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Distracted: How Regulations Are Destroying the Practice of Medicine and Preventing True Health-Care Reform

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
After the many bureaucratic changes that followed the passing of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) and other legislation, patient care has become secondary to satisfying the whims of government and giant insurance company administrators, who are in total control. The result is a web of complicated rules and misguided programs whose chief effect has been to distract doctors and nurses from their proper focus on patient care. Access to health care now depends on the ability of patients, doctors, and nurses to navigate in and around this cumbersome and ever-changing system.
Written by a practicing doctor and based on years of real-life experience, Distracted takes the unique view that it is not the American health care system that is broken—the problem lies in the administration of health care. The solution is simplicity where there is complexity. The solution is an elegant use of health information technology to foster improved care. It is putting control of health care decisions back with those who know best, patients and their health care teams.
The solution is caring for patients with fewer distractions.
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    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2017

      "It's complicated" and "the devil is in the details" are the mantras of family physician Hahn's critique. Disgruntled by most aspects of U.S. health care and peppering his text freely with sarcasm, Hahn details what he sees as the problems and offers a series of "fixes." He describes obstacles to his own medical practice in navigating treatment authorizations, setting fees, and trying to collect those fees from various payers. He argues that much of what is wrong, from requiring electronic health record systems to overlapping forms of record keeping, results from good intentions taken too far. In most cases, he suggests simplification as the answer. Not a firm advocate of either a free market or a single-payer solution, the author posits that either might be used, yet that the goal needs to be affordable care for everyone. What we currently have results in inefficiency, frustration for all players, and sometimes harm to the patient. VERDICT Concise but detailed and presenting a clear point of view, this book should appeal to both consumers and policymakers interested in getting into the weeds of the work of a physician day to day.--Richard Maxwell, Porter Adventist Hosp. Lib., Denver

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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