factor reduction. Not everyone shares
this optimistic view, however, especially those managed care executives
whose main goal is to spend less on health care in order to reward
their investors and attract new business.
The most aggressive leaders of for-profit managed care often seem
unconcerned with the ideals and institutions . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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