Pyrrhic medicine

It’s almost cliché that the U.S. spends more on medical care than any other country but still has the worst health outcomes in the developed world. The New Yorker’s “Why America Is Losing the Health Race” article opens with this claim and then continues:

The superior health outcomes achieved by other wealthy countries demonstrate that Americans are—to use the language of negotiators—“leaving years of life on the table.” The causes of this problem are many: poverty, widening income disparity, underinvestment in social infrastructure, lack of health insurance coverage and access to health care. 

Which is probably true. But here’s an alternate (and perhaps contributory) hypothesis: what if U.S. health outcomes are so poor because our doctors are so good? After all, the U.S. has Harvard, Stanford, Johns Hopkins, Yale, UCLA, and UCSF—six out of the top ten medical schools worldwide, per this ranking—and besides, the U.S. attracts a great many foreign-trained medical professionals (“America Is Stealing The World’s Doctors,” the Times tactfully implies). These superb but debt-ridden doctors are incentivized to go into procedure-performing specialties instead of primary care: Orthopedists, Cardiologists, Urologists, and Gastroenterologists all make about twice the annual income of family doctors. Then the following occurs:

I totally made that number up; also, I’m not a doctor. But you get the point. Now here’s the same case in a Less Heroic and Patriotic country:

And so the American doctors, best in the world, do better at every single individual medical crisis and thus have worse outcomes overall. Pyrrhic medicine.

Take home messages: a) no amount of clinical training is going to fix America’s healthcare system, and b) even though there’s a lot of anger/debate about “rationing care," we already do this. Our current rationing-care policy is "Spend whatever it takes for emergencies, and pay for that by decreasing primary care availability and increasing the cost of elective procedures.”

I’m not sure this is an effective strategy.