A new
report by Paul Ginsburg at the Center for Studying Health System Change concludes medical
technology is significantly the culprit for soaring health care costs. AdvaMed and
advocates for technology advances strongly disagree.
New
technology does contribute to higher costs, and physicians should be careful
about how they use it. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t use it. Technology,
properly used, can avoid more expensive inpatient care and medical
complications due to delayed diagnoses. This is where the ACC’s Appropriate Use
Criteria and evidence-based guidelines come in. Using advanced technologies
appropriately will help save dollars and
lives. But, given the growing financial crisis, there will only be more calls
to reduce costs, and some of them will be shortsighted in terms of longer term
cost savings.
With physician supply
problems in cardiovascular care looming, having likely new cuts in Medicare and Medicaid
could actually reverse progress in CV morbidity and mortality in the near
future. We can’t let that happen.