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posted by Fnord666 on Monday June 05 2017, @04:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the can't-take-it-with-you dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

SAN FRANCISCO — When John Battelle's teenage son broke his leg at a suburban soccer game, naturally the first call his parents made was to 911. The second was to Dr. Jordan Shlain, the concierge doctor here who treats Mr. Battelle and his family. "They're taking him to a local hospital," Mr. Battelle's wife, Michelle, told Dr. Shlain as the boy rode in an ambulance to a nearby emergency room in Marin County. "No, they're not," Dr. Shlain instructed them. "You don't want that leg set by an E.R. doc at a local medical center. You want it set by the head of orthopedics at a hospital in the city." Within minutes, the ambulance was on the Golden Gate Bridge, bound for California Pacific Medical Center, one of San Francisco's top hospitals. Dr. Shlain was there to meet them when they arrived, and the boy was seen almost immediately by an orthopedist with decades of experience.

For Mr. Battelle, a veteran media entrepreneur, the experience convinced him that the annual fee he pays to have Dr. Shlain on call is worth it, despite his guilt over what he admits is very special treatment. "I feel badly that I have the means to jump the line," he said. "But when you have kids, you jump the line. You just do. If you have the money, would you not spend it for that?"

Increasingly, it is a question being asked in hospitals and doctor's offices, especially in wealthier enclaves in places like Los Angeles, Seattle, San Francisco and New York. And just as a virtual velvet rope has risen between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else on airplanes, cruise ships and amusement parks, widening inequality is also transforming how health care is delivered. Money has always made a big difference in the medical world: fancier rooms at hospitals, better food and access to the latest treatments and technology. Concierge practices, where patients pay several thousand dollars a year so they can quickly reach their primary care doctor, with guaranteed same-day appointments, have been around for decades.

But these aren't the concierge doctors you've heard about — and that's intentional.

Dr. Shlain's Private Medical group does not advertise and has virtually no presence on the web, and new patients come strictly by word of mouth. But with annual fees that range from $40,000 to $80,000 (more than 10 times what conventional concierge practices charge), the suite of services goes far beyond 24-hour access or a Nespresso machine in the waiting room.

Indeed, as many Americans struggle to pay for health care — or even, with the future of the Affordable Care Act in question on Capitol Hill, face a loss of coverage — this corner of what some doctors call the medical-industrial complex is booming: boutique doctors and high-end hospital wards.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by isostatic on Monday June 05 2017, @06:54PM (1 child)

    by isostatic (365) on Monday June 05 2017, @06:54PM (#520901) Journal

    The US as a whole spends $9,451 per person per year on healthcare.
    Canada spends $4,167
    Germany spends $4,647
    Frane spend $4,063
    The UK spends $3,621

    Whether this is private or public, whether the burden falls on the rich, the sick, or more evenly, is irrelevant. That's what is spent on healthcare - someone pays.

    For what it's worth the US government funding of US health care (medicaid etc) is $4,600 - the same as Germany pays for everything, and $1k a year per person (or $350b a year) more than the UK pays for everything (NHS and private care)

    P.S. there's nothing in the UK system that stops you from having a $40k a year concierge. Private health care in the UK for a typical 33 year old tends to cost in the $400/year area (for 70+ years old you're likely spending more like $1200 or even $1500 a year)

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  • (Score: 1) by anubi on Tuesday June 06 2017, @09:08AM

    by anubi (2828) on Tuesday June 06 2017, @09:08AM (#521236) Journal

    Around where I live are several massive buildings full of people, flitting from desk to desk, playing with papers.

    There are huge signs on the buildings, associating them with the medical health care profession.

    I went in one once just to see if I could find any sick people going in or out, or as much as a tongue depressor or anyone wearing a stethoscope.

    No... the whole friggen building full of people were concerned with financial matters of who is authorized to care for who.

    I am convinced that doctors and care givers probably net less than ten percent of my healthcare insurance dollar. The lion's share most likely goes to CEO's and lobbyists, with whats left over going to pay for legions of desk hens to pass papers back and forth... in expensive buildings.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]