首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Too Much Healthcare A) For people who had been awaiting the rollout of the Affordable Care Act in order to obtain health ins
Too Much Healthcare A) For people who had been awaiting the rollout of the Affordable Care Act in order to obtain health ins
admin
2022-07-18
44
问题
Too Much Healthcare
A) For people who had been awaiting the rollout of the Affordable Care Act in order to obtain health insurance for the first time, the major problem associated with American healthcare has been a lack of access to it. But for a surprising number of Americans, the greater problem may be exactly the opposite: They are receiving too much healthcare. And that’s not good news for either their wallets or their physical well-being.
B) The most recent estimate from the Institute of Medicine is that about 30 percent of total healthcare expenditures in America go toward unneeded care. Doctors, too, have acknowledged the problem: In a 2011 survey published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, 42 percent of American primary care physicians said that patients in their own practice were getting more care than necessary.
C) Excessive care typically takes the form of overabundant referrals (转诊病人) to specialists, more diagnostic tests than would be medically necessary, or too many prescriptions—but in some cases, it can extend to actual treatments or surgeries that are not clinically indicated. Richard Baron, president of the American Board of Internal Medicine, is candid (直言不讳的) about the problem. "There were and are lots of things being done in healthcare that don’t reliably benefit patients," he says.
D) From a patient perspective, it can be hard to see at first glance how too much care could be a problem. But unneeded healthcare can be physically damaging. "Anything we do in medicine and healthcare has expected benefits and harms," says Brenda Sirovich, a research associate at the VA Medical Center in White River Junction, Vermont. "Any time you have an intervention for a patient, no matter how small there is also the chance that it’s going to do some harm."
E) Even for initial screening tests that pose no risk in themselves, there’s the problem of the "downstream effect"; if the first test produces an ambiguous result or a false positive, it can lead to more invasive testing that does carry substantial risk. "As you intervene on patients who have less and less reason to intervene and less and less chance of benefiting, you still retain that probability of harming them," says Sirovich. "In a word, that is the biggest problem with doing too much—the risk of harm."
F) In some cases, the roots of the excess care are noble: Doctors just want to provide the best possible care for their patients. The operating assumption for many both inside and outside the medical field tends to be that if a little care does a little good, a lot of care will do a lot of good. Given the time constraints that many physicians are under, it can seem safest to default to over-ordering.
G) But there are several other major drivers of overutilization (过度医疗) , as well. Experts debate exactly how much the threat of lawsuits influences physicians in their practice of medicine, but physicians themselves say that fear of legal challenges is a substantial factor in motivating them to provide too much care.
H) Skeptics challenge that physicians might not be in the best position to know exactly what motivates their own behavior. But a study published in Health Affairs this summer suggests that the malpractice effect is real. According to the report, doctors who acknowledge having a strong fear of malpractice are more likely to show a pattern of ordering aggressive diagnostic tests, and they’re also more likely to refer patients to the ER (急诊室) for treatment. This makes intuitive sense: Doctors are rarely asked if they did too much, but they are constantly questioned as to whether or not they did enough—and they know they can wind up in legal trouble if patients don’t think their care was sufficient.
I) Perhaps more troubling than medical liability issues are the financial incentives inherent in the American healthcare system. Most American healthcare currently operates on a fee-for-service model, where physicians receive payment for every service performed, regardless of whether that service actually benefits the patient or not. In some cases, especially where physicians self-refer their patients for expensive diagnostic tests and treatments, there can be substantial financial incentives for ordering interventions that might not be medically necessary.
J) Several recent studies have explored whether financial incentives influence how physicians practice, and the answer, unsurprisingly, is that they do. In October, for example, a report in the New England Journal of Medicine examined the "self-referral effect" among urologists (泌尿科医生) treating patients fox prostate cancer (前列腺癌). The study found that doctors are substantially more likely to order radiation therapy for their prostate cancer patients if those doctors have ownership interests in the radiation services they are offering. Over the five-year period from 2005 to 2010, the use of radiation therapy by self-referring urologists in private practice jumped 19.2 percentage points, whereas the rate among their non self-referring peers barely budged, going up just 1.3 percentage points.
K) Jean Mitchell, a professor of public policy at Georgetown University and the author of the report, acknowledges that her study can’t ultimately speak to the motivations of the physicians involved. But she sees reason to be concerned. "There’s been this dramatic trend toward aggressive treatment of prostate cancer, even though basically the clinical data suggest that we should move away from that," she says. "The issue is that it seems like being steered toward the treatment that is going to have the most financial benefit for the urologist."
L) The self-referral effect isn’t unique to radiology. Earlier this summer, a report of the United States Government Accountability Office examined rates of referrals for biopsies (活组织检查) and found that between 2004 and 2010, referrals for biopsies more than doubled among self-referring physicians, even while they increased only 38 percent among those who referred outside their own practices.
M) As physicians, researchers, and policy experts have grown to recognize the problem of excessive care, there have been a number of attempts to combat the problem. One of the most talked-about provisions of Obama’s Affordable Care Act, for example, is the provision for Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). Under this provision, a network of doctors and hospitals that agrees to act as an ACO receives financial incentives to figure out how to maximize quality while simultaneously reducing costs and eliminating waste in the system. The idea is to encourage healthcare networks to take more collective responsibility for population health and reward better care, rather than simply more care.
N) Physician groups are also stepping up to solve the problem. One widely publicized effort is the Choosing Wisely campaign which is set out to promote conversations between doctors and patients about utilizing the most effective tests and treatments while avoiding unnecessary care. To this end, organizers began calling on physician societies to compile lists of the top five tests and procedures in their respective specialties that were most susceptible to overuse. To date, more than 50 physician societies have joined the campaign, each contributing their own "top 5" list.
O) For Sirovich, these initiatives offer signs of hope. Fifteen years ago, she says, conversations about the harms of medical care or excessive spending weren’t likely to come up, but today, she hears more patients—and fellow physicians—talking about the harms of overuse.
P) But despite hints of change, the problem of overutilization is likely to persist for some time. After all, it took more than a century to construct the current healthcare system, and change does not come easily.
Physicians say that fear of legal challenges is one of the factors that motivate them to provide too much care.
选项
答案
G
解析
题干意为,医师们说对医疗纠纷的恐惧是驱使他们提供过度医疗的因素之一。根据题干中的关键词too much care和fear of legal challenges可定位到G段。该段第二句提到,医师们表示,对医疗纠纷的恐惧正是他们提供过度医疗护理的一个重要推动力。由此可知,题干是对原文的同义转述,故选G。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/Y1aFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
联合国中文日是联合国语言日的一部分。根据传说,仓颉(CangJic)创造了中国最原始的象形文字(hieroglyph)。上苍因仓颉造字而感动,为其降下一场谷子雨,这就是“谷雨”(theGrainRain)的由来。中文日因此被定在每年中国农历的“谷
在纸发明之前,人们使用的书写材料是竹简(bambooslip)和绢帛(silk)。自诞生之后,纸在几千年的发展历程中,经过不断的技术改进,出现了宣纸、笺纸等一批又一批纸产品。纸虽然是文房四宝中出现最晚的,但是它为中国传统书画艺术带来的翻天覆地的变化,
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledCrazeforCivilServants.Youshouldwriteatleast15
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessay,commentingontheremark"Asmileistheshortestdistancebet
中国吉祥图案(auspiciouspattern)指一些在中国广为流传的、蕴含吉祥意义的图案,如龙、凤(phoenix)、鱼、桃、松树等。在一些节日或喜庆的日子,人们都喜欢用这些图案装饰自己的房间和物品,以表示对幸福生活的向往。中国的吉祥图案内容非常广泛
A、Anti-animal-abusedemonstrations.B、SurveyingtheAtlanticOceanfloor.C、Anti-nuclearcampaigns.D、Removingindustrialwaste.
A、Healthconditionsimprovewithtimespentwatchinghealthyprograms.B、Comedyvideoscancuremostpeopleofchronicheartatt
A、Dreamswerealwaysmisleading.B、Dreamshadtheirownspecificmeanings.C、Dreamscouldhelpexplainourbrainactivities.D、T
A、Thecontinentsandoceanfloorsmoveviolently.B、Theearthisaspermanentasitwas.C、Thesurfaceofourplanetisalwaysi
随机试题
与氯丙嗪、异丙嗪合用组成冬眠合剂:能提高血中NA水平的是:
meta分析过程中计算合并后综合效应的大小时,经过异质性检验,如果各研究的结果不同质,那么要计算合并后的统计量可以采用
通过阻滞钠通道发挥抗心律失常作用的药物是
()应急预案是指针对具有一定规模(建筑规模由社会单位根据实际情况确定)的高层建(构)筑物,在可能发生火灾、爆炸等灾害事故的情况下所编制的应急预案。
MMPI—2各量表可分为()三大类。
有一些地方鼓励退休老干部回农村传授经验。对此,你怎么看?
雨水是甘露,是老天爷普施给大地的津液。我国许多城市水资源短缺,不能光想着把雨水全排走,全排走既不现实,难以根治水淹城市的顽疾,也不符合自然生态规律和城市水资源可持续发展的需要。应当因势利导,通过恢复城市的肌肤功能予以留住,趋利避害。这方面,我们的老祖宗给我
大额可转让定期存单的发行使商业银行引入了哪种经营策略?()。(浙江财经大学2012真题)
下列行为中,侵犯专利权的有()(2010年一专一第54题)
求
最新回复
(
0
)