Medicare for All – Part I

 

(Author’s Note: Recently candidates for Congress nominated by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) have won primary victories in the Democratic party. These candidates support Medicare for All, the radical change in our healthcare system first advocated by socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders. Medicare for All is a euphemism for socialized medicine, much like socialism is a euphemism for communism. Today I am re-publishing articles I wrote in the past explaining Medicare for All so that everyone can understand the evils of this proposal.)

9/10/18

It is the duty of every American voter to be educated on the issues. As we rapidly approach another election day in November, many Democratic candidates are touting “Medicare For All” as a solution to our failing healthcare system.

Vermont Senator and avowed socialist Bernie Sanders introduced his version of healthcare reform in 2016 when he campaigned for the presidency touting a new single-payer system he calls Medicare For All. Other Democratic candidates have jumped on Bernie’s bandwagon as a growing number of mostly young Americans favor socialism over capitalism.

Today I begin a series of posts to help readers understand what Medicare For All really means to the healthcare of Americans. To assist me in this analysis I will be relying on the excellent work of healthcare economist John C. Goodman.

Ten Things You Need to Know

Goodman gives us ten fundamentals you need to understand about Medicare and what it mean if it were the only healthcare system available to everyone, as Senator Sanders promotes.

  1. Medicare is not really government insurance.

Although Medicare is mostly funded by taxpayers, it is not strictly a government system. It was formed originally by providing a standard benefit package offered by Blue Cross in 1965. It has always been privately administered, mostly by Blue Cross, that continues to provide private insurance to non-seniors. In recent years, one third of all seniors are enrolled in plans offered by private insurers such as Cigna, Humana, and United Healthcare under a cooperative program called Medicare Advantage.

  1. The most successful part of Medicare is run by private insurance.

This refers to the above-mentioned Medicare Advantage program. Studies have found this program delivers higher quality care at less cost than traditional Medicare. (Choice of doctors, however, is more limited.)

  1. Medicare is often the last insurer to adopt innovations that work.

Medicare started prescription drug coverage only after all the private insurers had been doing that for years. It still doesn’t pay for doctor consultations by phone, email, or Skype. It won’t pay for house calls at night or on weekends, even though the cost and the wait times are far below those of emergency rooms.

  1. Medicare has wasted enormous sums on innovations that don’t work.

Medicare has spent billions on pilot programs and demonstration projects trying to find ways of lowering costs and raising the quality of care. Yet instead of finding places in the healthcare system where these techniques work (private Medicare Advantage plans), Medicare set out instead to reinvent the wheel. Medicare frequently has regulations that are counter-intuitive and wasteful, such as requiring patients to be hospitalized before they can receive home physical therapy.

  1. Most seniors in conventional Medicare are participating in stealth privatization, even though they are unaware of it.

There are over 32.7 million patients enrolled in a managed care program called Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). The Obama administration started this practice without telling seniors they were participating in a grand experiment. Not only that, but it is illegal for an ACO to tell a senior they are enrolled! Furthermore, ACOs are not achieving their intended purpose – they are neither saving money nor are they improving the quality of care.

  1. There is nothing Medicare can do that employers and private insurers can’t do.

For many years the Physicians for a National Health Program argued that a single-payer health insurer would be a single buyer in the market for physicians’ services. They reasoned this would give the government the power to bargain down the fees paid to physicians. Reality, however, is that Medicare doesn’t bargain with anyone. They simply put out a price for services and doctors can either accept or reject it. Private insurers have been doing the same thing for years. This is currently bringing doctor fees down in the ObamaCare exchange market – which is why the best doctors and hospitals avoid these plans.

  1. Medicare For all would be costly.

There is no such thing as a free lunch. This is one of the first lessons of adulthood. Even Bernie Sanders admits this, but only when pressed. A study by Charles Blahous of the Mercatus Center has estimated the cost at $32.6 Trillion over the first ten years. This would necessitate a minimum of a 25% payroll tax – but only if it is assume doctors and hospitals provide the same amount of care they provide today. Since Medicare rates are 40% or more below private rates, a realistic assumption is that doctors and hospitals would increase the amount of care to make up the difference. This would then require at least a 30% payroll tax.

(This post will be continued next time.)

Physicians Returning to Private Practice

 

Last week I told you about all the negative changes in hospital healthcare as a result of physicians leaving private practice and being employed by hospitals. (Hospital Changes Threaten Patient Care). In the 1960s only about 15% of all physicians worked for hospitals. However, in 2026 recent surveys have revealed up to 78% of physicians now work for hospitals.

This radical change has led to loss of continuity in care as private physicians are left out of treatment decisions once patients are admitted to the hospital. It has raised the cost of healthcare and diminished the quality of patient care.

But now there is evidence this trend may be reversing. Daniel Godla, reporting for thoroughcare.net says the pendulum is swinging as more and more physicians regret their decision to work for hospitals and desire to return to private practice.

Godla says a survey conducted by Bain & Co. found that “nearly 25% of physicians in health system-led organizations are contemplating a change in employers, compared to just 14% in physician-led practices.” Among those contemplating a change, 37% are seeking to transition to physician-owned settings.

Godla tells us tells us there are three reasons physicians leave private practice to be employed by hospitals:

Three Reasons Physicians Leave Private Practice

  1. Physician Pay and Reimbursement Declined

A recent Medscape survey of more than 7,000 physicians across 29 specialties found that physician pay growth has been the lowest since 2011. More than half felt underpaid or not fairly paid relative to their jobs. Between 2005 and 2021, Medicare reimbursements decreased nearly 2.3%, accounting for inflation. Just last year, the 2025 Physician Fee Schedule saw average payment rates reduced by 2.93%.

  1. Malpractice Insurance and Practice Cost Increases

Independent practices have been particularly impacted by reduced revenue and escalating operational costs. This includes:

  • Overhead expenses
  • Malpractice insurance premiums
  • Staffing shortages
  • Rising wage demands
  • Supply chain disruptions that persist post-COVID
  1. Prior Authorizations/Administrative Burdens

2022 survey of more than 500 physicians from independent practices found that 89% believed regulatory burdens had increased over the past year. Nearly  82% considered the prior authorization process to be very or extremely burdensome.

But now that the pendulum is swinging back, Godla gives us three reasons physicians are changing their minds:

Three Reasons Physicians Return to Private Practice

  • Physicians Seeking Autonomy

survey from NORC at the University of Chicago found that 61% of employed physicians have moderate or no autonomy to make referrals outside of their ownership system. Nearly 47% said they adjust patient treatment options to reduce costs in line with employer policies or incentives. This lack of independence is an essential aspect of the “practice of medicine.” Physicians may miss the flexibility to explore new treatment options, participate in research, and implement innovative care models.

  • Physicians Seeking Adequate Pay and Profit-sharing

In Medscape’s survey, 43% of physicians reported a drop in income—despite the overall average increase—coinciding with a 2.93% cut to the CMS Physician Fee Schedule for 2025. Additionally, 62% of those surveyed believed that most physicians are underpaid today. Some physicians transition to corporate-led employment because of increases in base pay. However, while hospitals and systems may provide a level of stability, they do not offer the same long-term financial advantages as ownership or leadership in an independent practice.

  • Physicians Seeking More Balance and Time Focused on Direct Patient Care

According to the Physicians Foundation, employed physicians report more inappropriate feelings of anger, fearfulness, or anxiety than independent physicians. They also convey higher levels of burnout (62%) compared to physicians working for or owning an independent practice (53%).Other research published in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine found that physician burnout within independent practices was only 13.5%, which is lower than for employed physicians.

All of this comes as no surprise to me. Physicians don’t like to be told how to take care of their patients by hospital employers. Hopefully, this will lead to more personal patient care, less unnecessary treatment, and overall reduced healthcare spending.

 

Hospital Changes Threaten Patient Care

 

As I look back over the last 60 years, I am seeing changes in how hospitals deliver patient care and I don’t like what I see. I was first exposed to hospital care in 1966 when I worked as an orderly in the summer in a hospital operating room. Since then, I have worked as a surgical assistant, medical school student, orthopedic resident, and orthopedic surgeon for the last 42 years.

According to the American Medical Association (AMA), in the 1960s 15% of doctors were employed by hospitals. In 2026 that number is 78% in some surveys. That represents a seismic change in the healthcare system.

How does this change impact hospitals?

Hospitals are hiring doctors for a simple reason – to make more money! The third-party payers, healthcare insurers, allow higher charges for the same services if they are performed in a hospital – or billed by a hospital. That means when doctors are employees of a hospital, all of their charges for services are billed at higher rates. This is a huge incentive for hospitals to employee doctors.

There’s another reason, too. When hospitals employ doctors, they control how they practice medicine. They incentivize the doctors to do more procedures and order more tests that make more money for the hospitals. They monitor the number of patients their doctors see in an average day and they are held accountable if they don’t meet target goals.

Recently I have been exposed to how all this has impacted patient care when my wife was hospitalized. I observed changes in the practice of medicine in the hospital that radically differed from my patient hospital experiences as a physician.

When I was practicing orthopedic surgery, I would admit a patient and frequently consult their primary care physician (PCP) if they had concurrent medical conditions that needed to be treated. The PCP would come from their office to see the patient, make recommendations for their care, and continue to follow the patient in the hospital if necessary. The patient received continuity of care from the physicians who treated him before admission to the hospital.

Today, that has all changed. When you are admitted to the hospital you will be treated by physicians who don’t know you. You will be admitted to the hospital by an internal medicine doctor, known as a “hospitalist” because their entire practice is based in the hospital and they are employees of the hospital. Your PCP will not be consulted. If you need other specialists to see you, they will also be hospital-based employees.

These hospital-based employees will be governed by hospital “protocols” that dictate how they practice. For instance, they will order blood work on every patient, every day, as long as they are in the hospital! The only good reason for such “protocols” is to make more money. My wife entered the hospital with a normal hemoglobin and left anemic! Furthermore, they will order additional consultations with other hospital-based specialists whenever these consultations can be remotely justified. Just another way to crank up the hospital charges.

All of this may not seem harmful to the patient because they are getting lots of attention from a plethora of medical providers. But when physicians who are not familiar with the patient take over care from those physicians who do knowthe patient, errors in patient management can and do occur.

Be an advocate for your family

My advice is that every family must have a patient advocate; preferably someone with medical expertise but at least someone willing to ask questions and make the doctors and nurses justify everything they are doing. I saved my wife from several needless tests and procedures and you can do the same for your family member just by paying attention.